A US appeals court Saturday paved the way for a California law banning the concealed carry of firearms in “sensitive places” to go into effect January 1, despite a federal judge’s ruling that it is “repugnant to the Second Amendment.”

The law – Senate Bill 2 – had been blocked last week by an injunction from District Judge Cormac Carney, but a three-judge panel filed an order Saturday temporarily blocking that injunction, clearing the path for the law to take effect.

The court issued an administrative stay, meaning the appeals judges did not consider the merits of the case, but delayed the judge’s order to give the court more time to consider the arguments of both sides. “In granting an administrative stay, we do not intend to constrain the merits panel’s consideration of the merits of these appeals in any way,” the judges wrote.

  • @chitak166
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    11 year ago

    Because you can’t rely on cops to protect you and can’t expect regular people to forego violence if they believe it will get them what they want.

      • @PopcornTin
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        21 year ago

        Note that only covers homicides, the criminal died. Guns can save people from going that far as well. Everything from yelling, “Don’t come here, I have a gun,” to showing it, to firing and wounding or missing the criminal isn’t in that statistic. One FBI statistic a few years ago put it around 2-4 million instances of defensive uses of guns that year.

        Statistically you’ll never be mugged, raped, or murdered, so why do anything to prevent any of them?