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US Supreme Court rules on gun rights for marijuana users

The decision is a loss for President Donald Trump’s Republican administration, which had defended the 1968 law

The Independent2 phút đọc

US Supreme Court rules on gun rights for marijuana users

The U.S. Supreme Court has sided with a Texas marijuana user in a gun-rights challenge to a federal law that bars drug users from owning firearms.

In a unanimous decision, the justices backed Ali Danial Hemani, who argued that the law violates the Second Amendment. Hemani, an American-Pakistani dual citizen and resident of Texas, was charged in 2023 following an FBI raid of the home he shared with his parents in Denton County.Agents found a Glock 9mm pistol, marijuana and cocaine during the search.

Hemani told police he used marijuana about every other day, though authorities did not accuse him of being intoxicated at the time of the search.Hemani was charged under a 1968 federal law called the Gun Control Act, which makes possession of a firearm illegal for anyone who "is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance."The Justice Department said in court papers that Hemani's actions had drawn FBI attention, citing his travel to Iran and his brother's attendance at an Iranian university, but Hemani's indictment contained only the single charge under the Gun Control Act.

open image in galleryThat gun restriction led to Hunter Biden’s 2024 conviction, though he was later pardoned by his father, then-President Joe Biden (Getty Images)The justices upheld a lower court's decision Thursday to dismiss his illegal gun possession charge brought under the law.The decision is a loss for President Donald Trump’s Republican administration, which had defended the 1968 law despite arguing against other gun restrictions. The measure was also used in a case against Hunter Biden, who was convicted in Wilmington, Delaware, of buying a gun while addicted to cocaine in 2018.

He was later pardoned by his father, then-President Joe Biden, a Democrat.The opinion is the latest in a series of firearm cases to reach the Supreme Court since a landmark ruling expanding gun rights in 2022 led to a wave of challenges around the country.Since then, the high court has upheld a law aimed at protecting victims of domestic violence and strict regulations on ghost gun kits but has struck down a ban on bump stocks, an accessory that enables rapid fire.

The justices considered two firearm cases this term alone.The legality and use of cannabis, meanwhile, has also shifted significantly in recent years. More than half of U.

S. states have now legalized it broadly, and it’s gained widespread use for health purposes.Recreational use remains illegal on a federal level, however, even after the Trump administration reclassified medical marijuana as a less-dangerous drug in April.

It’s rare to see standalone criminal charges filed against people accused of owning guns and using drugs. The charge is more often filed against people also accused of other crimes.The case made for some unusual political alliances.

The American Civil Liberties Union and the National Rifle Association both supported Hemani’s case, as did cannabis legalization groups like NORML. On the other side were gun safety groups like Everytown that usually oppose the Trump administration on Second Amendment issues.

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被害者の名前が書かれた文書を被告に手渡す 広島県警が職員を処分

電車内で10代の女性2人の体を触ったとして、広島県迷惑防止条例違反の罪で起訴された県警科学捜査研究所職員の男(59)に対し、県警の職員が被害者の名前を記した文書を誤って渡していたことがわかった。県警は情報の取り扱いが不適切だったとして、内規に基づいて処分した。 捜査関係者などによると、昨年8月に男が起訴された後、県警職員が男の休職手続きのために留置施設で面会した際、起訴内容を写した文書を男に手渡した。文書には、本来明かすべきではない被害者2人の名前が記されていたという。 外部からの指摘を受け、県警は文書を回収し、被害者側に謝罪の意向を伝えた。名前が男に伝

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