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Reply #297: No, I'm thinking strict scrutiny, of which compelling interest is only one component. [View All]

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benEzra Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Dec-05-07 05:15 PM
Response to Reply #290
297. No, I'm thinking strict scrutiny, of which compelling interest is only one component.
Edited on Wed Dec-05-07 05:16 PM by benEzra
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strict_scrutiny

To pass strict scrutiny, the law or policy must satisfy three prongs:

First, it must be justified by a compelling governmental interest. While the Courts have never brightly defined how to determine if an interest is compelling, the concept generally refers to something necessary or crucial, as opposed to something merely preferred. Examples include national security, preserving the lives of multiple individuals, and not violating explicit constitutional protections.

Second, the law or policy must be narrowly tailored to achieve that goal or interest. If the government action encompasses too much (over-inclusive) or fails to address essential aspects of the compelling interest (under-inclusive), then the rule is not considered narrowly tailored.

Finally, the law or policy must be the least restrictive means for achieving that interest. More accurately, there cannot be a less restrictive way to effectively achieve the compelling government interest, but the test will not fail just because there is another method that is equally the least restrictive. Some legal scholars consider this 'least restrictive means' requirement part of being narrowly tailored, though the Court generally evaluates it as a separate prong.


The Bush administration can claim "compelling interest" for everything they've ever done--torture, Guantanamo, extraordinary rendition, waterboarding, secret watchlists, denial of habeus corpus, warrantless surveillance, or whatever. That doesn't justify it.

Gun laws should be subject to the same judicial review as search and seizure rules, speech and press, and whatnot. Strict scrutiny, not just rational basis review or intermediate scrutiny.

The problem is, most of what the gun-control lobby considers "strict gun control" or even "reasonable gun control" (bans on protruding rifle handgrips, for example) would pass neither the narrowly-tailored test, nor the least-restrictive test, even if they would pass a compelling-interest test. That is largely because most gun-control proposals over the last decade or so have been aimed squarely at the law-abiding, with the invocation of criminal violence primarily as an excuse. Rifle handgrip bans and pre-1861 capacity restrictions are a perfect example.
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