July 15, 2009 2:36 PM

Sotomayor's Bias

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  Wayne LaPierre is Executive Vice President and CEO, National Rifle Association.

Other than declaring war, neither house of Congress has a more solemn responsibility than the Senate's role in confirming justices to the U.S. Supreme Court. As the Senate considers the nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor, Americans are watching to see if this nominee would lend her support to those who've declared war on the rights of America's 80 million gun owners.

After the first day of confirmation hearings, gun owners have good reason to worry. Those of us who respect the Second Amendment are concerned about the case of Maloney v. Cuomo, which reviewed whether this freedom applies to all law-abiding Americans or only to residents of Washington, D.C. If it's incorporated, the Second Amendment prevents the states from disarming honest Americans. If it's not, the Second Amendment is meaningless outside of our nation's capital.

Judge Sotomayor was on the Second Circuit panel that decided the Maloney case in a short, unsigned, and clearly incorrect opinion. The fact that the Maloney panel misread precedent in order to avoid doing the Fourteenth Amendment "incorporation" analysis required by the Supreme Court is troubling to say the least.

Equally troubling is the fact that Judge Sotomayor said she wasn't even familiar with the Supreme Court's modern incorporation cases. There are few issues more important for a judge to understand than whether the fundamental guarantees in the Bill of Rights apply to all Americans. Our First Amendment right to free speech applies to all Americans. Our Fourth Amendment protection from illegal search and seizure applies to all Americans. It's hard to believe that a potential Supreme Court justice wouldn't be familiar with those cases.

Despite that judicial amnesia, Judge Sotomayor co-authored an opinion -- in January of this year -- holding that the Second Amendment does not apply to the States. So that leaves two options: either she failed to follow the Supreme Court's direction in Heller that judges are required to analyze the modern incorporation cases; or she actually did review those cases, but came to an incorrect conclusion. Neither option gives gun owners much confidence in her view of the Second Amendment.

It is only by ignoring history that any court can say-as the Second and Seventh Circuits did-that the Second Amendment doesn't apply to the states. The one part of the Bill of Rights that Congress clearly intended to apply to all Americans was the Second Amendment. History is clear on this point. In his speech introducing the proposed amendment, for example, Senator Jacob M. Howard listed the freedoms guaranteed by the Bill of Rights "such as … the right to keep and bear arms," and said the proposed amendment would "restrain the power of the States and compel them at all times to respect these great fundamental guarantees."

Under questioning, Judge Sotomayor was also evasive on the question of whether the Second Amendment guarantees a fundamental right. In fact, her previous decision in United States v. Sanchez-Villar held that it was not. Let me be clear on this - any judge who does not believe the Second Amendment guarantees a fundamental right is unacceptable to gun owners.

Judges often try to hide behind precedent in order to avoid answering fundamental constitutional questions during confirmation hearings. But history has shown that, in many cases, precedent was wrong and needed to be changed. It was wrong when precedent prevented an African-Americans' vote from counting the same as a white man's. And it was wrong when precedent prevented African-Americans from owning firearms.

It was equally wrong when precedent prevented women from voting. It took people with courage and conviction to stand up against this type of ill-conceived precedent.

This nation was founded on a set of fundamental freedoms. Our Constitution does not give us those freedoms - it guarantees and protects them. The right to defend ourselves and our loved ones is one of those. The individual right to keep and bear arms is another. These truths are what define us as Americans.

The Supreme Court is compelled to respect the Second and Fourteenth Amendments and to interpret and apply them correctly. The cases in which Judge Sotomayor and her colleagues have mishandled these issues raise serious questions about her fitness to serve on the highest Court in the land.




By Wayne LaPierre

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 19 Comments
by noloyalisti July 16, 2009 12:23 PM EDT
LaPierre look even more French than Kerry. Actually he looks like he came from the white wing racist Republican factory. Where they bow down to the God of Corporate Global Domination. Which includes the gun manufacturers who think an armed society is a polite society.
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by afmcalax July 16, 2009 9:15 AM EDT
LaPierre is just a prostitute for the gun industry. Heaven forbid that rational thought be applied to gun ownership in America thus affecting the profits of the blood merchants. This little tirade will send more of the NRA lemmings running to their local gun shops to purchase more weapons that only increase the profits of the gun manufacturers while doing little or nothing to actually increasing safety.

LaPierre arguments are the same old, worn out ramblings of an institution that has no real place in America anymore. The NRA used to stand for integrity in promoting gun safety and hunting but are no more than ****** for the likes of Smith & Wesson and they other gun companies trying to keep their last remaining open market available.
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by butterfly462 July 16, 2009 12:33 AM EDT
Texas also passed a law allowing concealed carry of guns on college campuses, so while there may be some hope, there is quite a long way to go.
Amendment II

A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

Seems like the reasons for owning a gun according to the second ammendment is to the security a free state as part of a well regulated militia. How many gun owners are part of a well regulated militia?
Nobody wants to take your guns that are used for hunting or personal protection, but you are not using them for what the second amendment is discussing. If you think that your personal gun stash will stand a chance against a U.S. military jet with lasar guided missiles, you are sadly mistaken. Now, I also don't think that the U.S. military will round us up and put us in work camps and take away our freedoms and whatever other scare tactics the GOP can come up with, but your guns are not what keeps this nation free. I have lived as free as you in this country. Made it to the ripe old age of 46 without owning one or firing one, and I am one very free American. I am disgusted with how little the GOP thinks of the American people that they think we will fall for their lies. I would think they would be done with all the God, gays, guns and abortion issues as figure out how to implement good gonverning policies, but that would take critical thinking skills and they don't seem to possess that.
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by Wolf1944 July 15, 2009 11:31 PM EDT
There is hope. Texas--of all places--has just enacted a new law to make it harder for mentally ill people to buy guns.
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by BeckieBest July 15, 2009 10:44 PM EDT
If the NRA could sell guns to children, they would.
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by Wolf1944 July 15, 2009 8:14 PM EDT
Deaths in attack on New York's World Trade Towers on 9/11: 3,000
Deaths of our soldiers in Iraq: 4,272 (4/09)
Coalition military fatalities in Afghanistan: 1,133
U.S. soldiers wounded, maimed, disabled in the Iraq War: 24,912
U.S. citizens killed by guns in the last four years: 121,000
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by steeepe July 15, 2009 8:11 PM EDT
I happen to believe that it's fine to have guns for self defense and hunting and recreation, but I don't think that the 2nd amendment is as clear as the NRA guy says. I think it was written when the country might need to have citizens band together with their guns for federal defense. That is not necessary now. The problem with the NRA is they see it all in black or white: either we get to have whatever we want or nothing at all. People can't have machine guns or missiles, and there is nothing inherently wrong with certain other restrictions of owning weapons or knowing who's got what for solving crimes. Geez, you can't even possess M-80s or cherry bombs, but it's AOK to get yourself unlimited firepower. Doesn't make sense.
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by justsane-2009 July 16, 2009 12:42 AM EDT
well said.
by pvperson3 July 15, 2009 6:47 PM EDT
Damn but I get tired of hearing one issue "pundits" rant about their one issue while blithely ignoring the hundreds of other issues important today. No matter how many times some idiot from the NRA says that "someone", "anyone" is going to take your gun, it's just crap being spewed to make you afraid and sway your opinion. This country and this government is filled with hunters and gun enthusiasts that would NEVER allow a president to even try and restrict gun ownership and do you really think that the 5 conservatives on the Supreme Court would go along? Get real. You people are fools to buy this neo-con bullsh*t.
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by noloyalisti July 15, 2009 7:29 PM EDT
Very well said. This NRA junk is just another straw man made up by frightened little right wingers to take attention away from the real issues. Like how the big corporations have robbed us blind and ruined the world economy for their own gain.
by thatissosilly July 15, 2009 6:00 PM EDT
to geecee827
The 2nd Amendment is written very clearly. If you don't like it please move to a country whose laws are more to your liking. Bye bye. I won't miss you. Good luck protecting yourself! See yah.
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by bondsman_dotmac July 15, 2009 5:45 PM EDT
Judge Sotomayor said that the second Amendment is a state right and yet it is clear when it says ?the right of the people to keep and bear arms? not that a state or government can tell them if they can, why else would it say ?shall not be infringed?? It is the bill of rights for the people not any government, by her thinking free speech, the right of the people to peaceable assemble, The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures or any other of the rights of the people are at risk. It was written over two-hundred years ago and in plain language so that the people could understand what it said, now we have Judges telling us that we don?t understand the meaning and they must tell us what it says?
Are we less intelligent then we were then or is the government with the help of the courts attempting to become dictatorial and domineering over the people and leave us without away to defend ourselves and families from criminal and the Government? The Second Amendment is the corner stone of the Bill of Rights if we let that one go they will take the rest. She does not belong on the SCOTUS and her and many others should not be judges.
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by justsane-2009 July 16, 2009 12:41 AM EDT
huh--your guy lapierre just wrote that sotomayor authored an opinion saying that its wasn't a state's right. you guys need to get together and make up your minds...
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