Virginia Militia Clause Lawsuit

When a gun control law is challenged in the United States in either state or Federal court, the challenge is more often than not based upon the 2nd and 14th Amendments or the state’s equivalent protection for the right to keep and bear arms. A common secondary challenge might be based upon the the Administrative Procedures Act or the state equivalent.

In a state like Texas which lies within the 5th Circuit, this would be a winning argument. However, challenging the new Virginia assaults weapons ban and magazine restrictions using the right to keep and bear arms is more difficult because it lies within the 4th Circuit. The misguided judges of the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals have held in cases like Bianchi v. Brown (2024) that the 2nd Amendment doesn’t apply to state level assault weapons bans. Virginia is already arguing in Crump v. Katz that their state’s constitution doesn’t protect an individual right to keep and bear arms. Indeed, a hearing on a preliminary injunction scheduled for today has been stayed by the Circuit Court of Lancaster County. I fear this will be the norm for all the cases brought in Virginia based upon the right to keep and bear arms.

However, what if the lawsuit challenging the new gun control laws was based not upon rights but on responsibilities as a member of the militia? Moreover, what if this challenge was solely on a state constitutional provision that could not be moved to a Federal court other than perhaps the US Supreme Court which probably would refuse to take it?

That is the whole premise behind Curtis et al v. Katz et al which is being tried in the Circuit Court of Spotsylvania County, Virginia. The argument is that the new laws violate the militia clause of the Virginia Constitution because these laws prohibit the acquisition of arms to which the plaintiffs must be trained a members of the militia. It challenges the law principally upon these grounds. The plaintiffs note that if the court should decide to not recognize the militia clause as an independent source of constitutional authority, historical precedent would hold that the new gun control laws could not survive scrutiny under the remainder of Article 1, Section 13, who guarantees a right to keep and bear arms. As the complaint states, “Under any analytical framework—whether the militia clause is treated as independently operative or as the definitional predicate for the individual right—the Act is unconstitutional because it prohibits the body of the people from acquiring the very arms that the militia clause identifies as constitutionally essential.”

The lawsuit is brought on behalf of two members of the Virginia unorganized militia – Dustin Curtis and Michael Wood, firearms dealer Bob’s Gun Shop, and certified firearms trainer Daniel Hinkson. Both Curtis and Wood are within the age parameters (Ages 16-55) of Va. Code § 44-1 which defines the unorganized militia. They are represented by former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, a Republican, who was the 46th Attorney General of Virginia.

Article 1, Section 13 of the Virginia Constitution begins, “That a well regulated militia, composed of the body of the people, trained to arms, is the proper, natural, and safe defense of a free state.” These words were drafted by George Mason in 1776 prior to the Declaration of Independence and have remained a part of the Commonwealth’s Constitution ever since.

As the complaint notes:

They are not a preamble. They are not a recital. They are operative constitutional text, continuously in force for two hundred and fifty years.

The breadth of that guarantee is remarkable. Article I, Section 13 speaks of “the body of the people”—without qualification as to sex, age, or other condition. The Virginia Constitution thus embeds the militia concept at its most expansive: not a narrow demographic slice, but the people themselves, armed and trained for the defense of the free state. George Mason, who authored these words, confirmed their sweep on June 4, 1788, at the Virginia Ratifying Convention: “I ask, Who are the militia? They consist now of the whole people, except a few public officers.”

The complaint goes on to note that the firearms and magazines banned under the new Virginia gun control laws are the civilian equivalents of those used by the Armed Forces of the United States and the Virginia National Guard. In other words, they are the very firearms and magazines that militia members must obtain and be trained in if they are to fulfill their responsibilities as members of the militia.

The intellectual foundation for this lawsuit comes from the work of Dr. Edwin Vieira, Jr. His exhaustive research on state militias is found in The Sword and Sovereignty: The Constitutional Principles of “the Militia of the Several States”.

In every era, this has meant the weapons that bear a functional relationship to those issued to the organized military forces of the Commonwealth and the nation. As Dr. Edwin Vieira, Jr. has documented, this is a fixed constitutional principle, not a matter of legislative grace: the arms suitable for militia service must be no less current and effective than those carried by the members of the regular armed forces.

This concept is reinforced in US v. Miller where the US Supreme Court said the 2nd Amendment protects weapons bearing “some reasonable relationship to the preservation or efficiency of a well regulated militia” and those that are “part of ordinary military equipment” or “could contribute to the common defense.” While the US Supreme Court found that Jack Miller’s sawed-off shotgun didn’t qualify as a militia weapon, I think that court would have found AR-15s which share the majority of their parts along with the same cartridge as the M-16 bear that reasonable relationship.

The plaintiffs are asking for both a declaratory judgment that the law is unconstitutional and for permanent and preliminary injunctions to stay its enforcement. The hearing on the preliminary injunction is next Wedneday, June 17th. Interestingly enough, the Commonwealth’s Attorney for Spotsylvania County, G. Ryan Mehaffey, is fully in support of a preliminary injunction being issued and has asked the court to grant it.

Donations are needed to support this case. Rights Watch International, a North Carolina-based 501(c)3, is working with our fellow patriots in Virginia to help raise money for the litigation. All donations, whether $5 or $5,000, will be used to support this fight. Given this is for civil rights litigation and Rights Watch is a 501(c)3 organization, your donations are tax deductible. Thank you in advance for your generosity.

To donate, use this LINK.

There is a move to consolidate all the four state-level cases. It will remain to be seen whether Curtis will be exempted from this move to consolidate as it is arguing very different grounds to invalidate the new assault weapons ban and magazine ban.

You can read the whole complaint below:

A FAQ On The New Virginia Gun Laws

The Virginia Citizens Defense League has published a 48 page guide to the newly passed gun control laws in Virginia. It has links within it that go to broader explanations as well as to the laws passed by the Virginia General Assembly. From what I understand, July 1st will be the date when most of these laws will go into effect. As of today, she still has not signed the assault weapons ban that she sent back to the legislature and which they sent back to her without the amendments she requested.

If you plan on traveling in Virginia or you are a gun owner in Virginia, I would carefully go over this FAQ. As for me, the only times I plan to visit Virginia are for my NRA Board of Directors’ meetings.

For My Friends In Virginia

The grassroots efforts by NRA-ILA in the Commonwealth of Virginia needs your help. If you live in Virginia and have some time to devote, this online meeting is for you.

Subject:Attend the NRA Virtual Election Meeting on Tuesday September 23rd!

view the web version of this email

NRA-ILA: Institute for Legislative ActionAttend the NRA Virtual Election Meeting on Tuesday September 23rd!With the upcoming elections quickly approaching here in the Commonwealth, we’re inviting you to join us for our virtual “Virginia Election Kick-Off Meeting” on Tuesday, September 23rd, at 7:00 p.m.

This important virtual meeting will cover:

Volunteer Opportunities – Learn how you can get involved and make a difference in our election efforts right here in Virginia.

Our Candidate Endorsement Process – Understand how the NRA evaluates and supports candidates who stand strong for our Second Amendment rights.Your voice and your time can make a real impact this election season. Whether you’re a seasoned volunteer or just looking to get started, this meeting is the perfect place to learn how you can be involved in this very important election!

Please click the RSVP button below to register for this special webinar:
When:
Tuesday, September 23rd, 7:00 p.m. EST
Where:
NRA-ILA Grassroots Virtual Microsoft Teams Classroom

Even though I live in North Carolina, I will be helping out the grassroots campaign by using their i360 texting platform. I certainly don’t want a Gov. Abigail Spanberger who is BFF with Everytown in an adjoining state.

Lexy Higgins who manages the grassroots program told me that they are really seeking local volunteers who can do door-to-door campaigning. You know for sure that Everytown and the Demanding Moms will be out in force and our side needs to be there as well.

Sounds Like VCDL Has Grounds For A Defamation Lawsuit

It looks like the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence (sic) is up to its old tricks. The only thing that has changed is the players involved. It used to be Ladd Everitt and now it seems it is Lori Haas.

Ms. Haas sent out a press release on Tuesday, June 8th, that cheered the nomination by Virginia Democrats of Terry McAuliffe for governor. She touted McAuliffe’s position on gun control.

Also included in her statement was this:

Now is not the time to go back. Virginia cannot afford to elect Glenn Youngkin and his outdated and harmful stance on gun violence. His willingness to say anything for a vote is deeply troubling, as we’ve already seen him cozying up to those with deep ties to those at the forefront of the insurrectionist movement, like Senator Amanda Chase and the domestic terror organization, the Virginia Citizens Defense League

I am not a lawyer but calling any legitimate organization such as the Virginia Citizens Defense League a “domestic terror organization” sounds defamatory. I think it goes beyond legitimate and protected political speech.

The FBI has a definition of “domestic terrorism” that speaks to the issue.

Domestic terrorism: Violent, criminal acts committed by individuals and/or groups to further ideological goals stemming from domestic influences, such as those of a political, religious, social, racial, or environmental nature.

Wearing an orange sticker that says “Guns Save Lives” is neither violent nor criminal. Neither is engaging in the political process and supporting a candidate such as Glenn Youngkin who believes in the Second Amendment.

If I were Phillip Van Cleave of VCDL, a letter from VCDL’s attorneys would be in the mail demanding a retraction of Ms. Haas’ statement along with an apology. If neither was forthcoming, then a lawsuit would be filed sooner than later.

A Win In Virginia For Indoor Ranges (Updated)

Despite the Supreme Court punting on the NYSRPA case, it hasn’t been a totally bad day in the courts. Judge F. Patrick Yeatts of the 24th Judicial District of Virginia granted SafeSide Virginia, VCDL, GOA, and the Association of Gun Ranges of Virginia a temporary injunction against Gov. Ralph Northam’s closure order.

Judge Yeatts found that Gov. Northam had exceeded his authority in closing indoor gun ranges. Northam had argued that his authority came from his chief executive power to assure that “laws are faithfully executed” and that he could ignore laws that limited his authority. Judge Yeatts disagreed saying:

The Court cannot agree with such an expansive interpretation of the Governor’s authority. His duty to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed” include the laws that limit his power during emergencies like §44-146.15 (3).

Accordingly, the Court finds that the Governor’s power to close whole categories of businesses would only come from §44-146.17, which is constrained by §44-146.15(3) regarding the right to keep and bear arms.

Judge Yeatts notes that the Virginia Constitution includes the words “trained to arms” in the prefatory clause of the Commonwealth’s equivalent of the Second Amendment. He goes on to say that “gun ranges provide a venue for such training to occur, thus, “bear arms” includes loading and shooting at a gun range.” He then references the 7th Circuit’s decision in the Ezell v. Chicago.

In discussing the appropriate level of scrutiny, Judge Yeatts says, “The Court declines to invent a level of scrutiny to circumvent the text in the statute.” §44-146.15(3) says that the governor cannot “in any way limit or prohibit the right of the people to keep and bear arms” during an emergency.

The judge believes the plaintiffs will succeed on the merits. He found that they would suffer irreparable harm if forced to stay closed, that the balance of equities favors granting a temporary injunction, and that the injunction favors the public interest.

His order granting the injunction does note that safe distancing and sanitizing edicts of Executive Order 53 should be followed.

Cam Edwards, writing at BearingArms.com, believes Northam will appeal.

The governor will almost certainly appeal Judge Yeatts decision, but for the moment, SafeSide Lynchburg and other indoor ranges in the state are allowed to re-open. The judge made the right call. Let’s hope that the state Supreme Court agrees.

I agree with Cam’s hope that the Virginia Supreme Court likewise agrees.

UPDATE: I should clarify that Judge Yeatts’ order only applies to SafeSide Lynchburg. He did not order the rest of the indoor ranges in the state be opened.

VCDL sent out an email regarding the win and noted:

As for the other indoor ranges that are still closed, VCDL is disappointed that they were not covered under the ruling and we are weighing our legal options at this time.  Our goal is to get all indoor ranges the option of reopening as soon as possible.

How Virginia Was Bought

If you wondered how Virginia went from a red state to a purple state to a blue state, here is part of the answer.

Michael Bloomberg played the long game, made many strategic campaign contributions over the years, and made Virginia his own.

According to the New York Times it started a lot sooner than the last couple of elections.

Soon enough, Mr. Bloomberg ramped up his spending on politics beyond New York. Frustrated at the flow of firearms from Virginia, a state with lax gun laws, Mr. Bloomberg tried to buoy candidates in the state’s 2011 elections who shared his views.

Then, in 2013, he received a visitor in New York: Mr. McAuliffe, by then a candidate for governor of Virginia. He proposed to Mr. Bloomberg that he make the state a decade-long priority, with an eye toward empowering Democratic supporters of gun regulation.

“I walked out with a multimillion-dollar commitment that day,” Mr. McAuliffe recalled.

Mr. Bloomberg spent more than $3 million in Virginia that year through his super PAC, helping propel Mr. McAuliffe to the governorship and electing a Democratic attorney general supportive of gun control, according to the Virginia Public Access Project. He has plowed millions more into the state since then, culminating last fall with a takeover of the state legislature by Democrats who are now seeking to pass a series of tougher gun laws.

It started with Terry McAuliffe, continued with Attorney General Mark Herring, and then down into state legislative races.

You know what happened in 2019 (corrected) – Democrats took both houses of the General Assembly.

I Don’t Have A Good Feeling About These Guys

The left-wing website Vice had a story yesterday about a group planning to show up for the 2020 VCDL Lobby Day. It is a local Richmond-based Antifa group which supports the Second Amendment and gun rights.

When gun lovers rally in front of the Virginia Capitol in Richmond next week, the local chapter of antifa will be there too. But their members won’t be wearing all black, and they don’t plan to douse right-wingers in milkshakes or Silly String.

Instead, local antifa will join thousands of conservatives who are expected to descend on Richmond that day in protesting pending gun-control legislation introduced by Democratic lawmakers.

Antifa Seven Hills, based in Richmond, are opposing the slew of gun bills introduced by the newly Democratic Legislature since November, because they say those types of laws are used primarily to criminalize poor people, minorities, and leftists — and to bolster law enforcement’s power.

“I think it’s been pretty important for us to focus on the fact that gun control in America has a legacy of racist enforcement,” said Antifa Seven Hills spokesperson James (who asked that his name be withheld to avoid getting doxxed online). “Like taking guns away from black people, because black people were perceived as a threat to property and the sanctity of the state.”

I tend to agree with “James” about the racist roots of gun control and how gun control has been used to keep African-Americans disarmed.

That said, I’m leery of any group of people affiliated with Antifa. As someone commented to me on Facebook yesterday, “the enemy of my enemy is not always my friend.”

My fear is what are called “Fifth Columnists” causing incalculable harm. They say they support gun rights and the Second Amendment but their goal is actually to subvert it through their actions. With media-driven reports of “white supremacists” and “militia groups” planning on attending the Richmond rally, the mainstream media will go wild if there is any sort of a disturbance. You just know that they along with every member of the gun control industry is just praying to Gaia that it is another Charlottesville.

My anxiety rises when I read “James'” last comments.

If authorities’ fears are confirmed and white supremacist groups join the fray, Antifa Seven Hills could be left in an awkward position. Asked whether there was a plan to switch from conservative outreach into a more combative role, James declined to comment. “We’re not going to discuss our plans at this point,” he said.

J.KB at Gun Free Zone has the best advice if you are going – be NORMAL. Wearing your casual Friday clothes, look respectable, leave the Gadsden flag at home, and don’t go looking for trouble.

Demanding Moms Channel CSGV In Comments About Lobby Day

When Ladd Everitt was the communications director for the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence (sic), it was a favorite tactic to characterize Second Amendment supporters as “gun extremists”. CSGV’s Executive Director Josh Horwitz took it a step further by calling those who opposed the Obama Administration‘s efforts “insurrectionists“. I was one of those called a “gun extremist” when I challenged the sainted Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-NY) over some of her comments.

In a news release about the VCDL’s Lobby Day next Monday, Moms Demand Action channels CSGV and calls it a “gun extremist rally”.

On January 20th, gun extremists – including out-of-state militia groups – will descend on the Virginia General Assembly, hoping to intimidate lawmakers into rejecting the democratic will of the people who, by wide margins, want (and voted for champions of) common-sense gun safety laws.

The Democrats won control due to court-ordered redistricting. The plan was devised by California-based special master Bernard Grofman of U. California – Irvine and intended to be most favorable to Democrats. It was approved in a 2-1 decision with Obama-appointed Judges Barbara Keenan and Arenda Allen in the majority. Republicans who opposed the new districts called it “legal indefensible” because it was so slanted towards the Democrats.

They portray Second Amendment Sanctuary resolutions as “lawless county resolutions”.

Lawless County resolutions, or as gun extremists call them, ‘Second Amendment Sanctuary’ resolutions, which threaten that officials will  disregard their duty to enforce duly enacted and constitutional laws, have no legal force. The resolutions also threaten the safety of communities nationwide by fostering distrust in law enforcement and may deter people from reporting individuals that may hurt themselves or others.

Since when did promoting respect for God-given, Constitutionally-protected rights become a threat to the safety of communities? That is the kind of argument one would have expected from racial segregationists who opposed school integration in the face of Brown v. Board of Education.

Overflow crowd at the Amelia County hearing

The news release continues and throws in “militia”, “white supremacist”, “Charlottesville”, and “Civil War” for good measure. I’m surprised they didn’t include “Boogaloo” as well. Remembering that Everytown and Moms Demand have the best PR flacks that money can buy, it is obvious that they want to scare both African-Americans and suburban “soccer moms” with this rhetoric. This is the sort of thing that Matt Bracken warned about in his comments on Lobby Day characterizing it as a Charlottesville-style setup.

They end this screed with a few words about their ultimate boogeyman – the NRA.

The NRA has yet to make any public statement disavowing the January 20th event or the various militia groups planning on attending. However, the NRA’s people and rhetoric are intertwined with the January 20th rally. The NRA put out a formal statement supporting the Lawless County resolutions, and former NRA TV personalities like Cam Edwards and Antonia Okafor are listed as speakers at the rally. The NRA has taken out billboards throughout Virginia ominously and baselessly warning of coming “confiscation” of firearms.

While the NRA hasn’t “disavowed” the VCDL’s Lobby Day, they haven’t supported it either. Instead, they came up with their own rally being held today. As to “baselessly warning” about confiscation, a magazine ban without grandfathering certainly meets the standard for confiscation.

We know the Demanding Moms don’t respect the Second Amendment. It is increasingly clear that they don’t support the First Amendment rights of their opponents. The First Amendment ends ” the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” That is exactly what the many thousands of Virginians and their supporters from other states will be doing on January 20th.

A reCAPTCHA For Virginia

We have all been on websites with pictures asking you to select the boxes with buses or stoplights or cars in order to prove you are not a bot. It is a system called reCAPTCHA. It was meant as an improvement over an earlier system that presented you with fuzzy numbers and letters which you had to type in.

Someone decided to create a new picture just for Virginia politicians and gun control advocates.

Flatlanders like Gov. Ralph Northam (D-VA) just don’t get it.

As someone who has lived in the Appalachians for the majority of my life, I can tell him that folks from Tazewell or Grundy or Wytheville are different from the rest of Virginians. They didn’t descend from the planter class and their families won’t be found in a list of the First Families of Virginia. Instead they are descended from the heavily Scots-Irish migrants who ended up there because they just wanted to be left the hell alone. They didn’t take kindly to being told what to do and they still don’t.

People in the mountains are a tolerant people until they are not. This is something the Virginia Democrats bought and paid for by Michael Bloomberg should keep in mind. I hope and pray that they do. Because if they don’t, all hell is going to break loose. And it won’t be pretty.