Here’s another gun case headed for the U.S. Supreme Court sometime this fall. Here’s the shortened version of how it got to this point.
In 1994, Randy Edwards Hayes of Marion County, West Virginia pleaded guilty to a West Virginia law charging him with misdemeanor battery against his ex-wife.
In 1996, it became federal law that if convicted of a domestic violence misdemeanor, you can no longer possess a firearm.
In 2004, police found a rifle in Hayes’ home and charged him with illegal possession of a firearm after a domestic violence conviction.
Hayes lawyers argue that it is unconstitutional to apply a new law to an old conviction and they say there is a difference between Hayes’ plead to a state misdemeanor battery charge and a federal domestic violence charge.
Any ruling in the case is bound to have interesting consequences in the treatment of gun laws and how new laws affect past crimes.
I’ll try to follow this interesting case.
Tom Remington
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