Current:Home > NewsNevada Supreme Court rulings hand setbacks to gun-right defenders and anti-abortion activists -Summit Capital Strategies
Nevada Supreme Court rulings hand setbacks to gun-right defenders and anti-abortion activists
View
Date:2025-04-25 18:49:21
RENO, Nev. (AP) — Nevada’s Supreme Court upheld a state ban on ghost guns Thursday, overturning a lower court’s ruling that sided with a gun manufacturer’s argument that the 2021 law regulating firearm components with no serial numbers was too broad and unconstitutionally vague.
Separately the court handed a setback to anti-abortion activists in a fight over a voter initiative that no longer was headed to the November ballot anyway, a decision that abortion rights’ advocates say nonetheless helps establish important legal guidelines regarding overall reproductive health care.
The gun law had previously been struck down by Lyon County District Judge John Schlegelmilch, who ruled in favor of a legal challenge by Nevada-based gun manufacturer Polymer80 Inc. that said the statute was too vague.
Among other things, Polymer80 argued, terms such as “blank,” “casting,” and “machined body” were not defined, while “unfinished frame or receiver” failed to specify what a “finished” frame or receiver is.
In upholding the statute, the Supreme Court said in a unanimous decision that the language that lawmakers approved and then-Gov. Steve Sisolak signed was “readily” understandable through ordinary usage and common understanding.
“The statutes here only regulate conduct involving an object that is intended to ultimately become a firearm,” Chief Justice Lydia Stiglich wrote in the ruling. “They prohibit acts involving such not-yet-complete firearms that have not been imprinted with a serial number. ”
She noted in the ruling that Polymer80’s “own legal counsel had written letters to the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms that included the words ‘blank,’ ‘casting,’ and ‘machined’ in reference to its own products, showing that these terms are commonly understood.”
The fact that the terms were “generic and broad” does not make them vague, Stiglich added.
Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford, a Democrat who filed the appeal on the state’s behalf in December 2021, said the ruling “is a win for public safety and creates sensible, practical measures to protect Nevadans from violent crime.”
“The ban on ‘ghost guns’ is one of the most impactful pieces of legislation that we have seen come through Carson City,” he said in a statement.
Polymer80’s legal counsel did not immediately respond to emails from The Associated Press seeking comment.
In the other decision Thursday, the high court rejected a Carson City judge’s ruling that the initiative’s description was misleading and violated requirements that it address a single subject by including abortion rights under the umbrella of reproductive health care.
“The medical procedures considered in the initiative petition concern reproduction. To assert that they could not all be addressed together because they are separate procedures is improper,” the Supreme Court said. “Each medical procedure relates to human reproduction and they are germane to each other and the initiative’s single subject of establishing a right to reproductive freedom.”
Abortion rights advocates hailed the decision even though they have already shifted their focus to a different and narrower initiative, which seeks to amend the state constitution and which they are are confident will make the November ballot after a judge ruled that it had met legal muster.
“Today’s ruling is an unequivocal recognition of what we’ve always know to be true: The right to reproductive freedom includes all aspects of a person’s reproductive health care,” Lindsey Harmon, president of Nevadans for Reproductive Freedom, said in a statement.
A lawyer representing a group that was fighting the voter initiative, the Coalition for Parents and Children, said expressed disappointment.
“The Court has transformed the single-subject rule into the single-category rule, which will open the floodgates to broad and deceptive initiative proposals like the one at issue in this case,” Jason Guinasso said via email. “My clients will now focus on educating the voters on why this proposal is bad law and policy for Nevadans.”
Harmon said her group has gathered more than 160,000 signatures for the new ballot initiative — well above the 102,000 required by June 26 — and intends to submit them for validation that month. The measure would enshrine in the constitution current protections under a 1990 law that guarantee access to abortion through 24 weeks of pregnancy, or later to protect the health of the pregnant person.
Voters would need to approve it in both 2024 and 2026 to change the constitution.
veryGood! (74418)
Related
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- The 'horrendous' toll on children caught in the Israel-Gaza conflict
- 3,000-plus illegally dumped tires found in dredging of river used as regatta rowing race course
- Man who found bag of cash, claimed finders-keepers, pays back town, criminal charge dropped
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- How Val Chmerkovskiy Feels About Being in Throuple With Wife Jenna Johnson and Tyson Beckford
- Unifor, GM reach deal on new contract, putting strike on hold in Canada
- Scene of a 'massacre': Inside Israeli kibbutz decimated by Hamas fighters
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- George Santos denies new federal charges, including credit card fraud, aggravated identity theft
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Salman Rushdie's new memoir 'Knife' to chronicle stabbing: See release date, more details
- “Addictive” social media feeds that keep children online targeted by New York lawmakers
- Finland police investigate undersea gas pipeline leak as possible sabotage
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- What time is the 'ring of fire' solar eclipse Saturday and where can you view it?
- The power dynamic in labor has shifted and pickets are seemingly everywhere. But for how long?
- Kansas escapes postseason ban, major penalties as IARP panel downgrades basketball violations
Recommendation
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Sketch released of person of interest in fatal shooting on Vermont trail
Birkenstock set for its stock market debut as Wall Street trades in its wingtips for sandals
Mexican official says military obstructs probe into human rights abuses during country’s ‘dirty war’
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
Man who found bag of cash, claimed finders-keepers, pays back town, criminal charge dropped
UN human rights body establishes a fact-finding mission to probe abuses in Sudan’s conflict
Wisconsin GOP leader reveals names of former justices he asked to look at impeachment