Supreme Court Bolsters Domestic Violence Gun Ban Law

Supreme Court Bolsters Domestic Violence Gun Ban Law

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court says a federal law barring people convicted of minor domestic violence offenses from possessing guns can be enforced even in states where no proof of physical force is required to support the domestic violence charge.

The justices on Wednesday reinstated charges against a Tennessee man who pleaded guilty to misdemeanor domestic assault in 2001. He was then charged in 2009 with illegal possession of a firearm. Lower courts threw out the gun charge because Tennessee law doesn't require physical, or violent, force to have been used in misdemeanor domestic assault.

The Supreme Court reversed that decision in an opinion by Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

The Obama administration argued that the lower courts' reading of the law would render it unenforceable in many states.

Before You Go

Chief Justice John Roberts

Supreme Court Justices

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot