D.C. Wrongfully Arrested 6 People For Carrying Handguns In Public, Federal Judge Rules
SEP 30, 4:12 PM
D.C. Wrongfully Arrested 6 People For Carrying Handguns In Public, Federal Judge Rules
Jenny Gathright
https://twitter.com/jennygathright
A federal judge ruled Wednesday that D.C. police officers wrongfully arrested six people for carrying handguns in public between 2012 and 2014, potentially creating a legal pathway for as many as 4,500 people arrested under similar circumstances to seek damages from the city.
The six plaintiffs were arrested for violating a combination of D.C. gun laws that have since been struck down or changed. They sued and asked for several forms of relief including judgment in their favor, the sealing of their arrest and prosecution records, and the award of damages.
The lead plaintiff in the cases decided on Wednesday is Maggie Smith, a nurse from North Carolina who was pulled over in 2014 and subsequently arrested for carrying a pistol that was licensed in her home state. The other plaintiffs are a combination of D.C., Maryland, and Virginia residents who were arrested on gun charges in the District. All of their charges were eventually dropped and the laws they were arrested for violating are no longer in effect. They filed the lawsuit jointly in 2015.
D.C. previously enforced a complete ban on carrying handguns in public, which a federal judge ruled unconstitutional in 2014. The city replaced that complete ban with the so-called good reason law, which said that residents needed to have a compelling reason to obtain a permit for a firearm but the good reason law was also ruled unconstitutional by an appeals court in 2017. D.C. has also since repealed laws that prevented non-D.C. residents from possessing firearms and criminalized the possession of ammunition by people who didnt have their guns registered in the District.
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