Maryland Shall Issue v. Moore and Firearm Purchaser Licensing Podcast Por  arte de portada

Maryland Shall Issue v. Moore and Firearm Purchaser Licensing

Maryland Shall Issue v. Moore and Firearm Purchaser Licensing

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In the inaugural episode of "Sufficiently Analogous," the team and their guests take a deep dive into the case of Maryland Shall Issue v. Moore—a case that could shape the future of Firearm Purchaser Licensing laws across the country. Last year, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit found Maryland’s Handgun Qualification License (HQL) unconstitutional. An HQL is a form of Firearm Purchaser Licensing that requires would-be handgun purchasers to apply for and receive a license. The two-judge majority ruling stated that the HQL, while not a permanent ban, violated the Second Amendment because it prevented individuals from immediately obtaining a handgun.

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Timestamps

0:00 - Introduction

2:30 - Recap of Bruen Framework

4:38 - What is Firearm Purchaser Licensing?

7:35 - Cass Crifasi, PhD, MPH, co-director of the Center for Gun Violence Solutions discusses HQL & Firearm Purchaser Licensing

21:23 - Case History of MSI v. Moore

30:22 - Professor Saul Cornell, Paul and Diane Guenther Chair in American History at Fordham University discusses historic analogies and the Bruen test

45:50 - MSI v. Moore Oral Arguments and Predictions

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