The Fraternal Order of Police, an association of law enforcement officers, brought suit challenging certain provisions of the 1996 amendments to the Gun Control Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. § 921 et seq. The Order alleged that these provisions exceeded Congress’s power under the Commerce Clause, and also that they ran afoul of the Second, Fifth, and Tenth Amendments. The district court granted summary judgment for the government. Finding that the Order has standing to raise its claim under the equal protection component of Fifth Amendment due process, see
Bolling v. Sharpe,
As relevant here, the essence of the 1996 amendments was to (1) extend a pre-existing criminalization of firearms possession by persons convicted of domestic violence felonies to persons convicted of domestic violence misdemeanors; and (2) to withhold from the misdemeanants — but not the felons — an exception for firearms issued for the use of any state or locality (the so-called “public interest exception”). The Gun Control Act, now as before, also applies to anyone who supplies a person with a firearm in the fáce of this and related proscriptions.
The amendments bringing about this change are as follows: Section 922(d)(9) of Title 18 makes it illegal to provide a firearm to any person “convicted in any court of a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence”; § 922(g)(9) prohibits such misdemeanants from possеssing or receiving firearms. Section 922(g)(9) limits its .scope to possession in or affecting interstate commerce, or firearms transported in interstate commerce; § 922(d)(9) contains no similar limitation. Relief from the disability thus imposed is governed in part by § 925(a)(1), which, provides that the prohibitions of § 922 generally do not apply to firearms issued for the use of “any State or any department, agency, or political subdivision thereof.” Section 925(a)(1) explicitly excludes §§ 922(d)(9) and 922(g)(9) from this public interest exception.
Sections 922(d)(9) and (g)(9) thus forbid the states to arm those members of their police forces, militias, or National Guards who possess disabling misdemeanor convictions; they criminalize both the officers’ аc *1001 ceptance of the states’ firearms and the provision of the firearms by any person, including (presumably) any state’s representative. The disability operates regardless of the date of the conviction. So the new bans can be expected to affect a significant number of current police officers. The Joint Apрendix contains several newspaper articles recounting instances in which officers were required to turn in their guns, and it was in view of this prospect — though not solely on behalf of members directly threatened with the firearm disability — that the Order brought suit.
The threshold question on appeal is whether the Order has standing to pursue its claims. We find it necessary to аddress only the standing claim based on the interests of members who are chief law enforcement officers (“CLEOs”). Although the Order’s briefs make vague allusions to some legal theories that would entail broader relief than is suitable for the Equal Protection claim brought by the Order on behalf of the CLEOs, they fail to develop such theories. So there is no neеd to assess the standing possibly underlying such inchoate claims.
For a party to establish the sort of “case” or “controversy” over which Article III creates federal jurisdiction, it must satisfy the now familiar tripartite requirements of “(1) an injury in fact, (2) a causal relationship between the injury and the challenged conduct, and (3) a likelihood that the injury will be redrеssed by a favorable decision.”
United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 751 v. Brown Group, Inc.,
Several CLEOs. allege that enforcement of the 1996 amendments conflicts with their obligations under state law. Although there is no indication that this is true in the hard core sense of federal law requiring any CLEO to do something state law forbids (or vice ver-sa), it seems true in the broader practical sense thаt if a CLEO complies with the domestic violence misdemeanor provisions, he will find himself, in any enforcement activity requiring firearms, unable to use officers who fall under the federal ban, even where in his judgment it is highly desirable or even critical to use such officers. The government presents no reason to think that this interference should not qualify as an Articlе III injury, and we can see none.
There remains the issue of whether the CLEOs would have “prudential standing,” i.e., whether the interests they seek to advance are ■ “arguably within the zone of interests to be protected or regulated by the statute or constitutional guarantee in question.”
Ass’n of Data Processing Service Orgs. v. Camp,
Although neither
Barrows
nor
Craig
is crystal clear as to just when a pеrson whose injury qualifies under Article III may invoke the interests of a third party, the Court in
Craig
seemed to embrace the proposition asserted in a student law review note, namely, that he should be able to assert those third-party rights that would be infringed by his compliance. See
Equal protection analysis is substantially identical under the Fifth Amendment and the Fourteenth. See
Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena,
Analysis of the character of the Second Amendment right has recently burgeoned. See, e.g., Akhil Reed Amar,
The Bill of Rights
257-67 (1998); David C. Williams,
Civic Republicanism and the Citizen Militia: The Terrifying Second Amendment,
101 Yale L.J. 551, 572-86 (1991); compare
Hickman v. Block,
Section 925 extends the “public interest” exception to all sources of the firearm disability except domestic violence misdemeanors. It thus allows the states to arm police officers convicted of violent felonies, and even crimes of domestic violence so long as those crimes are felonies, while withholding this privilege with respect to domestic violence misdemeanors. No reason is offered for imposing the heavier disability on the lighter offense. The government’s brief argues that a special focus on domestic violence as compared to other misdemeanors is rational, and *1003 we agree. The defect is the neglect of more severe crimes of domestic violence, about which the government says nothing.
A conceivable justification comes to mind. As a law survives rational basis review if it is rational under any “reasonably conceivable state of facts,”
Heller v. Doe,
The problem is that the states’ laws are neither sufficiently consistent, nor sufficiently sеvere, to make this a rational approach. New Hampshire, for example, requires three felonies for the prohibition to attach. See N.H. Stat. Title XII § 159:3-a. Vermont does not prohibit gun possession 'by felons who are convicted but never incarcerated.
McGrath v. United States,
The government notes, following up its point that Congress may distinguish between crimes of domestic and violence and other crimes, that a legislature does not violate the equal protection clause merely because it approaches an issue “one step at a time, addressing itself to the phase of the problem which seems most acute to the legislative mind.”
Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma, Inc.,
We note, finally, that the treatment of domestic violence misdemeanants intersects with certain anomalies in Congress’s provision for deferring to state law on restoration of civil rights. For the purposes of the firearm disability generally, 18 U.S.C. § 921(a)(20) provides that convictions for which civil rights have beеn restored do not trigger the disability. See
United States v. Bost,
This anomalous consequence of the “civil rights restored” provision is not confined to domestic violence misdemeanors. Any conviction that triggers the disability but does not deprive the convict of civil rights will produce a similar result. Thus misdemeanors carrying a sentence of more than two years (which count as qualifying convictions under § 921(a)(20)), or felonies not accompanied by revocation of civil rights, will also activate the federal disability with no prospect of relief via restoration of civil rights.
Thé' First Circuit has responded to this discrepancy by holding that the “civil rights restored” provision of- § 921(a)(20) protects those who have never been deprived of civil rights. See
United States v. Indelicato,
This brings us to the question of remedy. The Order makes various alternative requests, one of which is that we hold § 925 inoperative. Section 928 of the Gun Control Act explicitly provides that the invalidation of one provision shall not affect the remainder of the Act. We think the most аppropriate remedy is consequently to hold that § 925 is unconstitutional insofar as it purports to withhold the public interest exception from those convicted of domestic violence misdemeanors. The government may not bar such people from possessing firearms in the public interest while it imposes a lesser restriction on thosе convicted of crimes that differ only in being more serious. Of course we do not decide whether a broader revocation of the public interest exception— for example, from all those convicted of any crime of domestic violence — would be constitutional.
So ordered.
Notes
. Whether a prudential defect in a member’s standing translates to a constitutional defect in the association’s is a niсe question. Superficially, one might conclude that it would, since the cases treat the first element of the
Washington Apple
test as (entirely) constitutional. See, e.g.,
United Food and Commercial Workers,
