Defendant-Appellant Emmanuel Hui-tron-Guizar entered a conditional guilty plea to being an illegal alien in possession of firearms transported or shipped in interstate commerce, 18 U.S.C. §§ 922(g)(5)(A), 924(a)(2), and was sentenced to 18 months’ imprisonment. Mr. Huitron-Guizar is to be delivered upon release to an immigration official for deportation. On appeal, he argues that § 922(g)(5)(a) is unconstitutional and that the district court committed various sentencing errors in applying the Sentencing Guidelines. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a), and we affirm.
Background
Mr. Huitron-Guizar was born in Mexico and brought to Wyoming at age three. In March 2011, officers executed a warrant on his home and discovered three firearms — a 7.62x39mm rifle, a 12-gauge semi-automatic shotgun, and a Smith
&
Wesson semiautomatic pistol. They learned from his sister that Mr. Huitron-Guizar, now 24 years old, was, unlike her, not a U.S. citizen. The district court denied his motion to dismiss the indictment on grounds that § 922(g)(5) unconstitutionally abridges the right to bear arms as interpreted in
District of Columbia v. Heller,
Discussion
The constitutionality of a federal statute is reviewed de novo,
United States v. Carel,
A. Second Amendment and Equal Protection Challenges
Heller
held that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess a firearm, unconnected with service in a militia, and to use that firearm for traditionally lawful purposes, like self-defense within the home. This right was understood by eminent authorities like William Blackstone and James Wilson as but an application of the natural right of self-preserva
*1166
tion.
Our issue concerns the “who.” Section 922(g), a part of the amended Gun Control Act of 1968, forbids gun possession by nine classes of individuals: felons, fugitives, addicts or users of controlled substances, the mentally ill, illegal and non-immigrant aliens, the dishonorably discharged, renouncers of their citizenship, those subject to court orders for harassing, stalking, or threatening intimate partners or their children, and those convicted for misdemeanor domestic violence. No Second Amendment challenge since
Heller
to any of these provisions has succeeded.
See, e.g., United States v. McCane,
Mr. Huitron-Guizar agrees that those guilty of serious crimes and the mentally ill are sensibly stripped of firearms they might otherwise lawfully keep. Yet he wonders what it is about aliens that permits Congress to impose what he considers a similar disability? The starting point' to any answer was given by Justice Jackson in
Johnson v. Eisentrager,
The alien, to whom the United States has been traditionally hospitable, has been accorded a generous and ascending scale of rights as he increases his identity with our society. Mere lawful presence in the country creates an implied assurance of safe conduct and gives him certain rights; they become more extensive and secure when he makes preliminary declaration of intention to become a citizen, and they expand to those of full citizenship upon naturalization.
This ascending scale of constitutional rights is elaborate. An alien outside the country has fewer rights than one within, e.g., an alien held at the border has no right to a deportation hearing.
Shaughnessy v. Mezei,
Mr. Huitron-Guizar’s implicit Equal Protection argument is that Congress does not have power to “discriminate against non-citizens by not allowing them to have all the constitutional rights that United States citizens have.” Aplt. Br. 16. This is not correct. Federal statutes that classify based on alienage need only a rational basis; they flow from plenary powers over admission, exclusion, naturalization, national security, and foreign relations.
Mathews v. Diaz,
More vexing is the Second Amendment claim. Until last year the federal alien-in-possession statute had not been challenged in a U.S. Court of Appeals under
Heller.
Does that amendment even protect illegal aliens? It provides: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the
right of the people
to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” (Emphasis added.) We know that the Fifth Amendment applies to illegal aliens within our territory because it provides that “No
person
shall be____”
Kwong Hai Chew v. Colding,
Yet the meaning of “the people” is less clear. The only Supreme Court case to scrutinize the phrase is
United States v. Verdugo-Urquidez,
‘[T]he people’ seems to have been a term of art employed in select parts of the Constitution____ [Its uses] sugges[t] that ‘the people’ protected by the Fourth Amendment, and by the First and Second Amendments, and to whom rights and powers are reserved in the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, refers to a class of persons who are part of a national community or who have otherwise developed sufficient connection with this country to be considered part of that community.
Id.
at 265,
Does
Heller
shed any light? Neither majority nor dissents mentioned “aliens,” “immigrants,” or “non-citizens.” The Court did say that “nothing in our opinion” was meant to undermine the “longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill,” two other categories enumerated in § 922(g), given there as “examples.”
And although the Court did not face the question before us, it is not exactly reading between the lines to note how frequently the opinion connected arms-bearing and citizenship. A sampling: “we do not read the Second Amendment to protect the right of citizens to carry arms for
any sort
of confrontation, just as we do not read the First Amendment to protect the right of citizens to speak for
any purpose,” id.
at 595,
Yet despite this we hesitate to infer from
Heller
a rule that the right to bear arms is categorically inapplicable to non-citizens. We realize that many district courts have discerned such a rule,
see, e.g., United States v. Guerrero-Leco,
Perhaps an even greater reason not to read an unwritten holding into
Heller
is that the question seems large and complicated. “[S]ince this case represents [our] first in-depth examination of the Second Amendment,” the Court explained, “one should not expect it to clarify the entire field.”
Heller,
That Congress saw fit to exclude illegal aliens from carrying guns may indicate its belief, entitled to our respect, that such aliens, as a class, possess no such constitutional right. We think we can avoid the constitutional question by assuming, for purposes of this case, that the Second Amendment, as a “right of the people,” could very well include, in the absence of a statute restricting such a right, at least some aliens unlawfully here — and still easily find § 922(g)(5) constitutional. The apparent inconsistency in assuming the existence of a right before sustaining a law that acts as a blanket prohibition on it is, we believe, outweighed by the prudence of abstaining on a question of such far-reaching dimensions without a full record and adversarial argument. If the right didn’t apply at all, the case would be at an end. If the right does apply, even if in less robust dimensions than it does for citizens, the question is the level of scrutiny.
We applied “intermediate” scrutiny in
Reese,
The “principal purposes” of the Gun Control Act of 1968 are to “make it possible to keep firearms out of the hands of those not legally entitled to possess them because of age, criminal background, or incompetency, and to assist law enforcement authorities in the States and their subdivisions in combating the increasing prevalence of crime.” S.Rep. No. 90-1097, *1170 at 22 (1968), 1968 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2112, 2113-14. The alien-in-possession ban was incorporated from a predecessor statute by the 1986 Firearm Owners’ Protection Act, Pub. L. No. 99-308, 100 Stat. 449, likewise with purpose of keeping instruments of deadly force away from those deemed irresponsible or dangerous. S.Rep. No. 98-583, at 12 (1986).
Congress may have concluded that illegal aliens, already in probable present violation of the law, simply do not receive the full panoply of constitutional rights enjoyed by law-abiding citizens. Or that such individuals, largely outside the formal system of registration, employment, and identification, are harder to trace and more likely to assume a false identity. Or Congress may have concluded that those who show a willingness to defy our law are candidates for further misfeasance or at least a group that ought not be armed when authorities seek them. It is surely a generalization to suggest, as courts do,
see, e.g., United States v. Orellana,
Nothing is this opinion purports to express an opinion on the Second Amendment rights of lawfully present aliens, yet we note that, since 1998, under this same statute, even those admitted on non-immigrant visas (usually issued to visitors for business or pleasure) are prohibited from having firearms and ammunition unless they secure a special waiver or happen to be hunters or diplomatic or law-enforcement officials here on business. 18 U.S.C. § 922(y)(2).
The thrust of
Heller,
or at least the intended thrust of much
post-Heller
litigation, has been to broaden the right. Recently some state statutes that burden gun possession by lawful permanent aliens (which § 922(g)(5) does not cover) have been declared invalid under the Equal Protection Clause, which requires that strict scrutiny be applied to state laws that impose restrictions based on alienage.
See, e.g., People v. Bounasri,
If the right’s “central component,” as interpreted by
Heller,
*1171 B. Sentencing Error
Mr. Huitron-Guizar was sentenced under U.S.S.G. § 2K2.1(a)(4)(B),
see
AFFIRMED.
