Patriot Watch
We watch. You know first.
Watching 2A
By the Patriot Watch Desk
Published July 14, 2026 at 3:22 PM ET · Updated July 14, 2026 at 4:50 PM ET

Appeals court upholds marijuana-related gun conviction after Supreme Court ruling

1 independent outlets are covering this story. Verification: Watching — single-source — not yet independently corroborated. Patriot Watch links to original reporting; we don't republish it.

Read the story at The Reload →

What we know

A federal appeals court upheld a marijuana-related gun conviction following a Supreme Court ruling. The decision affirms that individuals who use marijuana can be legally prohibited from possessing firearms.

Patriot Watch first flagged this story 1 d ago, when The Reload reported it. So far this remains a single-source report. The most recent report came 1 d ago from The Reload. Verification tier: Watching — single-source — not yet independently corroborated.

⚖ The Constitutional Angle

Under Bruen, when the Second Amendment's plain text covers gun possession, the government must show its regulation matches the Nation's historical tradition. Heller held the right is not unlimited and longstanding bans remain presumptively lawful but did not reach drug users. Rahimi allowed disarmament only after a court found a credible threat. Whether barring marijuana users fits that tradition is unsettled.

New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Kevin P. Bruen, Superintendent of New York State Police 597 U.S. 1 (2022)
Vote: 6-3 · Opinion: Thomas
New York's requirement that applicants demonstrate 'proper cause' — a special need for self-protection distinguishable from the general community — to obtain an unrestricted public-carry license violates the Fourteenth Amendment by preventing law-abiding citizens with ordinary self-defense needs from exercising their Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms in public. The Court held the Second Amendment protects a right to carry handguns publicly for self-defense, and rejected the two-step means-end framework lower courts had applied after Heller.
District of Columbia v. Heller 554 U.S. 570 (2008)
Vote: 5-4 · Opinion: Scalia
The Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess a firearm unconnected with service in a militia and to use it for traditionally lawful purposes such as self-defense within the home. The right is not unlimited: the Court noted that longstanding prohibitions (e.g., possession by felons and the mentally ill, carrying in sensitive places, conditions on commercial sale) remain presumptively lawful. D.C.'s ban on handgun possession in the home and its requirement that lawful firearms in the home be kept nonfunctional violate the Second Amendment.
United States v. Zackey Rahimi 602 U.S. 680 (2024)
Vote: 8-1 · Opinion: Roberts (C.J.)
When an individual has been found by a court to pose a credible threat to the physical safety of another, that individual may be temporarily disarmed consistent with the Second Amendment. 18 U.S.C. §922(g)(8), which bars firearm possession by persons subject to a domestic-violence restraining order containing such a judicial finding, is facially constitutional. The Court grounded the statute in the combined tradition of surety laws and 'going armed' laws, which permitted preventing individuals who threaten physical harm to others from misusing firearms.
Precedent facts from the PW Law Library — primary-source verified & independently audited

Conservative & independent coverage (1)

The Reload 1 d ago
Appeals court upholds marijuana-related gun conviction after Supreme Court ruling
More on: Second AmendmentCourtsSupreme Court
Sponsored
Brownells.com

More 2A coverage

Gun rights columnist flags contradictions in anti-Wolford property rights argument
2A · 1 outlets · 14 min ago
Supreme Court docket signals looming test for national concealed carry reciprocity
2A · 2 outlets · 48 min ago
Supreme Court declines new Second Amendment historical test case
2A · 1 outlets · 1 hr ago
Gun rights groups file brief in NFA challenge after SCOTUS rulings
2A · 1 outlets · 2 hr ago
Heller ruling faces renewed scrutiny 18 years later
2A · 1 outlets · 4 hr ago
Supreme Court declines new Second Amendment historical test case
2A · 2 outlets · 4 hr ago
The Patriot Watch Daily Brief

Every morning. The stories that matter, first — straight to your inbox. Free.

© 2026 Patriot Watch · Every headline links to the original reporting