Published July 17, 2026 at 2:18 PM ET · Updated July 17, 2026 at 4:29 PM ET
Third Circuit strikes down New Jersey's AR-15 and high-capacity magazine bans
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.
Patriot Watch first flagged this story 2 hr ago, when AmmoLand reported it. So far this remains a single-source report. The most recent report came 2 hr ago from AmmoLand. Verification tier: Watching — single-source — not yet independently corroborated.
⚖ The Constitutional Angle
Caetano held the Second Amendment covers all bearable arms, including modern ones not in existence at the founding. Bruen requires the government to justify a firearms restriction with historical tradition. The Third Circuit found no such tradition supports banning AR-15s and large magazines. The Supreme Court has not yet resolved rifle bans, so the question stays open.
Jaime Caetano v. Massachusetts 577 U.S. 411 (2016)
Vote: Unanimous per curiam (8-member Court, post-Scalia); no recorded vote split · Opinion: Per curiam (unsigned)
Summarily vacating the SJC's judgment without briefing on the merits or oral argument, the Court held that each of the SJC's three rationales contradicted Heller: the Second Amendment extends prima facie to all bearable arms, including those not in existence at the founding; 'unusual' cannot be equated with 'not in common use in 1789'; and protection is not limited to weapons useful in warfare. The case was remanded for further proceedings; the Court did not itself hold the Massachusetts ban unconstitutional.
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.
Precedent facts from the PW Law Library — primary-source verified & independently audited