Gun safety advocates in Maine and across the country say that the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision upholding a law designed to protect domestic violence victims will put guardrails on an earlier ruling that dramatically expanded gun rights.effectively upholds a federal law that allows the government to confiscate firearms from people under domestic violence restraining orders.
Margaret Groban, a former federal prosecutor who now teaches a class about firearms regulation and the 2nd Amendment at the University of Maine School of Law, at her home in South Portland. Groban, who is also a member of the Maine Gun Safety Coalition, said it's too soon to tell how the Rahimi ruling will affect legal challenges to state gun laws, including one prospective lawsuit targeting a new three-day waiting period law passed by the Legislature this spring. That's because such laws aren't dealing with criminal statutes like the domestic violence confiscation law at issue in Rahimi.
Nevertheless, Groban, who also served on the Maine Domestic Violence Homicide Review, said the Rahimi ruling should provide some comfort to domestic violence victims who obtain restraining orders against their alleged abusers.
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