Firearms owners added another prong to their campaign against a sweeping Massachusetts law, filing a new federal lawsuit late last week challenging its constitutionality.
While other lawsuits and a repeal campaign continue to unfold, a coalition of industry groups including the National Rifle Association and Massachusetts gun owners on Friday sued over firearm age restrictions included in the wide-reaching package Governor Maura Healey signed in July.
Plaintiffs argue the law violates Second Amendment rights by preventing Bay Staters older than 18 but younger than 21 from possessing or carrying handguns and semiautomatic firearms.
“Adults between the ages of 18 and 20 are part of ‘the people,’ and there is no historical tradition of limiting the firearms rights of adults on account of their age,” they wrote in their complaint. “And as for the types of firearms that Massachusetts forbids them from owning, much less carrying, there can be no dispute that they qualify as ‘arms’ within the ‘plain text’ meaning of the Second Amendment.”
People ages 18 to 20 in Massachusetts can acquire firearm identification cards, but that document does not grant the ability to purchase, possess, or transfer handguns or semiautomatic firearms, according to plaintiffs. To do so, someone would need to obtain a license to carry, which the law restricts only to people 21 and older.
One of the plaintiffs is Mack Escher of Brewster, a student at the Massachusetts Maritime Academy who falls in the 18-to-20 age range. He has a firearm identification card, but under the new law is unable to purchase or possess a handgun or semiautomatic firearm.
He was joined in the lawsuit by the Gun Owners’ Action League, Commonwealth Second Amendment, the Firearms Policy Coalition Inc, the Second Amendment Foundation, and the NRA, as well as the national group Gun Owners of America Inc.
“Massachusetts’s new gun control law is one of the most severe attacks on the right to keep and bear arms in our nation’s history,” John Commerford, executive director of the NRA Institute for Legislative Action, said in a statement alongside the lawsuit. “Vindicating the rights of young adults is just our first step towards dismantling this unconstitutional law.”
Supporters of the massive law argue that it will save lives, especially as police work to limit the spread of untraceable “ghost guns,” and keep gun violence rates in Massachusetts low.
Plaintiffs cited the US Supreme Court’s 2022 New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen decision, which deemed unconstitutional a New York law that required applicants to show special need to obtain a concealed carry license. That landmark decision served as a catalyst for the Massachusetts legislation two years later.
The new case, focused on young adult firearms rights, is the latest piece of a broad effort targeting the new restrictions and reforms.
It is at least the third lawsuit filed in federal court so far. The first challenge, filed soon after Healey signed the measure, focused on new licensing and training frameworks. Plaintiffs dropped that case in December after the Legislature delayed the effective date of a requirement for applicants to complete a live-fire training course.