2026-06-18T14:08:56.104Z / https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-supreme-court-backs-challenge-ban-gun-ownership-by-drug-users-2026-06-18/
华盛顿6月18日路透电——美国最高法院周四作出有利于一名大麻使用者的裁决,限制了一项禁止吸毒者拥有枪支的联邦法律的适用范围,认定根据该法律提起的某些起诉侵犯了美国宪法第二修正案赋予的“持有和携带武器”的权利。
大法官们以9票全票通过的裁决,维持了下级法院驳回针对阿里·赫马尼的、依据该法律提起的非法持有枪支罪名的判决。赫马尼是拥有美国和巴基斯坦双重国籍的德克萨斯州居民,他向当局表示自己经常吸食大麻。
订阅路透社美国政治新闻简报,获取每周美国政治新闻及相关国际影响分析。点击此处注册。
撰写该裁决意见的保守派大法官尼尔·戈萨奇表示,政府并未“履行其公认的举证责任,证明对赫马尼先生的起诉符合第二修正案”。
唐纳德·特朗普政府曾为该法律辩护,但在案件审理中途,其对禁止大麻使用者拥有枪支的立场有所软化。
戈萨奇表示,政府的立场转变“使其尴尬地暗示,如今数百万经常吸食大麻的美国人具有绝对且异常的危险性”。
赫马尼的律师纳兹·艾哈迈德对裁决表示欢迎。
“法院的一致裁决将保护数百万美国人免受严苛惩罚,仅仅因为他们碰巧吸食大麻并持有枪支,”艾哈迈德说道。
1968年通过的《枪支管制法》规定,任何“是管制物质的非法使用者或成瘾者”均不得持有枪支,违者属非法行为。
亨特·拜登案
这项枪支限制规定导致亨特·拜登在2024年被定罪,同年他获得了时任总统乔·拜登的赦免。检察官指控这名总统之子在2018年购买一把柯尔特眼镜蛇手枪时,就吸毒情况作了虚假陈述。
2023年,联邦调查局突袭了赫马尼与父母同住的丹顿县住宅,在其家中查获一把格洛克9毫米手枪、大麻和可卡因,赫马尼因此遭到起诉。赫马尼称自己大约每隔一天就吸食大麻,但当局并未指控他在搜查当时处于吸毒后受影响状态。
司法部在法庭文件中表示,赫马尼的行为引起了联邦调查局的注意,理由是他曾前往伊朗,以及他的兄弟曾在伊朗的一所大学就读。但起诉书中仅包含一项依据《枪支管制法》提出的指控。
根据另一部法律《美国受控物质法》,非法药物被分为不同等级,即所谓的“附表”。
长期以来,大麻与海洛因、摇头丸和佩奥特仙人球一同被列为附表I物质,这意味着它具有很高的滥用潜力且无医疗价值。但在特朗普签署有关大麻的行政命令后,司法部于今年4月放松了对部分大麻产品的限制,并将该药物重新归类为危险性较低的物质。
司法部律师向最高法院表示,赫马尼吸食的大麻应被视为附表I管制物质,因为在他犯下非法持有枪支罪行时,大麻确实属于这一类别。但他们同时建议,法院可以为获得美国食品药品监督管理局批准或持有州医用大麻执照的大麻产品创设一项禁令例外。
赫马尼提出动议要求驳回指控,辩称该指控侵犯了他的第二修正案权利。他还援引了最高法院在2022年一项判决中确立的严格标准,即枪支法律必须“符合国家历史上的枪支监管传统”,才能符合第二修正案的要求。
总部位于新奥尔良的美国第五巡回上诉法院于2025年驳回了非法持有枪支的指控,裁定只有当人们在持有枪支时处于吸毒受影响状态,才能适用枪支禁令。
“惯常使用者”
在上诉过程中,特朗普政府时期的司法部敦促最高法院采纳一项规则,允许对“惯常使用”非法药物的人提起非法持有枪支的指控。该政府表示,这项限制规定与19世纪的法律类似,当时的法律允许当局暂时解除“惯常酗酒者”的武装。
“我们理解毒品和枪支有时会构成危险组合,”戈萨奇在裁决意见中写道。“我们也理解,政府试图将现代禁毒相关法律与历史法律进行类比,必须考虑到这样一个现实:如今广为人知的许多药物在早期美国闻所未闻。”
戈萨奇表示,那些针对酗酒者的法律与现代联邦枪支法有所不同。
由美国公民自由联盟支持的赫马尼的律师辩称,经常吸食大麻的人不能与此类法律中提及的“惯常酗酒者”相提并论。
在一个就在如何应对持续的枪支暴力(包括频发的大规模枪击事件)问题上存在深刻分歧的国家,最高法院经常对第二修正案的保护作出扩大解释,包括在2008年、2010年和2022年的重大裁决中。
目前拥有6比3保守派多数席位的最高法院,于今年1月听取了另一起重要的第二修正案案件的辩论。法院的保守派大法官对夏威夷州的一项法律表示怀疑,该法律禁止在未经所有者许可的情况下,在大多数对公众开放的私人场所(如多数商铺)携带手枪。预计将于6月底前作出裁决。
约翰·克鲁泽尔 报道;威尔·邓汉姆 编辑
我们的准则:汤姆森路透社信任原则。
US Supreme Court limits ban on gun ownership by marijuana users
2026-06-18T14:08:56.104Z / https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-supreme-court-backs-challenge-ban-gun-ownership-by-drug-users-2026-06-18/
WASHINGTON, June 18 (Reuters) – The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of a marijuana user on Thursday by limiting the application of a federal law that bars drug users from owning guns, finding that certain prosecutions under the measure intrude on the U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment right to “keep and bear arms.”
The justices, in a 9-0 ruling, upheld a lower court’s decision to dismiss an illegal gun possession charge brought under the law at issue against Ali Hemani, an American-Pakistani dual citizen and resident of Texas who told authorities he was a regular marijuana user.
Get weekly news and analysis on U.S. politics and how it matters to the world with the Reuters Politics U.S. newsletter. Sign up here.
Conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch, who authored the ruling, said the government had not “carried its conceded burden of showing its prosecution of Mr. Hemani complies with the Second Amendment.”
President Donald Trump’s administration had defended the law, though midway through the case it softened its position on barring marijuana users from owning guns.
Gorsuch said the government’s shift “leaves it awkwardly positioned to suggest that the millions of Americans who now regularly use marijuana are categorically and unusually dangerous.”
Naz Ahmad, a lawyer for Hemani, welcomed the decision.
“The court’s unanimous ruling will protect millions of Americans from draconian punishment, simply because they happen to use marijuana and own a firearm,” Ahmad said.
A 1968 federal law called the Gun Control Act makes possession of a firearm illegal for anyone who “is an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance.”
THE HUNTER BIDEN CASE
That gun restriction led to a 2024 conviction of Hunter Biden, who later that year received a pardon from his father, then-President Joe Biden. Prosecutors had accused the president’s son of lying about his use of narcotics in 2018 when he purchased a Colt Cobra handgun.
Hemani was charged in 2023 following an FBI raid of the home he shared with his parents in Denton County in which agents found a Glock 9mm pistol, marijuana and cocaine. Hemani said he used marijuana about every other day, though authorities did not accuse him of being intoxicated at the time of the search.
The Justice Department said in court papers that Hemani’s actions had drawn FBI attention, citing his travel to Iran and his brother’s attendance at an Iranian university. But Hemani’s indictment contained only the single charge under the Gun Control Act.
Illegal drugs are grouped by tiers, known as “schedules,” under another law called the U.S. Controlled Substances Act.
Marijuana had long been listed as a Schedule I substance alongside heroin, ecstasy and peyote, implying it had high potential for abuse and no medical value. But after Trump signed an executive order concerning marijuana, the Justice Department in April loosened restrictions on some marijuana products and reclassified the drug as less dangerous.
Lawyers for the Justice Department told the Supreme Court that Hemani’s marijuana should be treated as a Schedule I controlled substance, as it was at the time of his illegal gun possession offense. But they suggested that the court could create a carve-out from the gun restriction for marijuana products that are approved by the Food and Drug Administration or covered by a state medical marijuana license.
Hemani moved to dismiss his charge, arguing it violated his Second Amendment rights. He also cited the stringent test the Supreme Court set in a 2022 decision requiring that gun laws be “consistent with the nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation” in order to comport with the Second Amendment.
The New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2025 dismissed the illegal gun possession charge, ruling that the firearm ban cannot be applied to people unless they are under the influence of drugs while in possession of a gun.
‘HABITUAL USERS’
On appeal, Trump’s Justice Department urged the Supreme Court to adopt a rule that would allow illegal gun possession charges to be brought against “habitual users” of unlawful drugs. The administration said the restriction was historically similar to laws from the 1800s allowing authorities to temporarily disarm “habitual drunkards.”
“We appreciate that drugs and guns can sometimes make for a dangerous mix,” Gorsuch wrote in the decision. “We appreciate, too, that the government’s effort to analogize a modern statute addressing drug use to historical laws must be approached with a sensitivity to the fact that many drugs well known today were unknown in early America.”
Gorsuch said those drunkard laws were different from the modern federal gun law.
Lawyers for Hemani, who is backed by the ACLU, argued that regular marijuana users are not comparable to “habitual drunkards” referenced in such laws.
In a nation deeply divided over how to address persistent firearms violence including frequent mass shootings, the Supreme Court often has taken an expansive view of Second Amendment protections including in major rulings in 2008, 2010 and 2022.
The court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, in January heard arguments in another important Second Amendment case. The court’s conservative justices signaled skepticism toward a Hawaii law that restricts the carrying of handguns on private property open to the public, like most businesses, without the owner’s permission. A ruling is expected by the end of June.
Reporting by John Kruzel; Editing by Will Dunham
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
发表回复