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Originally published February 25, 2009 at 12:00 AM | Page modified February 25, 2009 at 9:29 AM

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Court upholds stripping gun rights in domestic abuse cases

he Supreme Court upheld the broad reach of a federal gun-control law Tuesday and said that no one who has a conviction for any crime of domestic violence may own a firearm.

Los Angeles Times

The day in D.C

Labor confirmation: California Rep. Hilda Solis won confirmation in a 80-17 vote Tuesday as President Obama's labor secretary, giving the agency a decidedly pro-worker tilt after years of business-friendly leadership under the Bush administration.

Burris urged to quit: Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, D-Ill., suggested to Sen. Roland Burris, D-Ill., Tuesday that he resign, but Burris rejected the idea. Durbin cited recent disclosures that Burris had spoken with several associates of then-Gov. Rod Blagojevich before his appointment to the Senate seat and tried to raise money for the since-impeached Democratic governor.

D.C. vote: The District of Columbia's two-century-long wait for a voice in Congress was a step closer to ending Tuesday with a crucial Senate vote to take up legislation giving the capital city's 600,000 residents a full seat in the House. The Senate voted 62-34, two more than needed, to begin debate on the measure that would increase the House to 437 members. It would give the Democratic-dominated city a new vote while adding a fourth seat to Republican-leaning Utah.

Seattle Times news services

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court upheld the broad reach of a federal gun-control law Tuesday and said that no one who has a conviction for any crime of domestic violence may own a firearm.

The 7-2 decision strips gun rights from tens of thousands of people who were convicted or had pleaded to an assault against a spouse, a live-in partner, a child or a parent. These crimes include not just felonies but misdemeanors.

"Firearms and domestic strife are a potentially deadly combination nationwide," Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said.

Gun-control advocates and law-enforcement officials praised the ruling. On average, more than three people are killed each day by domestic partners, said the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

About 14 percent of police officers who are killed in the line of duty die in response to a domestic-violence call, the group said.

Since 1996, federal authorities have turned down more than 175,000 prospective gun buyers because of domestic-violence charges, according to the Brady Center. Most of them could have had their rights restored had the court ruled the other way.

Tuesday's ruling did not involve the Second Amendment and its right to "keep and bear arms." Last year, the high court ruled law-abiding persons had a constitutional right to have a gun at home for self-defense, but it said felons can be denied gun rights.

In 1968, Congress made it illegal for felons to own a gun in the United States. Lawmakers in 1996 extended this ban to include those convicted of "a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence."

Until Tuesday, however, it had been unclear who is covered by this provision. Only about half the states have laws that make "domestic violence" a crime. Across the nation, prosecutors often charge offenders with an assault or battery.

Two years ago, the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the federal gun ban did not extend to state charges involving assault or battery. Randy Hayes, a West Virginia man, had challenged the federal law after he was found to have three guns and was convicted of illegal gun possession in 2004. Ten years earlier, he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor battery against his then-wife.

Ruling for Hayes, the appeals court said this "generic battery" conviction did not count as a "misdemeanor crime of domestic violence," and it freed him from the federal charges.

The Supreme Court overturned that ruling Tuesday in United States v. Hayes and restored the broad view of the federal law. Ginsburg's opinion said the ban on gun ownership extends to any person who has been convicted of any crime involving "physical force or the threatened use of a deadly weapon," so long as there was a "domestic relationship" between the perpetrator and the victim.

Congress sought to keep "firearms out of the hands of domestic abusers," she said, but the law would be "dead letter" in much of the nation if it were read as narrowly Hayes sought.

Only Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. and Justice Antonin Scalia dissented. They focused on the precise words of the law and said it should be applied narrowly.

Also

The court dealt a setback to public-employee unions in states including Idaho and Utah. In a 6-3 ruling, it said these states may forbid agencies from collecting union political dues from employees.

Five labor unions and the Idaho state AFL-CIO successfully argued in lower federal courts that a 2003 Idaho law forcing cities, counties and school districts to eliminate a payroll-deduction funding union political-action committees violated the First Amendment.

Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company

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