The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is supporting a challenge that seeks to strike down a Hawaii law that restricts the public carrying of firearms in the state, in a case before the U.S. Supreme Court.
A ruling to invalidate the Hawaii law that is “effectively banning public carry” in the Aloha State could cause similar laws in California, Maryland, New Jersey, and New York to fall, she said.
“So a win in this case will restore Second Amendment rights for millions of Americans,” Bondi said.
The 2023 Hawaii law forbids concealed-carry license holders from carrying firearms on private property that is open to the public without explicit authorization from the property owner. This is known as the “default property rule.” It also bans firearms in places such as beaches, parks, bars, and restaurants that serve alcohol.
A federal district court in Hawaii temporarily blocked the law in September 2023 after the residents and the gun rights group filed their legal challenge.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed that decision in part last year and allowed Hawaii to enforce the law.
The challengers said the Supreme Court should take up the case to resolve a circuit split the Ninth Circuit’s ruling created with the Second Circuit, whose 2024 ruling in Antonyuk v. James “struck down an identical New York state law.”
U.S. Solicitor General D. John Sauer told the Supreme Court that Hawaii’s law conflicts with the court’s landmark 2022 ruling in New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen.
In that case, the nation’s highest court ruled that laws preventing law-abiding individuals from carrying firearms in public for self-defense can’t be upheld unless they are consistent with the nation’s historical firearm regulation traditions.
Hawaii responded by loosening licensing restrictions, while at the same time enacting a new restriction that “effectively nullifies” public-carry licenses. The new law made it a criminal offense to take firearms onto private property open to the public unless the property owner provided “unambiguous written or verbal authorization” or posted “clear and conspicuous signage” allowing firearms, the brief said.
Four other states—California, Maryland, New Jersey, and New York—whose public-carry laws were struck down by Bruen, enacted similar laws, the brief said.
In Hawaii, licensees who pull over for gasoline with a pistol in the glove compartment face a year in prison if they don’t obtain the gas-station owner’s unambiguous consent, the brief said.
“The same goes for licensees who run errands at grocery stores, dine at restaurants, or stop to buy coffee,” it said.
The brief said the law was unconstitutional.
“History establishes that firearms regulations are per se unconstitutional if they are designed to thwart the right to publicly carry arms, or if they effectively negate the right. Hawaii’s restrictions fail both metrics,” the brief said.
Before the petition was granted on Oct. 3, Lopez filed a brief saying the Supreme Court would be acting prematurely if it granted the challengers’ petition.
“There are still unresolved factual disputes regarding the historical record and the reach of Hawaii’s default property rule,” Lopez said.
“The United States has a substantial interest in the preservation of the right to keep and bear arms and in the proper interpretation of the Second Amendment,” the motion said.
It is unclear when the Supreme Court will rule on the motion.







