Supreme Court Takes Up Marijuana Case And That Might Be Bad News!

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Estimated reading time: 4 minutes

The Supreme Court just added a second gun case to its docket this term, taking up United States v. Hemani, a challenge to 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3) — the federal ban on firearm possession by “unlawful users” of controlled substances.

On paper, that sounds like the kind of Bruen-era opportunity gun owners should cheer. In reality? This may be the wrong vehicle at the wrong time.

What the Case is About, in Plain English

Section 922(g)(3) makes it a federal felony for anyone who uses illegal drugs to possess a firearm. There’s a long history of disarming people who are actively intoxicated (think “no guns while you’re drunk”).

But there isn’t a clear historical tradition of a 24/7/365 ban on gun ownership for anyone who uses a disfavored substance at any point. That’s an especially big deal in the dozens of states where adults can legally use marijuana under state law while federal law still says it’s illegal.

The Fifth Circuit looked at those history-and-tradition questions and said the statute was unconstitutional as applied to Hemani. The Department of Justice asked the Supreme Court to reverse — and the Court said, “We’ll hear it.”

Why Gun Owners Shouldn’t Assume This Is a Win

Two big reasons.

1) “Bad facts make bad law.”

This isn’t a clean “state-legal marijuana cardholder wants to keep a home-defense pistol” test case. According to the government’s filings summarized by William Kirk of Washington Gun Law (see video above), Hemani comes wrapped in ugly facts: alleged ties and sympathies the feds highlight, plus admissions of regular drug use and drugs recovered during a search alongside a handgun. Even if some of that is disputed, it’s exactly the kind of record that tempts courts to announce broad, government-friendly rules. If SCOTUS wants to draw a line that keeps §922(g)(3) largely intact, this is the perfect vehicle to do it.

2) The bandwidth problem

The Court already granted another firearms case this term (Wolford v. Lopez, targeting Hawaii’s “sensitive places” carry restrictions). Historically, SCOTUS doesn’t take many Second Amendment cases in a single term. With high-capacity magazine bans, so-called “assault weapon” bans, and other post-Bruen litigation queuing up, adding Hemani now could crowd out cleaner, more impactful petitions.

The Stakes for Real People

An AI-generated image of an older hippie smoking a joint and holding a revolver.
I used AI to create this cover image of an older hippie smoking a joint and holding a revolver. The AI wasn’t smart enough to include proper trigger discipline. LOL.

For millions of otherwise law-abiding gun owners living in states with legal cannabis, §922(g)(3) is a trap. Under current federal law, a recreational joint on Friday night can make you a prohibited person on Saturday morning.

SEE ALSO: CBS Chicago: Blacks with Valid CCWs Face Felony Charges Anyway

That’s exactly the kind of overbreadth Bruen was supposed to rein in — disarming the dangerous while respecting the rights of the ordinary. The fear is that Hemani’s messy record nudges the Court toward blessing a broad, status-based prohibition instead of a narrower, conduct-based rule (e.g., no guns while impaired).

What to Watch Next

  • Briefing & oral argument: DOJ will push a sweeping “habitual user = prohibited person” theory. The defense will argue history supports disarming only when someone is actually intoxicated or actively dangerous, not forever because of past use.
  • How the justices frame “history and tradition”: Do they focus on laws punishing carrying while drunk, or do they embrace modern status bans?
  • Collateral impact: A government win could embolden agencies and lower courts to uphold other status-based disqualifiers with thin historical roots.

Bottom line

Yes, the Supreme Court taking another gun case could be huge. But Hemani is a risky hill to fight on. With the government setting the table and the facts looking tailor-made to spook judges, a decision that shores up §922(g)(3) could leave state-legal users — and anyone else swept into a vague “unlawful user” category — disarmed nationwide.

We’ll track the briefing, the argument date, and what this means for gun owners who live at the intersection of evolving state drug laws and a stubborn federal prohibition.

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  • Dr Dave November 10, 2025, 5:44 pm

    There sure are a lot of keyboard warrior comments on this topic, from people who probably all call themselves pro gun. I think the devil is in the details. How is habitual user defined? Is someone who smoked regularly in high-school but hasn’t done it in 20 years now disqualified? Go to a party and try the pretty brownies that happen to be laced? Are you still hood to go, or not? What if MJ later gets legalized by the feds? Who abuses firearms more, stoners or alcoholics?

  • Tubagoat November 10, 2025, 8:20 am

    This all becomes a moot point if marijuana is rescheduled. But, cant do that can we?!?!

  • Grumpy Old Biker October 26, 2025, 12:08 am

    There is no federal law preventing someone from simply possessing a firearm while under the influence of alcohol. What would constitute “under the influence”, and how would they prove it? Would they arrest the guy and make him take a breathalyzer test, like they do for drunk drivers? Sure, it’s common sense not to get involved with a firearm after drinking too much, but “common” sense is a misnomer. It’s actually quite rare anymore.

  • Kevin October 24, 2025, 10:19 am

    So…. Let’s drink a case of beer and go shoot tin cans in the back yard… See the hypocrisy???

  • Bob J October 24, 2025, 9:04 am

    Well Paul look back to Veit Nam era and all the “pot heads” who defended the country. I was in 74-78 and the guys whom I would have preferred going to combat with ( I was Airborne Infantry ) all smoke pot. Alcohol and marijaunna are to completely diffrerent highs. One dulls your senses and the other hightens them. But I guess most don’t know that.

    • paul I'll call you what I want/1st Amendment October 24, 2025, 1:38 pm

      kinda explains why we lost that one!

      • BeoBear October 25, 2025, 12:39 pm

        It had nothing to do with pot and I suspect you know that as even a 6th grader would. It’s pretty disrespectful to the men who fought and died in a war where our own government never gave them a fair chance at winning until the war was already lost. We’ll never know if we could have won that war if the politics hadn’t interfered daily but suggesting we lost because our soldiers were all stoned is beyond disgusting.

        • paul I'll call you what I want/1st Amendment October 26, 2025, 12:59 pm

          bragging about being stoned and the truth is you lost that one, i find your comments disgusting towards us who were ready to fight and fought in the gulf!!! we were ready and able you just wanted to party by your own admissions!

          • No Comparison November 10, 2025, 6:48 am

            “…disgusting towards us who were ready to fight and fought in the gulf!!!”. Are you really comparing a Vietnam vet to a Gulf War vet? I’m a veteran that didn’t go to the Gulf – but did go to Panama and spent most of my time with training units. I obviously didn’t go to Vietnam; but I have a lot of high speed friends that went to both. Both are worthy of exceptional respect – but to compare the two is ridiculous. You should maybe consider getting to know a couple of Vietnam vets. If you’re disgusted about Vietnam vets trying to cope with the situation they were in, you’re probably the same pog with ptsd that never walked outside of a secured sandy area.

    • GM1-Mic November 10, 2025, 8:12 am

      So you never actually had to go into combat with someone while they were stoned or under the influence of drugs? I’ll give you that alcohol and marijuana are two different highs but how do you figure one dolls your senses in the other heightens it? Alcohol is a depressant and marijuana has never been classified. I have never seen or met a stoner that spoke more intelligent, was more alert, drove better or was able to operate a piece of equipment better while stoned.

      • paul I'll call you what I want/1st Amendment November 10, 2025, 11:03 am

        I’m sure you go into combat all the time with drug addicts……..or at least you will say you do.

  • GM1-Mic October 24, 2025, 8:15 am

    Personally, I think marijuana should be legalized considering the racist reason it was made a schedule one drug in the first place. With that put aside… There should be the same rules for using weed or alcohol with guns just as it is for driving. That goes for prescription medications and the like…
    Life really isn’t that difficult, humans make it difficult!

  • Dom Perriello October 24, 2025, 7:39 am

    Could be the opposite – perhaps AI was smart enough to realize that a joint-smoking hippie gunslinger wouldn’t be likely to care about trigger finger discipline.

  • paul I'll call you what I want/1st Amendment October 24, 2025, 2:33 am

    well you all know my stand on this……decision making will suck when under the influence and mix that with guns not good.

    • Dano November 10, 2025, 9:41 am

      I see a lack of critical thinking on this and other gun related subjects here, all by the same commenters. Rights have responsibilities. Because someone enjoys alcohol or uses MJ for pain medication some think that these people should be restricted from firearms. How many people out of 360 million would you need to restrict because they like beer or a joint now and then? So, you would rather be in a restaurant when a crazy comes in with a gun to shoot the place up and no one in there can have their legal firearm because they consumed a couple beers or maybe a little marijuana earlier that day? Criminals don’t obey laws, neither do crazy people or indoctrinated illegal aliens. How do you stop them from killing, your laws never work on those who are not normal, law abiding people. The second amendment says, “the right of the people shall not be infringed”.
      After that, it is the responsibility of the person to make decisions. Certainly we know how effective laws are on those people who could care less about them, namely criminals and the insane. Piling on more laws to restrict self defense and the defense of others will be if decided by the courts, another unconstitutional law to harm the people who aren’t the problem.

      • paul I'll call you what I want/1st Amendment November 10, 2025, 10:44 am

        I would prefer to have my own gun and not depend on someone under the influence to protect me! Since that thought never occurred to you and the time to reply i would guess that your whole job here is to harass legal gun owners with asinine comments.

        • Dano November 10, 2025, 12:56 pm

          I’ve seen plenty of your asinine comments before. Not everyone in a restaurant carrys a gun, did you ever think of that. I’m 75 years old and started in law enforcement at 22 years old, owned my own security company, PI for the last 40 years and a former NRA firearms instructor. I’ve already forgotten more than you think you know about firearms and common sense. Perhaps you could tell us how you are protecting any legal gun owners or random people by advocating for more firearms laws and restrictions and spare me your insults.

          • paul I'll call you what I want/1st Amendment November 10, 2025, 1:46 pm

            spare me you liberal hypocrisy…ive done this and i’ve done that. dumbass expert you have no idea where i’ve been or done so stfu, telling me who i am! asinine is saying only drunks and drug addicts carry guns in restaurants. it ain’t more laws just keeping some on the books that need to be there. i don’t rest on the past i keep learning and evolving, something that seems to escape you with you rhetoric, i want people to think not follow people like you!

          • Dano November 10, 2025, 3:52 pm

            You really made me laugh, my liberal hypocrisy? I’m the one calling for less restriction. Where did I advocate for addicts and drunks. You obviously have a reading comprehension problem or just like the sound of your own thoughts. Are we going to search everyone going into restaurants or bars? How will you weed out the occasional drinker from the drunk. Do we restrict sober drivers to stop the drunk drivers? I’m glad I don’t know who you are due to the fact that you love to insult people instead of actually reading what they say and commenting rationally. So, let’s leave it at you are wonderful and always right and everyone else, not so much. PS, I’ve never been a liberal and vote republican all the time. Your words mean nothing to me and neither do your insults.