The National Rifle Association (NRA), Independence Institute, and FPC Action Foundationย joined the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) in the filing of amicus briefs inย United States v. Hemani โย a case in front of the U.S. Supreme Court that challenges the federal prohibition of the possession of firearms byย anyone who โis an unlawful user of or addicted to any controlled substance.โย ย
Theย briefย from the NRA, Independence Institute, and FPC, notes that throughout history, restrictions on discharging firearms by intoxicated persons, along with sales to intoxicated persons,ย were imposed by U.S. states and territories, butย those restrictions ended when the individual was sober. The brief further notes thatย โAlcohol was ubiquitous in early Americaโ and thatย โhempย has been cultivated in Americaย since Jamestown.โย
The NRA-led brief also takes aim at the brief filed in support of the ban by Smartย Approachesย to Marijuana that contendsย cannabis legalization has led toย an increase in bullying and that cannabis potency โis greater than before.โ Theย NRA amicus brief points to a study funded by the National Institute of Justice that examined the effects of cannabis legalization on crime in Colorado and Washington which found that cannabisย โlegalization and sales have had minimal to no effect on major crimesโ in those states, findingย โno statistically
