Association New Jersey Rifle v. Attorney General New Jersey ( 2020 )


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  •                               PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    _____________
    No. 19-3142
    _____________
    ASSOCIATION OF NEW JERSEY RIFLE AND PISTOL
    CLUBS INC;
    BLAKE ELLMAN; ALEXANDER DEMBOWSKI,
    Appellants
    v.
    ATTORNEY GENERAL NEW JERSEY;
    SUPERINTENDENT NEW JERSEY STATE POLICE;
    THOMAS WILLIVER, in his official capacity as
    Chief of Police of the Chester Police Department;
    JAMES B. O’CONNOR, in his official capacity as
    Chief of Police of the Lyndhurst Police Department
    _______________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (D.C. No. 3-18-cv-10507)
    District Judge: Hon. Peter G. Sheridan
    _______________
    Argued
    June 16, 2020
    Before: JORDAN, MATEY and ROTH, Circuit Judges.
    (Filed: September 1, 2020)
    _______________
    Marc A. Nardone
    John P. Sweeney [ARGUED]
    Bradley Arant Boult Cummings
    1615 L Street, NW – Suite 1350
    Washington, DC 20036
    James W. Porter, III
    Bradley Arant Boult Cummings
    1819 Fifth Avenue North
    One Federal Place
    Birmingham, AL 35203
    Daniel L. Schmutter
    Hartman & Winnicki
    74 Passaic Street – Suite 101
    Ridgewood, NJ 07650
    Counsel for Appellants
    Joseph Fanaroff [ARGUED]
    Stuart M. Feinblatt
    Office of Attorney General of New Jersey
    Division of Law
    25 Market Street
    Richard J. Hughes Justice Complex
    Trenton, NJ 08625
    2
    Jeremy Feigenbaum
    Office of Attorney General of New Jersey
    Division of Criminal Justice
    25 Market Street
    Richard J. Hughes Justice Complex
    Trenton, NJ 08625
    Bryan E. Lucas
    Evan A. Showell
    Office of Attorney General of New Jersey
    124 Halsey Street
    P.O. Box 45029
    Newark, NJ 07102
    Counsel for Appellees, Attorney General New Jersey,
    and Superintendent New Jersey State Police
    George C. Jones
    John H. Suminski
    McElroy Deutsch Mulvaney & Carpenter
    1300 Mount Kemble Avenue
    P.O. Box 2075
    Morristown, NJ 07962
    Counsel for Appellee, Thomas Williver
    Carmine Richard Alampi
    Jennifer Alampi
    Alampi & Demarrais
    One University Plaza – Suite 404
    Hackensack, NJ 07601
    Counsel for Appellee, James B. O’Connor
    3
    Joseph G.S. Greenlee
    Firearms Policy Coalition
    1215 K Street – 17th Floor
    Sacramento, CA 95814
    Counsel for Amicus Appellants
    _______________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    _______________
    JORDAN, Circuit Judge.
    We are asked to determine whether a New Jersey statute
    that makes it illegal to possess large capacity magazines
    (“LCMs”) – defined as magazines capable of holding more
    than ten rounds of ammunition – violates the Second
    Amendment, the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause, or the
    Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. But we
    cannot answer that question, since it has already been
    answered. A prior panel of our court reviewed that statute,
    known as Assembly Bill No. 2761 and codified at N.J. Stat.
    Ann. § 2C:39-1 (“the Act”), on appeal from an earlier order of
    the District Court denying a preliminary injunction. It upheld
    the District Court’s order and, in doing so, went beyond simply
    answering the question of the plaintiffs’ likelihood of success
    on the merits. It directly addressed the merits of the
    constitutionality of the Act, holding that the Act did not violate
    the Second, Fifth, or Fourteenth Amendments.
    On remand, the District Court ruled on summary
    judgment that it was bound by that earlier decision and so
    upheld the constitutionality of the Act. The plaintiffs have now
    appealed again, arguing that the District Court erred in treating
    4
    the prior panel’s opinion as binding and arguing again that the
    Act is unconstitutional. Because they are wrong on the first
    point, we do not reach the second. We will affirm.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    In 2018, New Jersey enacted Assembly Bill No. 2761,
    a law making it illegal to possess a magazine capable of
    holding more than ten rounds of ammunition. N.J. Stat. Ann.
    § 2C:39-1(y), 2C:39-3(j). Prior to that, it had been illegal in
    New Jersey to possess magazines capable of holding more than
    15 rounds of ammunition. Owners of LCMs had several
    options for complying with the new Act:
    Specifically, the legislation g[ave] LCM owners
    until December 10, 2018 to (1) modify their
    LCMs “to accept ten rounds or less,” id. at
    2C:39-19(b); (2) render firearms with LCMs or
    the LCM itself inoperable, id.; (3) register
    firearms with LCMs that c[ould not] be
    “modified to accommodate ten or less
    rounds,” id. at 2C:39-20(a); (4) transfer the
    firearm or LCM to an individual or entity entitled
    to own or possess it, id. at 2C:39-19(a); or (5)
    surrender the firearm or LCM to law
    enforcement, id. at 2C:39-19(c).
    Ass’n of N.J. Rifle & Pistol Clubs, Inc. v. Attorney Gen. of N.J.,
    
    910 F.3d 106
    , 111 (3d Cir. 2018) (“Prior Panel Opinion”)
    (footnote omitted). The statute exempts active military
    5
    members and active and retired law enforcement officers. N.J.
    Stat. Ann. § 2C:39-3(g), 2C:39-17.
    On the day the bill was signed into law, the plaintiffs
    filed this action, 1 naming certain state and local law
    enforcement officials as defendants. (For ease of reference, we
    refer to the defendants collectively as “the State.”) The
    complaint alleges that the Act violates the Second Amendment,
    the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause, and the Fourteenth
    Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. Prior Panel Opinion,
    910 F.3d at 111. With their complaint, the plaintiffs also filed
    a motion for a preliminary injunction. Ass’n of N.J. Rifle &
    Pistol Clubs, Inc. v. Grewal, No. 3:18-cv-10507 (PGS) (LHG),
    
    2018 WL 4688345
    , at *1 (D.N.J. Sept. 28, 2018) (“Preliminary
    Injunction Opinion”).
    The District Court held a three-day hearing on the
    motion, during which the parties presented conflicting expert
    testimony on the use of LCMs in mass shootings, including the
    number of casualties involved and whether the Act would save
    lives during a mass shooting by forcing the shooter to pause
    1
    The plaintiffs are the Association of New Jersey Rifle
    and Pistol Clubs, Inc. (“ANJRPC”), Blake Ellman, and
    Alexander Dembowski. ANJRPC is “an eighty-year old
    membership organization, representing tens of thousands of
    members, many of whom possess large capacity magazines for
    self-defense.” Ass’n of N.J. Rifle & Pistol Clubs, Inc. v.
    Grewal, No. 3:18-cv-10507 (PGS) (LHG), 
    2018 WL 4688345
    ,
    at *2 (D.N.J. Sept. 28, 2018). Ellman and Dembowski are
    members of ANJRPC who possess LCMs. 
    Id.
     The plaintiffs’
    standing is not in question.
    6
    and reload ammunition, thus allowing individuals time to
    escape or subdue the shooter. Id. at *4-8. The Court also heard
    testimony on whether LCMs are used in self-defense. Id. To
    distinguish law enforcement officers from the general public,
    the State offered expert testimony that both active and retired
    police officers who possess firearms are required to pass a
    qualification course bi-annually, using a weapon equipped
    with a 15-round magazine. Id. at *5. Ultimately, the District
    Court denied the preliminary injunction, remarking that “the
    expert testimony [wa]s of little help in its analysis.” Id. at *8.
    In rejecting the plaintiffs’ contention that the Act
    violated the Second Amendment, the District Court applied the
    two-step analytical approach we set out in United States v.
    Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d 85
    , 89 (3d Cir. 2010). Preliminary
    Injunction Opinion, 
    2018 WL 4688345
    , at *9. Marzzarella
    requires a court to ask first whether the challenged law imposes
    a burden on conduct falling within the scope of the Second
    Amendment’s guarantee of the right to bear arms. If it does, the
    second step is to evaluate that law under some form of
    heightened scrutiny. 2 
    614 F.3d at 89
    . The level of scrutiny to
    2
    There are three levels of scrutiny: rational basis
    review, intermediate scrutiny, and strict scrutiny. In Binderup
    v. Attorney General, 
    836 F.3d 336
     (3d Cir. 2016) (en banc), we
    explained the three levels of scrutiny by saying:
    Depending on the importance of the rights
    involved and the nature of the burden on them, a
    law’s purpose may need to be only legitimate and
    the means to achieve it rational (called rational
    basis scrutiny); the purpose may need to be
    important and the means to achieve it
    substantially related (called intermediate
    7
    be applied is determined by whether the law burdens the core of
    the Second Amendment guarantee. 
    Id.
     The “core … [of] the
    Second Amendment protects the right of law-abiding citizens to
    possess non-dangerous weapons for self-defense in the home.”
    Id. at 92. See also District of Columbia v. Heller, 
    554 U.S. 570
    ,
    635 (2008) (explaining that the Second Amendment “elevates
    above all other interests the right of law-abiding, responsible
    citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home.”). Laws that
    do burden that core receive strict scrutiny, whereas those that
    do not burden it receive intermediate scrutiny. Marzzarella,
    
    614 F.3d at 89, 96-97
    .
    The District Court concluded that the New Jersey Act
    imposes a burden on the Second Amendment because
    magazines, including LCMs, are integral components of guns.
    Preliminary Injunction Opinion, 
    2018 WL 4688345
    , at *9-11.
    Having answered the step-one question from Marzzarella, the
    Court proceeded to the second step and determined that the law
    should be evaluated under intermediate scrutiny because the
    core of the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms is
    not burdened by the Act. As the Court saw it, the Act “does not
    prohibit the possession of the quintessential self-defense
    weapon, the handgun,” nor does it “effectively disarm
    individuals or substantially affect their ability to defend
    scrutiny); or the purpose may need to be
    compelling and the means to achieve it narrowly
    tailored, that is, the least restrictive (called strict
    scrutiny). The latter two tests we refer to
    collectively as heightened scrutiny to distinguish
    them from the easily met rational basis test.
    836 F.3d at 341.
    8
    themselves.” Id. at *12 (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted).
    Then, applying intermediate scrutiny, the District Court
    upheld the Act. Id. at *12-13. Intermediate scrutiny requires
    the government to prove that the objective of the government
    regulation is “significant, substantial, or important[,]” and that
    “the fit between the challenged regulation and the asserted
    objective [is] reasonable[.]” Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d at 98
    (internal quotation marks omitted). “The regulation need not
    be the least restrictive means of serving the interest, but may
    not burden more [conduct] than is reasonably necessary.” 
    Id.
    (citations omitted). The District Court concluded that New
    Jersey has a significant, substantial, and important interest in
    the safety of its citizens. Preliminary Injunction Opinion, 
    2018 WL 4688345
    , at *12. While the Court did not make a
    definitive finding that the Act will significantly reduce
    casualties in a mass shooting by limiting the number of shots
    that can be fired from a single gun, it did decide that there was
    a reasonable fit between the Act and its stated object. It said,
    “the expert testimony established that there is some delay
    associated with reloading, which may provide an opportunity
    for potential victims to escape or for a bystander to intercede
    and somehow stop a shooter.” Id. at *12. Finally, the Court
    concluded that the Act places a minimal burden on lawful gun
    owners because it does not impose a restriction on the number
    of magazines an individual may own and instead limits only
    the lawful capacity of a single magazine. Id. at *13.
    The District Court also rejected the plaintiffs’ Fifth and
    Fourteenth Amendment claims. It concluded that there had
    been no taking of property in violation of the Fifth Amendment
    because the Act allows for gun owners to permanently modify
    9
    their magazines to accept ten rounds, and, if those magazines
    or guns cannot be modified, they can be kept as long as the
    owner registers them. Id. at *16. As to the plaintiffs’ argument
    that the Act violates the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal
    Protection clause because it treats active and retired law
    enforcement officers differently than other individuals, the
    District Court concluded that law enforcement officers are not
    similarly situated to other New Jersey citizens for a number of
    reasons. 3    Officers are required to pass gun safety
    requalification tests, which are not required of other
    individuals; officers have “an unusual ethos of public service
    … and are expected to act in the public’s interest[;]” and
    “retired police officers face special threats that private citizens
    do not[.]” Id. at *14 (internal quotation marks and citations
    omitted).
    Dissatisfied with the denial of their motion for a
    preliminary injunction, the plaintiffs appealed, but a divided
    panel of our Court affirmed. Prior Panel Opinion, 910 F.3d at
    110. The panel announced its holding in these straightforward
    words: “Today we address whether [the Act] violates the
    Second Amendment, the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause,
    and the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause.
    We conclude that it does not.” Id. While the panel explained
    3
    The plaintiffs did not argue that the Act’s exemption
    for active military personnel violates the Equal Protection
    Clause but did argue that there was disparate treatment
    between retired police officers and military veterans. The
    Court rejected that, saying, “there is no evidence to suggest that
    military veterans receive equivalent training [to law
    enforcement officers].” Preliminary Injunction Opinion, 
    2018 WL 4688345
    , at *14.
    10
    that its task was to “decide whether Plaintiffs have a reasonable
    probability of showing that the Act violates [these
    constitutional rights,]” 
    id. at 115
    , it nevertheless immediately
    went beyond that task, reached the merits, and determined that
    the Act withstands the plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge.
    Addressing the Second Amendment claim, the panel
    applied the analytical approach from Marzzarella, as had the
    District Court. 
    Id. at 116-24
    . First, it assumed without
    deciding that LCMs are “typically possessed by law-abiding
    citizens for lawful purposes and that they are entitled to Second
    Amendment protection.” 
    Id. at 117
    . It then turned to the
    second step of Marzzarella and determined that intermediate
    scrutiny should apply because the Act does not burden the core
    Second Amendment guarantee, for five reasons: (1) it does not
    categorically ban a class of firearms but is rather a ban on a
    subset of magazines; (2) it is not a prohibition of a class of arms
    overwhelmingly chosen by Americans for self-defense in the
    home; (3) it does not disarm or substantially affect Americans’
    ability to defend themselves; (4) New Jersey residents can still
    possess and use magazines, just with fewer rounds; and (5) “it
    cannot be the case that possession of a firearm in the home for
    self-defense is a protected form of possession under all
    circumstances. By this rationale, any type of firearm possessed
    in the home would be protected merely because it could be
    used for self-defense.” 
    Id. at 117-18
     (citations and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    The panel also agreed with the District Court that the
    Act survives intermediate scrutiny. It recognized New Jersey’s
    significant, substantial, and important interest in protecting its
    citizens’ safety. 
    Id. at 119
    . And, the panel said, the Act
    reasonably fits the State’s interest because, by reducing the
    11
    number of shots that can be fired from one gun, victims will be
    able to flee, bystanders to intervene, and numerous injuries will
    be avoided in a mass shooting incident. 
    Id. at 119
    . The panel
    further decided that the Act did not burden more conduct than
    is reasonably necessary because it imposes no limit on the
    number of firearms, magazines, or ammunition an individual
    may possess, and there is no record evidence that LCMs are
    “well-suited or safe for self-defense.” 
    Id. at 122
    . The panel
    also rejected the plaintiffs’ Fifth Amendment and Equal
    Protection Clause claims, for the same reasons as did the
    District Court. 
    Id. at 124-26
    .
    In ruling for the State, the panel’s decision was in line
    with the decisions of at least four other circuits that have
    decided that laws regulating LCMs are constitutional. See
    Kolbe v. Hogan, 
    849 F.3d 114
     (4th Cir. 2017) (en banc)
    (affirming grant of summary judgment upholding Maryland’s
    ten round limit); N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n v. Cuomo, 
    804 F.3d 242
     (2d Cir. 2015) (upholding, on review from summary
    judgment, New York and Connecticut’s laws imposing a ten
    round limit); Friedman v. City of Highland Park, Illinois, 
    784 F.3d 406
     (7th Cir. 2015) (affirming grant of summary
    judgment upholding City of Highland Park’s ten round limit);
    Heller v. District of Columbia, 
    670 F.3d 1244
     (D.C. Cir. 2011)
    (“Heller II”) (affirming grant of summary judgment upholding
    D.C.’s ten round limit). 4
    4
    Since the prior panel opinion was issued, the First
    Circuit has also concluded that Massachusetts’s ten round limit
    is constitutional. See Worman v. Healey, 
    922 F.3d 26
     (1st Cir.
    2019) (affirming grant of summary judgment upholding
    Massachusetts ten round limit). The Ninth Circuit, however,
    has very recently held that California’s ban on LCMs of more
    12
    The decision was not, however, unanimous. The
    dissenting member of the panel said that, in two ways, the
    majority treated the Second Amendment differently from other
    parts of the Bill of Rights: first, the majority weighed the merits
    of the case in order to pick a tier of scrutiny, and second, the
    majority, while purporting to use intermediate scrutiny,
    actually applied rational basis review. 
    Id. at 126
     (Bibas, J.,
    dissenting). Among other things, the dissent was concerned
    that the majority failed to demand actual proof to justify the
    State’s regulation, as heightened scrutiny demands in other
    contexts, and that the majority had likewise failed to put the
    burden of proof on the State to demonstrate that the regulation
    was sufficiently tailored. 
    Id.
    When the case was remanded to the District Court, the
    parties promptly filed cross-motions for summary judgment,
    and the State’s motion won. Although the Court recognized that
    different standards apply at the summary judgment stage than
    at the preliminary injunction stage, it said that it was granting
    summary judgment because “the Third Circuit has issued a
    precedential decision that resolves all legal issues in this case
    and there remains no genuine disputes of material fact.” (App.
    at 8.) The District Court noted that the prior panel opinion said
    the Act does not violate the Second, Fifth, or Fourteenth
    Amendments, so there was “binding Third Circuit precedent
    that the New Jersey law is constitutional[.]” (App. at 8-9.)
    than ten rounds is unconstitutional under either strict scrutiny
    or intermediate scrutiny. Duncan v. Becerra, --- F.3d ---, No.
    , 
    2020 WL 4730668
    , at *25 (9th Cir. Aug. 14, 2020).
    13
    This timely appeal followed.
    II.    DISCUSSION 5
    “It is the tradition of this court that the holding of a panel
    in a precedential opinion is binding on subsequent panels.” (3d
    Cir. I.O.P 9.1.) The plaintiffs argue, however, that we are not
    under that restriction here, for two reasons. First, they contend
    the outcome can differ here because this appeal arises in a
    different procedural posture than did the earlier one, with
    different standards and different inferences in play. Second,
    they say that the prior panel decision was clearly wrong and
    should be disregarded, to prevent manifest injustice. Neither
    argument succeeds.
    True enough, the standards for obtaining a preliminary
    injunction and summary judgment are different. Under the
    well-known standard for obtaining a preliminary injunction,
    the moving party must show “both a likelihood of success on
    the merits and a probability of irreparable harm. Additionally,
    the district court should consider the effect of the issuance of a
    preliminary injunction on other interested persons and the
    public interest.” Bradley v. Pittsburgh Bd. of Educ., 
    910 F.2d 1172
    , 1175 (3d Cir. 1990) (citations omitted). On summary
    judgment, by contrast, the moving party must establish that
    “there is not a genuine dispute with respect to a material fact
    5
    The District Court had jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
    , and we have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . “It
    is well established that we employ a plenary standard in
    reviewing orders entered on motions for summary judgment,
    applying the same standard as the district court.” Blunt v.
    Lower Merion Sch. Dist., 
    767 F.3d 247
    , 265 (3d Cir. 2014).
    14
    and thus the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law.” Blunt v. Lower Merion Sch. Dist., 
    767 F.3d 247
    , 265
    (3d Cir. 2014). Our standards of review are also different. We
    will affirm a district court’s order on a preliminary injunction,
    “unless the court abused its discretion, committed an obvious
    error of law, or made a serious mistake in considering the
    proof.” Bradley, 
    910 F.2d at 1175
    . On the other hand, we
    exercise plenary review over an order on summary judgment.
    Blunt, 767 F.3d at 265.
    But despite the differing standards pertaining to the
    differing procedural postures, a panel of our Court reviewing a
    decision on a preliminary injunction motion can indeed bind a
    subsequent panel reviewing an appeal from an order on
    summary judgment. As then-Judge Alito explained in Pitt
    News v. Pappert, 
    379 F.3d 96
     (3d Cir. 2004),
    although a panel entertaining a preliminary
    injunction appeal generally decides only whether
    the district court abused its discretion in ruling
    on the request for relief and generally does not
    go into the merits any farther than is necessary to
    determine whether the moving party established
    a likelihood of success, a panel is not always
    required to take this narrow approach. If a
    preliminary injunction appeal presents a question
    of law and the facts are established or of no
    controlling relevance, the panel may decide the
    merits of the claim.
    
    Id. at 105
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    Thus, “[i]n the typical situation—where the prior panel stopped
    at the question of likelihood of success—the prior panel’s legal
    15
    analysis must be carefully considered, but it is not binding on
    the later panel.” 
    Id.
     “On the other hand, if the first panel does
    not stop at the question of likelihood of success and instead
    addresses the merits, the later panel, in accordance with our
    Court’s traditional practice, should regard itself as bound by
    the prior panel opinion.” 6 
    Id.
     “We have recognized, however,
    that reconsideration is justified in extraordinary circumstances
    such as where: (1) there has been an intervening change in the
    law; (2) new evidence has become available; or (3)
    reconsideration is necessary to prevent clear error or a manifest
    6
    There are sound reasons why a panel reviewing a
    ruling on a preliminary injunction should focus on the question
    of likelihood of success on the merits rather than reaching the
    merits of the claim before them. Given the already-mentioned
    different standards on a motion for preliminary injunction and
    motion for summary judgment and our different standards of
    review, going to the merits on a preliminary record, under
    hurried circumstances, can lead to premature and less informed
    decisions. On review at the preliminary injunction stage, a
    panel may conclude that the district court did not abuse its
    discretion or commit obvious errors of law or serious mistakes
    in its findings of fact. But a subsequent panel reviewing an
    order on summary judgment may, in its plenary review of the
    record, identify errors the district court committed that, while
    not obvious or serious, impact the analysis or outcome of a
    case. We therefore make it a general practice to proceed
    cautiously, to avoid ending a case on review from a preliminary
    injunction when the record could be more developed on
    summary judgment and we can conduct a plenary review of
    that record.
    16
    injustice.” Council of Alt. Political Parties v. Hooks, 
    179 F.3d 64
    , 69 (3d Cir. 1999).
    Here, the prior panel’s opinion immediately went
    beyond the question of likelihood of success and declared a
    holding on the merits. Again, it held very plainly that the Act
    does not violate the Second Amendment, the Fifth
    Amendment’s Takings Clause, and the Fourteenth
    Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. Prior Panel Opinion,
    910 F.3d at 110. In short, it addressed the ultimate merits of
    the dispute, as the plaintiffs rightly admit. 7 (Oral Arg. At 2:02-
    40,    https://www2.ca3.uscourts.gov/oralargument/audio/19-
    3142_AssnNJRiflePistolClubsv.AttyGenNJ.mp3.) And the
    panel did so primarily on the basis of facts that are
    uncontested. 8
    7
    See Prior Panel Opinion, 910 F.3d at 122 (“[W]e hold
    that laws restricting magazine capacity to ten rounds of
    ammunition do not violate the Second Amendment.”); id. at
    125 (“In short, the Act does not result in a taking.”); id. at 126
    (“[R]etired law enforcement officers are not similarly situated
    to retired military personnel and ordinary citizens, and
    therefore their exemption from the LCM ban does not violate
    the Equal Protection Clause.”).
    8
    The case-determinative facts here centered on
    reloading. The District Court’s conclusion that the Act
    survived intermediate scrutiny relied on its finding that “there
    is some delay associated with reloading, which may provide an
    opportunity for potential victims to escape or for a bystander
    to intercede[.]” Preliminary Injunction Opinion, 
    2018 WL 4688345
    , at *12. The prior panel also relied heavily on that
    finding. Prior Panel Opinion, 910 F.3d at 119-20. The
    17
    To avoid the conclusion that the law of the case has been
    set and a precedent established, 9 the plaintiffs do not argue that
    there has been an intervening change in the law or the
    discovery of new evidence, but they do point out an intervening
    procedural step in our Court. They note that the State asked a
    motions panel of our Court to summarily affirm the District
    Court’s grant of summary judgment on remand but that the
    motions panel denied that request. According to the plaintiffs,
    that means “the motions panel necessarily rejected [the State’s]
    argument that the prior merits panel’s denial of a preliminary
    injunction binds the outcome of this appeal.” (Reply Br. at 2.)
    Not so.    According to our Internal Operating
    Procedures, we “may take summary action … if it clearly
    appears that no substantial question is presented or that
    subsequent precedent or a change in circumstances warrants
    such action.” (3d Cir. I.O.P 10.6 (emphasis added)). Thus,
    although we may choose to summarily affirm, a decision of a
    motions panel declining to affirm is not the same as a
    plaintiffs’ own witness before the District Court acknowledged
    that there would be some pause while a shooter reloaded.
    Preliminary Injunction Opinion, 
    2018 WL 4688345
    , at *6-7.
    And, on appeal, the plaintiffs have presented only legal, not
    factual, arguments.
    9
    We have explained that “[u]nder the law of the case
    doctrine, once an issue is decided, it will not be relitigated in
    the same case, except in unusual circumstances.” Hayman
    Cash Register Co. v. Sarokin, 
    669 F.2d 162
    , 165 (3d Cir. 1982).
    Thus, the prior panel’s opinion is both the law of the case and
    binding precedent.
    18
    determination that there is a substantial question left in the
    case. It often means nothing more than that the presentation
    made by motion has left that particular motions panel
    wondering whether there is a substantial question.
    Moreover, we do not afford the same deference to
    decisions made by a motions panel that we afford to opinions
    by a merits panel. Although “a merits panel does not lightly
    overturn a decision made by a motions panel during the course
    of the same appeal, we do not apply the law of the case doctrine
    as strictly in that instance as we do when a second merits panel
    is asked to reconsider a decision reached by the first merits
    panel on an earlier appeal.” Council Tree Commc’ns, Inc. v.
    FCC, 
    503 F.3d 284
    , 292 (3d Cir. 2007). That is in part because
    litigants can seek en banc review and review by certiorari of
    merits panel decisions but do not have similar opportunities
    with respect to a motions panel decision. 
    Id. at 291-92
    . Here,
    the order denying the motion for summary affirmance does not
    explain why the motion was being denied. Thus, even if the
    decisions of the merits panel and the motions panel were in
    conflict (which they are not), the merits panel is the one owed
    deference.
    The plaintiffs next argue that we need not follow the
    prior panel’s decision because it is clearly wrong and would
    work a manifest injustice. The burden that accompanies that
    contention is heavy. The plaintiffs must “persuade us not only
    that our prior decision was wrong, but that it was clearly
    wrong[.]” See In re City of Phila. Litig., 
    158 F.3d 711
    , 720-21
    (3d Cir. 1998) (emphasis added). Similarly, a manifest
    injustice occurs only when there is “direct, obvious, and
    observable error[.]”      Manifest Injustice, Black’s Law
    Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). “The law of the case will be
    19
    disregarded only when the court has a clear conviction of
    error[.]” Fogel v. Chestnutt, 
    668 F.2d 100
    , 109 (2d Cir. 1981)
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “Mere doubt
    on our part is not enough to open the point for full
    reconsideration.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    There is certainly room for vigorous debate about the
    prior decision. The thorough dissent shows that. But whether
    we agree with the majority’s opinion or not, we cannot say that
    it is clearly wrong or manifestly unjust. Even if we ignore that
    many other circuit courts have reached the same conclusion as
    the prior panel, with respect to very similar laws, there is
    evident in the prior panel’s work thoughtful consideration of
    the record and the relevant legal principles. Whether the prior
    panel ultimately got things wrong is not the question now. The
    question is whether it went so far astray that its decision can be
    called clearly wrong and manifestly unjust. The answer to that
    is no. We are therefore bound to respect the decision rendered
    by the prior panel, which ends this appeal. 10
    10
    The dissent concludes that the law of the case doctrine
    does not bar our consideration of the merits of the parties’
    dispute, for two reasons: first, the prior panel assumed without
    deciding that magazines holding more than ten rounds are
    protected under the Second Amendment, and, second, the prior
    panel was imprecise and interchangeably used the terms
    “magazines,” “LCMs,” and “large capacity magazines” to refer
    to magazines of different capacities and to magazines and
    firearms with different capabilities. In our view, neither of
    those considerations affects whether we are bound by the prior
    panel’s decision. Even though the prior panel assumed without
    deciding that magazines holding more than ten rounds are
    protected under the Second Amendment, that assumption did
    20
    III.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the District
    Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the State and
    its denial of the plaintiffs’ cross-motion for summary
    judgment.
    not leave the parties’ rights unsettled. That assumption was in
    plaintiffs’ favor, and, under that assumption, the prior panel
    clearly held that the Act does not violate the Second
    Amendment.         That     holding     settled   the   parties’
    rights. Similarly, the prior panel’s language describing
    magazines, even if not as precise as our dissenting colleague
    would like, does not, in our opinion, create anything that we
    can call clear error or manifest injustice and thus that would
    permit us to disregard the prior panel’s case dispositive
    holdings and reach the merits afresh.
    21
    Association of New Jersey Rifle & Pistol Clubs, Inc., et al. v.
    Attorney General of New Jersey, et al., No. 19-3142
    MATEY, Circuit Judge.
    The majority concludes that a prudential principle bars our
    consideration of the meaning of the Constitution. But “[t]he
    interpretation of the laws is the proper and peculiar province of
    the courts,” The Federalist No. 78, at 525 (Alexander
    Hamilton) (J. Cooke ed., 1961), and a judicially created tool
    for case management does not, in my opinion, supersede the
    expectation that the judiciary will decide cases and
    controversies arising under the Constitution. No doubt, there
    are rational reasons behind the “law-of-the-case doctrine.”
    Allowing courts to repeatedly consider questions already
    decided would undermine the stability and predictability of the
    law. In contrast, where issues remain undecided, or the
    assumptions underlying those decisions are unclear, then the
    opposite conclusion holds. And in such cases, the twin aims of
    finality—constancy and certainty—do not support limiting the
    judicial power granted in the Constitution and extended by
    Congress.
    This case, in my view, is an example of the latter category for
    two reasons. First, in Association of New Jersey Rifle and
    Pistol Clubs, Inc. v. Attorney General of New Jersey, 
    910 F.3d 106
     (3d Cir. 2018) (“NJ Rifle I”), 11 the panel did not decide
    whether all “magazines” enjoy the guarantee of the Second
    Amendment under United States v. Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d 85
    11
    For convenience, I sometimes refer to the NJ Rifle I panel as
    “the prior panel.”
    22
    (3d Cir. 2010); and second, the decision did not define what
    constitutes a “large capacity magazine.” Because both issues
    are central to the resolution of this case, I would decline to
    apply the law-of-the-case doctrine and would consider the
    issues raised by the appellant. Doing so, I would reverse the
    order of the District Court and remand this matter to permit the
    State to provide evidence that N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:39-1(y)
    (“New Jersey Magazine Act” or “the Act”) is narrowly tailored
    to advance the State’s interests.
    Finally, given the difficulty applying our existing framework
    in cases implicating the Second Amendment—illustrated by
    the deeply reasoned, but still deeply divergent opinions in NJ
    Rifle I—I believe we should reconsider our decision in
    Marzzarella in favor of a standard that draws on the text,
    history, and original meaning of the constitutional guarantee of
    “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms.” U.S. Const.
    amend. II.
    I. LAW-OF-THE-CASE DOCTRINE
    A.     Background
    Under the law-of-the-case doctrine, “one panel of an appellate
    court generally will not reconsider questions that another panel
    has decided on a prior appeal in the same case.” In re City of
    Phila. Litig., 
    158 F.3d 711
    , 717 (3d Cir. 1998). The doctrine
    does not appear in statute. Instead, it is a prudential limitation
    that “directs courts to refrain from re-deciding issues that were
    resolved earlier in the litigation.” Pub. Int. Rsch. Grp. of N.J.,
    Inc. v. Magnesium Elektron, Inc., 
    123 F.3d 111
    , 116 (3d Cir.
    1997). But “[t]he law of the case doctrine does not limit a
    federal court’s power; rather, it directs its exercise of
    discretion.” 
    Id.
     It is, in short, a judicially created self-direction
    23
    on when to choose to limit further judicial review. And the
    reasoning is simple: declining to reconsider issues in the same
    case “promotes the finality and efficiency of the judicial
    process by protecting against the agitation of settled issues.”
    Christianson v. Colt Indus. Operating Corp., 
    486 U.S. 800
    ,
    816 (1988) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). So
    a “settled” issue is the key and, in this case, I do not find the
    rights of the parties settled.
    B.     The NJ Rifle I Decision
    NJ Rifle I concluded that “laws restricting magazine capacity
    to ten rounds of ammunition do not violate the Second
    Amendment.” NJ Rifle I, 910 F.3d at 122. That conclusion rests
    on assumptions about the scope of the constitutional right to
    keep and bear arms, and the technical operation of self-loading
    firearms.
    1.     NJ Rifle I Did Not Decide That Magazines
    Holding More Than Ten Rounds Are Arms
    Protected under the Second Amendment
    I start by asking what constitutional question NJ Rifle I
    answered. We know the Second Amendment confers “an
    individual right to keep and bear arms.” District of Columbia
    v. Heller, 
    554 U.S. 570
    , 595, 598, 622 (2008). We have also
    read Heller to require “a two-pronged approach to Second
    Amendment challenges.” Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d at 89
    . “First,
    we ask whether the challenged law imposes a burden on
    conduct falling within the scope of the Second Amendment’s
    guarantee.” 
    Id.
     “If it does not, our inquiry is complete. If it
    does, we evaluate the law under some form of means-end
    scrutiny. If the law passes muster under that standard, it is
    constitutional. If it fails, it is invalid.” 
    Id.
    24
    I do not read NJ Rifle I to have fully applied this framework.
    To begin, the majority opinion held that “a magazine is an arm
    under the Second Amendment.” NJ Rifle I, 910 F.3d at 116.
    But it did not view “magazines” as the relevant “arm” regulated
    by New Jersey in the Act. Quite differently, the opinion
    focused on what it viewed as a narrower category of magazines
    called “Large Capacity Magazines” or “LCMs.” Id. at 116–17.
    And then, the opinion “assume[d] without deciding that LCMs
    . . . are entitled to Second Amendment protection.” Id. at 117
    (emphasis added). So are “LCMs” an “arm” under the Second
    Amendment? It is doubtful New Jersey thinks so. Indeed, when
    pressed at oral argument, the State declined to characterize NJ
    Rifle I as holding that such magazines enjoy constitutional
    protection. 12 That waffling is no small matter. It would of
    course be significant that some twenty-two million individuals
    residing in our Circuit are left to wonder whether they have,
    since the Founding, surrendered a fundamental right. But that
    unanswered question takes sharper focus when coupled with a
    second: what, exactly, is a “Large Capacity Magazine?”
    2.     NJ Rifle I’s Alternating Technical Definitions
    Narrowing the issue presented from “magazines” to a specific
    kind of magazine appears, in my reading, to have obscured the
    reasoning in NJ Rifle I. Consider a few examples in which the
    terms “magazines,” “LCMs,” and “large capacity magazines”
    interchangeably refer to 1) magazines within the New Jersey
    Magazine Act because they can hold more than ten rounds of
    ammunition, id. at 110; 2) magazines subject to laws in other
    states limiting the amount of rounds of ammunition, id. at 110
    12
    (Oral       Arg.         Tr.      at        28:13,
    https://www2.ca3.uscourts.gov/oralargument/audio/19-
    3142_AssnNJRiflePistolClubsv.AttyGenNJ.mp3.)
    25
    n.1; 3) firearms with “combat-functional ends” capable of
    “rapidly” discharging ammunition, id. at 117 n.16; and 4)
    magazines used in fully-automatic firearms, id. at 119 (citing
    NJ Rifle I App. at 1057, 1118–26). Each of these four concepts
    is different, yet they blend together throughout NJ Rifle I. For
    instance, early on the decision defines the term “LCM” to be
    coterminous with the object regulated by the New Jersey
    Magazine Act: magazines for semi-automatic firearms able to
    hold more than ten rounds of ammunition. Id. at 110 (citing
    N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:39-1(y)). A few pages later, the opinion
    states that “LCMs are used in mass shootings,” citing portions
    of the record that describe a host of different types of
    firearms—repeaters, semi-automatic, and automatic—and
    various sizes of magazines used in both automatic and semi-
    automatic firearms. See id. at 119 (citing NJ Rifle I App. at
    1057 (defining “LCM firearms” to include “assault weapons”
    and “high-capacity semiautomatic firearms” and stating that
    those “LCMs” jointly “appear to account for 22 to 36% of gun
    crimes in most places”); NJ Rifle I App. at 1118–26 (describing
    sixty-one mass shootings and the weapons used, including
    repeaters, semi-automatic firearms, and automatic firearms,
    along with magazines of varying capacities, ranging from 13-
    round magazines to 100-round magazines)). So the reader is
    left with the impression that the “LCMs” regulated in New
    Jersey are the same devices involved in a host of criminal acts
    across the country.
    But they are not. Yet blending together this wide assortment of
    firearms and regulatory structures is critical to the prior panel’s
    conclusion that “[n]ot only will the LCM ban reduce the
    number of shots fired and the resulting harm, it will present
    opportunities for victims to flee and bystanders to intervene.”
    Id. at 119. I do not see how the current record supports that
    26
    inference. At best, the record could be read to suggest that
    criminals use a variety of firearms to commit an array of
    violent acts some, all, or none of which are impacted by the
    New Jersey Magazine Act.
    3.     The Cumulative Result
    It is the combination of these two unanswered questions that
    gives me greatest pause. The collective effect of declining to
    confirm that “large capacity magazines” enjoy constitutional
    protection while defining those same magazines to include
    sizes greater than the New Jersey Magazine Act allows leaves
    me unable to predict how the Second Amendment will apply
    in future cases. I do not believe the constitutional character of
    a “magazine” rises and falls on a single extra round of
    ammunition. Nor do I imagine the Second Amendment allows
    any government to diminish an individual’s rights through
    nomenclature. I am, however, confident that new restrictions
    on firearms will continue to flourish throughout our Circuit.
    Under NJ Rile I, that leaves District Court judges with the
    difficult task of determining whether a magazine is small
    enough to satisfy the Second Amendment or large enough to
    slip outside its guarantee. And it leaves this Court with the
    certainty that we will need to address those unanswered
    questions.
    Respectfully, we need not wait. “[T]he law of the case doctrine
    bars courts from reconsidering matters actually decided[;] it
    does not prohibit courts from revisiting matters that are
    ‘avowedly preliminary or tentative.’” Council of Alt. Pol.
    Parties v. Hooks, 
    179 F.3d 64
    , 69 (3d Cir. 1999) (quoting 18B
    Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper,
    Federal Practice and Procedure: Jurisdiction § 4478 (3d ed.
    1981)). So we have taken care to “to prevent the doctrine from
    27
    being used to prevent a properly raised argument from being
    considered even once.” United Artists Theatre Cir., Inc. v.
    Township of Warrington, 
    316 F.3d 392
    , 398 (3d Cir. 2003)
    (emphasis in original). And that is why we have recognized
    that “[w]here there is substantial doubt as to whether a prior
    panel actually decided an issue, the later panel should not be
    foreclosed from considering the issue.” 
    Id.
    Here, there is substantial doubt about whether all magazines
    enjoy the guarantee of the Second Amendment or if, instead,
    that protection turns on the number of rounds of ammunition
    inside. In my opinion, it is necessary to address that issue to
    settle the rights of the parties here. Given that uncertainty, I
    would decline to apply the law-of-the-case doctrine, as I do not
    believe it applies to these circumstances. For that reason, I
    would, and therefore do, consider the full question presented
    by the appellants.
    II. APPLICATION OF THE SECOND AMENDMENT
    A.     The Scope of the Second Amendment
    I begin with Heller and the Supreme Court’s consideration of
    the text, history, and tradition of firearms regulations in the
    United States to best understand the meaning of the Second
    Amendment.
    Naturally, the Court began with the “operative clause” which
    provides that “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms,
    shall not be infringed.” Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 576
    , 578–79. The
    Court observed that “[t]he 18th-century meaning [of ‘arms’] is
    no different from the meaning today.” 
    Id.
     at 581 (citing 1 S
    Johnson, Dictionary of the English Language 106 (4th ed.
    1773) (reprinted 1978) (defining “arms” as “[w]eapons of
    28
    offence, or armour of defence”)); 1 Timothy Cunningham, A
    New and Complete Law Dictionary (1771) (defining “arms” as
    “any thing that a man wears for his defence, or takes into his
    hands, or useth in wrath to cast at or strike another.”); see also
    N. Webster, American Dictionary of the English Language
    (1828) (reprinted 1989) (similar)). With this foundation, the
    Court held that “the Second Amendment extends . . . to all
    instruments that constitute bearable arms, even those that were
    not in existence at the time of the founding.” Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 582
    . In so holding, the Court rejected the “frivolous”
    argument “that only those arms in existence in the 18th century
    are protected by the Second Amendment.” 
    Id.
     An unsurprising
    observation, because “[w]e do not interpret constitutional
    rights that way. Just as the First Amendment protects modern
    forms of communications, e.g., Reno v. Am. C.L. Union, 
    521 U.S. 844
    , 849 (1997), and the Fourth Amendment applies to
    modern forms of search, e.g., Kyllo v. United States, 
    533 U.S. 27
    , 35–36 (2001), the Second Amendment extends” to modern
    bearable arms. 
    Id.
    Next, the Court held that “the most natural reading of ‘keep
    Arms’ in the Second Amendment is to ‘have weapons.’” 
    Id.
     As
    to “bear,” the Court held that “[w]hen used with ‘arms’ . . . the
    term has a meaning that refers to carrying for a particular
    purpose—confrontation.” Id. at 584; see id. (“From our review
    of founding-era sources, we conclude that this natural meaning
    was also the meaning that ‘bear arms’ had in the 18th
    century.”). “Putting all of these textual elements together,” and
    drawing on historical context, the Court held “that they
    guarantee the individual right to possess and carry weapons in
    case of confrontation.” Id. at 592, 595.
    But the Court acknowledged that “[l]ike most rights, the right
    secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited.” Id. at
    29
    626. For example, it did “not read the Second Amendment to
    protect the right of citizens to carry arms for any sort of
    confrontation, just as we do not read the First Amendment to
    protect the right of citizens to speak for any purpose.” Id. at
    595 (emphasis in original). “From Blackstone through the
    19th-century cases, commentators and courts routinely
    explained that the right was not a right to keep and carry any
    weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for
    whatever purpose.” Id. at 626. Rather, the Court acknowledged
    the propriety of “longstanding prohibitions on the possession
    of firearms by felons and the mentally ill, or laws forbidding
    the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and
    government buildings, or laws imposing conditions and
    qualifications on the commercial sale of arms.” Id. at 626–27.
    It also “recognize[d] another important limitation”: that “the
    sorts of weapons protected were those ‘in common use at the
    time.’” Id. at 627 (quoting United States v. Miller, 
    307 U.S. 174
    , 179 (1939)). The Court held that this “limitation is fairly
    supported by the historical tradition of prohibiting the carrying
    of ‘dangerous and unusual weapons.’” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    As a result, the Court held that “the Second Amendment does
    not protect those weapons not typically possessed by law-
    abiding citizens for lawful purposes, such as short-barreled
    shotguns. That accords with the historical understanding of the
    scope of the right.” Id. at 625.
    With this foundation, the Court turned to the handgun ban at
    issue, which prohibited keeping operable handguns in the
    home. Id. at 628. Rather than cabining the standard of review
    to a balancing of interests, the Court held that the law was
    unconstitutional because it banned an entire class of firearms
    commonly owned by citizens for the lawful purpose of self-
    defense in the home. Id. at 628–29. Although Heller focused
    30
    its holding on the handgun ban before it, the Court
    acknowledged that “whatever else it leaves to future
    evaluation,” the Second Amendment “surely elevates above all
    other interests the right of law-abiding, responsible citizens to
    use arms in defense of hearth and home.” Id. at 635. Heller
    makes clear that judicial review of Second Amendment
    challenges proceeds from text, history, and tradition. This is
    because “[c]onstitutional rights are enshrined with the scope
    they were understood to have when the people adopted them,
    whether or not future legislatures or (yes) even future judges
    think that scope too broad.” Id. at 634–35. 13
    B.     Applying Heller and This Court’s Interpretative
    Framework
    Since Heller, circuit and district courts have varied in their
    approaches to evaluating the Second Amendment. Most have
    now settled on some version of the two-pronged approach we
    created in Marzzarella. 14 As noted, we first “ask whether the
    13
    Two years later, in McDonald v. City of Chicago, the
    Supreme Court reiterated that the right to keep and bear arms
    is a “fundamental” constitutional right “deeply rooted in this
    Nation’s history and tradition.” 
    561 U.S. 742
    , 767–68, 778
    (2010) (citation omitted).
    14
    See David B. Kopel, Joseph G.S. Greenlee, The Federal
    Circuits’ Second Amendment Doctrines, 61 St. Louis U. L. J.
    193, 212 n.105 (2017) (citing N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n,
    Inc. v. Cuomo, 
    804 F.3d 242
    , 254 (2d Cir. 2015); United States
    v. Chester, 
    628 F.3d 673
    , 680 (4th Cir. 2010); NRA v. Bureau
    of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, 
    700 F.3d 185
    ,
    194 (5th Cir. 2012); United States v. Greeno, 
    679 F.3d 510
    ,
    518 (6th Cir. 2012); United States v. Chovan, 
    735 F.3d 1127
    ,
    1136–37 (9th Cir. 2013); United States v. Reese, 
    627 F.3d 792
    ,
    31
    challenged law imposes a burden on conduct falling within the
    scope of the Second Amendment’s guarantee,” and, if it does,
    “we evaluate the law under some form of means-end scrutiny.”
    Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d at 89
    . I apply both steps, concluding that
    the New Jersey Magazine Act does not satisfy the rigorous
    scrutiny required for the fundamental rights of the Second
    Amendment.
    1.     Step One: Determining Whether the Challenged
    Law Imposes a Burden on Conduct Falling
    Within the Second Amendment
    The “threshold inquiry, then, is whether [the Act] regulates
    conduct that falls within the scope of the Second Amendment.”
    
    Id. at 89
    . That analysis turns on “whether the type of arm at
    issue is commonly owned,” 
    id.
     at 90–91, and “‘typically
    possessed by law-abiding citizens for lawful purposes,’ Heller,
    
    554 U.S. at 625
    .” NJ Rifle I, 910 F.3d at 116. I conclude the
    magazines, including those regulated by the New Jersey
    Magazine Act, are protected arms under the Second
    Amendment as best understood by history and tradition.
    i.     Defining the Regulated Arms
    I begin by defining the kinds of arms controlled by the New
    Jersey Magazine Act, which prohibits the possession of
    magazines “capable of holding more than 10 rounds of
    800–01 (10th Cir. 2010) (“Heller thus suggests a two-pronged
    approach to Second Amendment challenges to federal
    statutes.”) (internal quotations omitted); GeorgiaCarry.Org,
    Inc. v. Georgia, 
    687 F.3d 1244
    , 1261 n.34 (11th Cir. 2012);
    Heller v. District of Columbia (Heller II), 
    670 F.3d 1244
    , 1252
    (D.C. Cir. 2011)).)
    32
    ammunition to be fed continuously and directly therefrom into
    a semi-automatic firearm.” N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:39-1(y). 15 As
    ordinarily understood, a “magazine” is “a device that holds
    cartridges or ammunition.” NJ Rifle I, 910 F.3d at 116 (citing
    Magazine,              Merriam-Webster              Dictionary,
    https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/magazine (last
    visited Nov. 21, 2018)). What is more, this contemporary
    definition tracks the ordinary understanding of magazines
    since at least the 1800s. 16 Having defined what a magazine is,
    15
    At issue in this appeal are only magazines for semi-automatic
    firearms. A “semi-automatic” firearm is “a weapon that fires
    only one shot with each pull of the trigger, and which requires
    no manual manipulation by the operator to place another round
    in the chamber after each round is fired.” Staples v. United
    States, 
    511 U.S. 600
    , 602 n. 1 (1994). This is distinct from an
    “automatic” firearm, which “fires repeatedly with a single pull
    of the trigger. That is, once its trigger is depressed, the weapon
    will automatically continue to fire until its trigger is released
    or the ammunition is exhausted.” 
    Id.
     Individual ownership of
    automatic firearms is prohibited in New Jersey. See N.J. Stat.
    Ann. § 2C:39-5(a) (making unlawful the possession of “a
    machine gun or any instrument or device adaptable for use as
    a machine gun”); N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:39-1(i) (defining
    “machine gun” as “any firearm, mechanism or instrument not
    requiring that the trigger be pressed for each shot and having a
    reservoir, belt or other means of storing and carrying
    ammunition which can be loaded into the firearm, mechanism
    or instrument and fired therefrom”).
    16
    Compare Noah Webster, An American Dictionary of the
    English Language 510 (1842) (defining “magazine” as “[a]
    store of arms, ammunition or provisions; or the building in
    which such store is deposited; New Illustrated Edition of Dr.
    33
    I next consider whether a magazine is an arm within the Second
    Amendment.
    As the Supreme Court explained in Heller, regulation requiring
    “that firearms in the home be rendered and kept inoperable at
    all times” is unconstitutional as it necessarily makes “it
    impossible for citizens to use them for the core lawful purpose
    of self-defense[.]” Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 630
    . From this holding
    flows the logical conclusion that the Second Amendment’s use
    of the term “arms” should be ordinarily understood as
    “operable arms,” meaning that the Second Amendment
    likewise guarantees components required to make a protected
    firearm work for self-defense. See Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 581
    .
    That necessarily includes ammunition and, by extension,
    magazines that hold ammunition, as components of an
    operable firearm. See Miller, 
    307 U.S. at 180
     (observing that
    in the context of the colonial militia system, “[t]he possession
    of arms also implied the possession of ammunition, and the
    authorities paid quite as much attention to the latter as to the
    Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary of All the Words in the
    English Language 799 (1864) (defining “magazine” as “[t]o
    store up or accumulate for future use”); Webster’s Condensed
    Dictionary 336 (1887) (expanding the definition of “magazine”
    to include a “cartridge chamber of a repeating rifle”);
    Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 590 (3d ed. 1917) (defining
    “magazine” to include “[a] chamber in a gun for holding
    cartridges to be fed automatically to the piece”); Merriam-
    Webster Unabridged Dictionary (2020) (defining “magazine”
    to include “a supply chamber: such as . . . a holder that is
    incorporated in or attachable to a gun and that contains
    cartridges to be fed into the gun chamber by the operation of
    the piece”).
    34
    former”) (quoting The American Colonies In The 17th
    Century, Osgood, Vol. 1, ch. XIII). For these reasons, the best
    reading of “arms” in the Second Amendment includes
    magazines because “[a] regulation eliminating a person’s
    ability to obtain or use ammunition could thereby make it
    impossible to use firearms for their core purpose.” Jackson v.
    City & Cty. of San Francisco, 
    746 F.3d 953
    , 967 (9th Cir.
    2014).
    ii.    History and Tradition: The Development
    of Magazine-Operated Firearms and the
    Regulations That Followed
    That a magazine is an “arm” does not foreclose governmental
    regulation because “the right secured by the Second
    Amendment is not unlimited.” Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 626
    . So I
    next consider what, if any, restrictions on magazines satisfy the
    history and tradition of the Second Amendment. Answering
    that question begins with a review of magazines and magazine-
    operated firearms to understand: 1) the use and ownership of
    these arms over time, 2) traditional regulations, and 3) common
    use.
    a.     The Development of Repeating
    Firearms
    “The desire for . . . repeating weapons is almost as old as the
    history of firearms, and there were numerous attempts to
    achieve this goal, beginning at least as early as the opening
    years of the 16th century.” Harold L. Peterson, Arms and
    Armor in Colonial America, 1526–1783, at 215 (1956).
    “Successful systems [of repeating arms] definitely had
    developed by 1640, and within the next twenty years they had
    spread throughout most of Western Europe and even to
    35
    Moscow.” Harold L. Peterson, The Treasury of the Gun 229
    (1962). “[T]he two principal magazine repeaters of the era
    [were] the Kalthoff and the Lorenzoni. These were the first
    guns of their kind to achieve success . . . .” 
    Id.
     The Kalthoff
    repeater magazines held between six and thirty charges, and
    “were undoubtedly the first magazine repeaters ever to be
    adopted for military purposes.” Id. at 230. Also developed
    during the 17th century, the Lorenzoni was “a magazine-fed
    Italian repeating pistol that ‘used gravity to self-reload’” and
    held about seven shots. (Brief of Amici Curiae Professors of
    Second Amendment Law, et al. in Support of Appellants and
    Reversal (“Amici Professors”) at 12 (quoting Martin
    Dougherty, Small Arms Visual Encyclopedia 34 (2011)).) See
    also Gerald Prenderghast, Repeating and Multi-Fire Weapons:
    A History from the Zhuge Crossbow Through the AK-47, at 97
    (2018) (“The Lorenzoni is also referred to as the Cookson rifle
    by American collectors[.]”); David Westwood, Rifles: an
    Illustrated History of Their Impact 71 (2005).
    By the mid-17th century, Americans also began developing
    repeaters. These repeaters “often employed a revolving
    cylinder that was rotated by hand.” (Amici Professors Br. at 15
    (citing 2 Charles Winthrop Sawyer, Firearms in American
    History 5 (1939) (six-shot flintlock); Charles Edward Chapel,
    Guns of the Old West 202–03 (1961) (revolving snaphance)).)
    For example, the Boston Gazette advertised the American
    Cookson in 1756 and boasted that it could “fire 9 Times
    distinctly, as quick, or as slow as you please[.]” Peterson, The
    Treasury of the Gun 232. In 1777, the Continental Congress
    ordered Belton rifles able to discharge sixteen or twenty
    rounds, but then later cancelled the order based on the
    extraordinary expense. (See Amici Professors Br. at 18.) See
    also 7 Journals of the Continental Congress 1774–1789, at 324,
    36
    361 (1907) (describing the ordering of Belton rifles and later
    the cancellation of the same rifles over Belton’s request for “an
    extraordinary allowance”); Peterson, The Treasury of the Gun
    197. All of which documents both the existence and public
    knowledge of repeating weapons.
    That public knowledge grew into private practice by at least
    the early 19th century, when repeaters began circulating for
    personal use. For instance, in 1821, the New York Evening Post
    described the invention of a new repeater as “importan[t], both
    for public and private use,” whose “number of charges may be
    extended to fifteen or even twenty.” Newly Invented Muskets,
    N.Y. Evening Post, Apr. 10, 1822, in 59 Alexander Tilloch,
    The Philosophical Magazine and Journal: Comprehending the
    Various Branches of Science, the Liberal and Fine Arts,
    Geology, Agriculture, Manufactures, and Commerce 467–68
    (1822). Technical challenges, however, limited widespread
    adoption and “none achieved real popularity.” Peterson, The
    Treasury of the Gun 199.
    Then, in the 1830s, Samuel Colt introduced the revolver, which
    fired repeating rounds using a rotating cylinder. Peterson, The
    Treasury of the Gun 202–03, 209–11 (“The real father of the
    revolver in its modern sense, however, was Samuel Colt.”). See
    also Ian V. Hogg, The Complete Illustrated Encyclopedia of
    the World’s Firearms 40 (1978) (“[Colt] had developed a
    percussion revolver and patented it in England in 1835 and in
    America in 1836.”). By the mid- to late 19th century, some
    revolvers could fire up to twenty-one rounds. David B. Kopel,
    The History of Firearm Magazines and Magazine
    Prohibitions, 
    78 Alb. L. Rev. 849
    , 856 (2015) (“Pin-fire
    revolvers with capacities of up to twenty or twenty-one entered
    the market in the 1850s[.]”). Around this time, repeating rifles
    could fire between fifteen and sixty shots per minute. Id. at 854.
    37
    In addition, the lever-action repeating rifle arrived by the
    1850s, and could fire thirty times per minute. Id. at 854–55.
    The arms development during this time was “fueled by the
    Civil War market.” Robert L. Wilson, Winchester: An
    American Legend (1991).
    b.     The Development of           Semi-
    Automatic  Firearms            and
    Magazines
    The first commercially successful rifles holding more than ten
    rounds of ammunition appeared around 1866, with handguns
    holding more than ten rounds following by 1935. See Kopel,
    The History of Firearm Magazines and Magazine
    Prohibitions, 78 Alb. L. Rev. at 849–50. And “[o]wing to their
    simplicity and ease of use, by the mid-twentieth century the use
    of detachable magazines loaded through the base of the grip far
    exceeded all other loading methods.” Jeff Kinard, Pistols: An
    Illustrated History of Their Impact 174 (2003). Given that easy
    operation, “semiautomatic handguns grew from 28% of
    handgun production in 1973 to 80% in 1993.” (NJ Rifle I App.
    at 1272.) As they became more readily available,
    semiautomatic handguns gradually became more predominant.
    “Pistol magazines manufactured before September 1994
    commonly [held] five to 17 bullets, and magazines produced
    for some models [held] as many as 30 or more bullets.” (NJ
    Rifle I App. at 1060.) As for rifles, the AR-15 semiautomatic
    rifle appeared in 1963 and sold with a standard twenty-round
    magazine. Kopel, The History of Firearm Magazines and
    Magazine Prohibitions, 78 Alb. L. Rev. at 859–60. Since that
    time it has become “[t]he most popular rifle in American
    history.” Id. at 859.
    38
    Possession of magazines exceeding ten rounds grew rapidly
    “given the growing popularity of semi-automatic rifles and of
    large-capacity handguns. Nearly 80 percent of ammunition
    magazines owned by gun owners at the time of [a 1994] survey
    held fewer than 10 rounds.” Edward W. Hill, How Many Guns
    are in the United States: Americans Own between 262 Million
    and 310 Million Firearms, Urban Publications 3 (2013). By
    contrast, a market survey conducted in or around 2013 “of
    owners of semi-automatic assault rifles . . . showed that 63
    percent of owners of these guns had ammunition magazines
    that held more than 10 rounds.” Id.
    Today, “there are at least 58.9 million civilian-owned
    [magazines capable of holding more than ten rounds] in the
    United States.” (NJ Rifle I Opening Br. at 17 (emphasis
    omitted) (citing Gary Kleck, How Many Large Capacity
    Magazines (LCMs) Are Possessed By Americans?, SSRN
    (2018)); see also NJ Rifle I App. at 275 (Tr. 372:14–16
    (Kleck)) (percentage of firearms with capacity to hold eleven
    or more rounds); App. at 516–17 (Hill, How Many Guns are in
    the United States: Americans Own between 262 Million and
    310 Million Firearms, Urban Publications).) “Magazines
    capable of holding more than 10 rounds come standard on
    some of the most popular handguns and rifles, including the
    most popular rifle in America.” (NJ Rifle I, Opening Br. at 17–
    18) (emphasis omitted) (citing NJ Rifle I, App. at 696–704
    (Gun Digest 2018); App. at 753 (National Shooting Sports
    Foundation, Modern Sporting Rifle Comprehensive Consumer
    Report 2013 (2013); App. at 500 (Dan Haar, America’s Rifle:
    Rise of the AR-15, Hartford Courant (Mar. 9, 2013)); App. at
    1239 (Kopel, The History of Firearm Magazines and Magazine
    Prohibitions, 
    78 Alb. L. Rev. 849
    ).)
    39
    The State does not appear to have rebutted the fact that
    magazines holding more than ten rounds are commonly
    owned. 17 The commonality of magazines holding more than
    ten rounds fits with findings by other courts as well. See, e.g.,
    Heller II, 
    670 F.3d at 1261
     (“We think it clear enough in the
    record that semi-automatic rifles and magazines holding more
    than ten rounds are indeed in ‘common use,’ as the plaintiffs
    contend” because “fully 18 percent of all firearms owned by
    civilians in 1994 were equipped with magazines holding more
    than ten rounds, and approximately 4.7 million more such
    magazines were imported into the United States between 1995
    and 2000.”).
    c.     Regulating Magazine Capacity
    With the history of magazines and magazine-equipped
    firearms as a guide, I next consider traditional regulation.
    Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 627
    ; McDonald, 
    561 U.S. at 786
    (reaffirming that Heller “did not cast doubt on . . . longstanding
    regulatory measures” and “does not imperil every law
    regulating firearms”). That analysis first requires answering
    how a prohibition can be “traditional” or “longstanding” when
    it regulates arms of the modern era. That is because Heller
    permits “[s]tate and local experimentation with reasonable
    firearms regulations.” McDonald, 
    561 U.S. at 785
     (alteration
    in original). Logically, then, “when legislatures seek to address
    17
    One of the State’s experts also conceded the readily available
    nature of “large capacity magazines.” (NJ Rifle I App. at 195
    (“Many of the mass shooters did not seek out large capacity
    magazines, they just used what was easily available, and it
    would have been hard or impossible for many of those mass
    shooters to seek out [smaller-capacity] magazines.”).)
    40
    new weapons that have not traditionally existed or to impose
    new gun regulations because of conditions that have not
    traditionally existed, there obviously will not be a history or
    tradition of banning such weapons or imposing such
    regulations.” Heller II, 
    670 F.3d at 1275
     (Kavanaugh, J.
    dissenting).
    Instead, I believe “the proper interpretive approach is to reason
    by analogy from history and tradition.” 
    Id.
     (citing Parker v.
    District of Columbia, 
    478 F.3d 370
    , 398 (D.C. Cir. 2007)
    (“[J]ust as the First Amendment free speech clause covers
    modern communication devices unknown to the founding
    generation, e.g., radio and television, and the Fourth
    Amendment protects telephonic conversation from a ‘search,’
    the Second Amendment protects the possession of the modern-
    day equivalents of the colonial pistol.”), aff’d sub nom. Heller,
    
    554 U.S. 570
    ; Tr. of Oral Arg. at 77, Heller, 
    554 U.S. 570
    (Chief Justice Roberts: “[Y]ou would define ‘reasonable’ in
    light of the restrictions that existed at the time the amendment
    was adopted. . . . [Y]ou can’t take it into the marketplace was
    one restriction. So that would be—we are talking about lineal
    descendants of the arms but presumably there are lineal
    descendants of the restrictions as well.”); cf. Kyllo v. United
    States, 
    533 U.S. 27
    , 31–35 (2001) (applying traditional Fourth
    Amendment standards to novel thermal imaging technology);
    California v. Ciraolo, 
    476 U.S. 207
    , 213 (1986) (allowing
    government to view property from airplanes based on
    common-law principle that police could look at property when
    passing by homes on public thoroughfares)). So I turn to
    historical regulation of both magazines and other restrictions
    on ammunition capacity.
    41
    Limits on ammunition capacity emerged during the Prohibition
    Era, when six states adopted restrictions. 18 See also Kopel, The
    History of Firearm Magazines and Magazine Prohibitions, 78
    Alb. L. Rev. at 864–68 (internal footnotes and citations
    omitted). But all were repealed over time. Only the District of
    Columbia maintained an uninterrupted ban on semi-automatic
    magazines holding more than twelve rounds from 1932 until
    1975, when it banned all functional firearms in the home and
    handguns altogether. (See Amici Professors Br. at 33 (citing
    Pub. L. No. 72-275, §§ 1, 8, 
    47 Stat. 650
    , 650, 652).)
    New Jersey first limited magazine capacity to fifteen rounds in
    1990. Kopel, The History of Firearm Magazines and Magazine
    Prohibitions, 78 Alb. L. Rev. at 867 (citing Act of May 30,
    1990, ch. 32, §§ 2C:39-1(y), -3(j), 
    1990 N.J. Laws 217
    , 221,
    18
    These states include California, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio,
    Rhode Island, and Virginia. (See Amici Professors Br. at 31–
    32 (citing 
    1927 R.I. Pub. Laws 256
    , §§ 1, 4 (banning sales of
    guns able to fire more than twelve shots without reloading);
    1927 Mich. Pub. Acts ch. 372, § 3 (banning sales of firearms
    “which can be fired more than sixteen times without
    reloading”); 1933 Minn. Laws ch. 190 (banning “machine
    gun[s],” including semi-automatics “which have been
    changed, altered or modified to increase the magazine capacity
    from the original design as manufactured by the
    manufacturers”); 
    1933 Ohio Laws 189
     (requiring a license for
    semi-automatics with capacity of more than 18); 1933 Cal.
    Laws, ch. 450 (requiring license for machine guns, which were
    defined to include semi-automatics with detachable magazines
    of more than ten rounds); 1934 Va. Acts ch. 96 s137, §§ 1(a),
    4(d) (defining machine guns as anything able to fire more than
    sixteen times without reloading).))
    42
    235 (codified at N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:39-1(y), -3(j) (West
    2014)). Around the same time, Hawaii enacted a limitation of
    ten rounds. (See NJ Rifle I App. at 9 (citing 
    Haw. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 134
    -(8)).) A few years later, Congress passed the
    Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994
    prohibiting the possession or transfer of magazines holding
    more than ten rounds. See Pub. L. 103-322, § 110103 (Sep. 13,
    1994). But that law expired in 2004 and has never been
    reauthorized. Since then, states including California, Colorado,
    Connecticut, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, and New
    Jersey have enacted or maintained regulations limiting
    magazine capacity. See Kopel, The History of Firearm
    Magazines and Magazine Prohibitions, 78 Alb. L. Rev. at 867–
    68.
    This history reveals a long gap between the development and
    commercial distribution of magazines, on the one hand, and
    limiting regulations, on the other hand. The State reasons, “It
    is logical that state limits on such weapons do not predate their
    popularity.” (NJ Rifle I Response Br. at 22.) That is doubtful,
    as New Jersey has actively regulated firearms lacking any
    popular use. See, e.g., N.J. Stat. Ann. §§ 2C:39-3(m)
    (prohibiting “[c]overt or undetectable firearms,” such as 3D
    printed firearms); Guidelines Regarding the “Substantially
    Identical” Provision in the State’s Assault Firearms Laws, N.J.
    Att’y Gen. Op. (August 1996) (prohibiting “bayonet mounts”
    on rifles). At any rate, the State concedes that magazine-
    equipped rifles first achieved “mass-market success” in the
    1860s and magazine-equipped handguns achieved similar
    success in the 1930s. (NJ Rifle I Response Br. at 22.) Yet
    regulations did not grow until the 1990s and 2000s, and even
    today, only a handful of states limit magazine capacity. Given
    that the “success” of magazine-equipped firearms predated
    43
    these first regulations by at least fifty years, I do not see
    evidence of the longstanding tradition required under Heller to
    remove magazines from the protection of the Second
    Amendment. Cf. Drake v. Filko, 
    724 F.3d 426
    , 432 (3d Cir.
    2013) (holding New Jersey’s permit requirement was
    longstanding because its origins dated to 1924). Nor is it clear
    that there is a longstanding tradition of regulating magazines
    as “dangerous and unusual.” For one thing, more than eight
    states would have rushed to regulate magazine capacity
    following the end of the federal ban in 2004.
    Some will argue there must be an outer boundary to this
    analysis that, when crossed, renders a magazine dangerous and
    unusual. If so, it does not appear in the history and traditions
    of our Nation. But in any event that question is not before us.
    So while “[t]here may well be some capacity above which
    magazines are not in common use . . . the record is devoid of
    evidence as to what that capacity is.” Heller II, 
    670 F.3d at 1261
     (Kavanaugh, J., dissenting). As a result, and limited to
    this record, I would hold that magazines are arms protected by
    the Second Amendment and an act limiting magazine capacity
    to ten rounds burdens the Appellants’ Second Amendment
    rights.
    2.     Step Two: Evaluating the Challenged Law
    Under Means-End Scrutiny
    Although not required by Heller, our precedent uses some form
    of means-end scrutiny. See Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d at
    96–97.
    Marzzarella does not insist on a uniform standard in all cases.
    Rather, we observed that if, like the First Amendment, “the
    Second Amendment can trigger more than one particular
    standard of scrutiny,” then intermediate scrutiny should be
    applied when the challenged law does not burden the
    44
    “fundamental interest protected by the [Second
    Amendment]—the defense of hearth and home.” 
    Id. at 97
    . By
    extension, strict scrutiny should be applied when a challenged
    law does burden such a fundamental interest. I conclude that
    the New Jersey Magazine Act burdens the right to maintain
    operable protected arms without regard to location or
    circumstances, warranting strict scrutiny. But regardless of the
    level of scrutiny applied, the state does not satisfy its burden
    on this record.
    i.     Strict Scrutiny
    As the Supreme Court has not applied the tiers of scrutiny to
    gun regulations, see Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 634
    , “we look to other
    constitutional areas for guidance in evaluating Second
    Amendment challenges.” Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d at
    89 n.4.
    Using this rationale, we concluded “the First Amendment is the
    natural choice. Heller itself repeatedly invokes the First
    Amendment in establishing principles governing the Second
    Amendment.” 
    Id.
    Cases considering restrictions on speech and expression hold
    the appropriate level of scrutiny is a fact-specific inquiry tied
    to the type of regulation at issue. See, e.g., Ward v. Rock
    Against Racism, 
    491 U.S. 781
    , 791 (1989) (applying
    intermediate scrutiny to content-neutral time, place, and
    manner restrictions in a public forum); Zauderer v. Off. of
    Disciplinary Couns. of Sup. Ct. of Oh., 
    471 U.S. 626
    , 651
    (1985) (applying rational basis review to disclosure
    requirements for commercial speech). Strict scrutiny applies to
    content-based restrictions that infringe on the First
    Amendment’s core guarantee. See, e.g., Citizens United v.
    FEC, 
    558 U.S. 310
    , 340 (2010) (applying strict scrutiny in the
    context of infringement on “political speech”); United States v.
    45
    Playboy Ent. Grp., 
    529 U.S. 803
    , 813 (2000) (applying strict
    scrutiny in context of content-based speech restriction). So
    following the direction of Marzzarella, strict scrutiny applies
    to restrictions burdening rights at the core of the Second
    Amendment. See NJ Rifle I, 910 F.3d at 134 (Bibas, J.,
    dissenting).
    One of the Second Amendment’s core purposes is to protect
    the “use [of] arms in defense of hearth and home.” Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 591, 636
    . For that reason, prohibiting operable firearms
    in the home violates the Second Amendment. 
    Id.
     The same
    result applies here, because the New Jersey Magazine Act
    prohibits the possession of magazines exceeding ten rounds at
    all times, including inside the home for defense. The State
    argues that the Act “does not ban magazines; it imposes a
    restriction on the capacity of a single magazine that can be
    inserted into a firearm” and does not restrict the number of
    magazines an individual may possess. (NJ Rifle I Response Br.
    at 34–35.) That is only partially correct, as it leaves owners of
    a “noncompliant” magazine without an operating firearm. But
    even assuming the Act is not a categorical ban on all
    magazines, it still burdens a core Second Amendment right
    without exception or limitation, including the defense of
    “hearth and home” specifically noted in Heller. Following our
    prior analogy to decisions applying the First Amendment
    jurisprudence, this “ban on a class of arms is not an ‘incidental’
    regulation. It is equivalent to a ban on a category of speech.”
    See Heller II, 
    670 F.3d at 1285
     (Kavanaugh, J., dissenting); see
    also NJ Rifle I, 910 F.3d at 127 (Bibas, J., dissenting) (“I would
    apply strict scrutiny to any law that impairs the core Second
    Amendment right to defend one’s home.”).
    New Jersey has not offered record evidence meeting that test.
    “Strict scrutiny asks whether the law is narrowly tailored to
    46
    serve a compelling government interest.” Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d at
    96 n.14. When “a less restrictive alternative would
    serve the Government’s purpose, the legislature must use that
    alternative.” Playboy Ent. Grp., 
    529 U.S. at 813
    . As Judge
    Bibas observed, “[h]ere, the government has offered no
    concrete evidence that magazine restrictions have saved or will
    save potential victims. Nor has it made any showing of
    tailoring.” NJ Rifle I, 910 F.3d at 134 (Bibas, J., dissenting).
    New Jersey once imposed a fifteen-round limit on magazine
    capacity. Now it claims ten is essential for public safety. The
    Second Amendment demands more than back-of-the-envelope
    math. At a minimum, it asks the government to explain, to offer
    but one example, why eleven rounds is too many while nine
    remains fine. Unless competent evidence answers those
    questions, New Jersey cannot show why a ten-round limit is
    the least restrictive means of achieving public safety. For this
    reason, I would hold that the Act fails to satisfy strict scrutiny.
    ii.    Intermediate Scrutiny
    For largely the same reasons, the New Jersey Magazine Act
    does not satisfy intermediate scrutiny where “the government’s
    asserted interest must be more than just legitimate but need not
    be compelling. It must be ‘significant, substantial, or
    important.’” Drake, 724 F.3d at 436 (quoting Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d at 98
    ). “‘[T]he fit’ between the asserted interest and the
    challenged law need not be ‘perfect,’ but it must be
    ‘reasonable’ and ‘may not burden more [conduct] than is
    reasonably necessary.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d at 98
    ).
    Here, the record does not show the State reasonably tailored
    the regulation to serve its interest in public safety without
    burdening more conduct than reasonably necessary. First, the
    47
    State rests on the ambiguous argument that “when LCM-
    equipped firearms are used, more bullets are fired, more
    victims are shot, and more people are killed than in other gun
    attacks.” (NJ Rifle I Response Br. at 28.) Perhaps, but “this still
    begs the question of whether a 10-round limit on magazine
    capacity will affect the outcomes of enough gun attacks to
    measurably reduce gun injuries and death.” (NJ Rifle I App. at
    1280 (Christopher S. Koper, An Updated Assessment of the
    Federal Assault Weapons Ban 89 (2004)).) In fact, “studies
    suggest that state-level [assault-weapon] bans have not reduced
    crime[.]” (NJ Rifle I App. at 1272, Koper, supra at 81 n.95.)
    Second, as Judge Bibas observed, “since 1990 New Jersey has
    banned magazines that hold more than fifteen bullets. The ban
    affects everyone. The challengers do not contest that ban. And
    there is no evidence of its efficacy, one way or the other.” NJ
    Rifle I, 910 F.3d at 132 (Bibas, J., dissenting). Third, statistics
    in the record report that out of sixty-one “mass shootings,” 19
    19
    The term “mass shootings” does not appear to have an
    objective definition. See, e.g., NJ Rifle I App. at 1042, Louis
    Klarevas, Rampage Nation: Securing America From Mass
    Shootings (2016) (defining mass shootings as “attacks that
    resulted in six or more people—not including the
    perpetrator(s)—dying as a result of gunshot wounds”)
    (emphasis in original); App. at 1067, Cong. Rsch. Serv., Mass
    Murder with Firearms: Incidents and Victims, 1999-2013
    (2015) (defining “mass shooting” as “a multiple homicide
    incident in which four or more victims are murdered with
    firearms—not including the offender(s)—within one event,
    and in one or more locations in close geographical proximity);
    App. at 1118, Violence Pol’y Ctr., High-Capacity Ammunition
    Magazines are the Common Thread Running Through Most
    48
    eleven used fifteen-round magazines, two used fourteen-round
    magazines, and two used thirteen-round magazines. That alone
    casts doubt on the ten-round tailoring. As does the declaration
    of the Commissioner of the Baltimore Police Department’s
    stating that the use of a ten round magazine offers more
    opportunities to intervene in a shooting incident than if “30- or
    50-round magazines, or 100-round drums” are used. (NJ Rifle
    I App. at 865.) (emphasis added). So too, of course, would use
    of a magazine holding eleven or twenty-nine rounds. That is
    why narrow tailoring requires more than a ninety-round spread
    in logic. 20
    Mass Shootings in the United States (defining “mass shooting”
    as “3 or more fatalities”).
    20
    Diving deeper, the record evidence casts doubt on the State’s
    intervention theory. For example, “it takes two to four seconds
    for shooters to eject an expended magazine from a semi-
    automatic gun, insert a loaded magazine, and make the gun
    ready to fire.” (NJ Rifle I App. at 1197, Declaration of Gary
    Kleck in Support of Plaintiffs’ Motion for a Preliminary
    Injunction at 12). Investigations from criminal attacks show
    “that the killers typically do not fire at high rates, instead firing
    deliberately, at rates far below the fastest rates that can be
    maintained with semiautomatic weapons.” (NJ Rifle I App. at
    1203, Kleck Decl. at 18.) In fact, “[t]he average interval
    between shots in mass shootings . . . is nearly always more than
    two to four seconds, which means that magazine changes do
    not even slow the shooter’s rate of fire.” (NJ Rifle I App. at
    1203, Kleck Decl. at 18.) Shooters can “avoid the necessity of
    reloading by carrying several firearms, carry[ing] several
    magazines which can be exchanged quickly, or simply tak[ing]
    the time to reload.” (NJ Rifle I App. at 748, Carlisle E. Moody,
    49
    All of this leads to one conclusion: “the Government bears the
    burden of proof on the appropriateness of the means it employs
    to further its interest[,]” but “the Government falls well short
    of satisfying its burden—even under intermediate scrutiny.”
    Binderup v. Att’y Gen., 
    836 F.3d 336
    , 353 (3d Cir. 2016) (en
    banc). New Jersey must “present some meaningful evidence,
    not mere assertions, to justify its predictive [and here
    conclusory] judgments[,]” and it failed to meet that burden
    here. Id. at 354 (alteration in original) (citing Heller II, 
    670 F.3d at 1259
    ); see also N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n, Inc, 
    804 F.3d 242
    , 264 (2d Cir. 2015) (“[O]n intermediate scrutiny
    review, the state cannot ‘get away with shoddy data or
    reasoning.’ To survive intermediate scrutiny, the defendants
    must show ‘reasonable inferences based on substantial
    evidence’ that the statutes are substantially related to the
    governmental interest.”) (emphasis in original) (internal
    citations omitted).
    For these reasons, I would hold that the Act cannot satisfy
    intermediate, or any applicable level of, scrutiny.
    III. RECONSIDERING MARZZARELLA AND TIERED SCRUTINY
    Decided two years after Heller, our decision in
    Marzzarella ushered in a two-part framework for analyzing the
    Second Amendment. That test has proved popular, and is now
    used by a majority of circuit courts. But our approach has come
    into question, and I have serious doubts that it can be squared
    with Heller. See, e.g., Rogers v. Grewal, 
    140 S. Ct. 1865
    , 1867
    Large Capacity Magazines and Homicide, 160 C. Wm. & Mary
    Working Paper 6, 6 (2015).) Crediting all of this testimony
    seems to undermine the State’s theory, and suggests that
    reducing magazine does not meaningfully assist intervention.
    50
    (2020) (mem.) (Thomas, J., dissenting) (criticizing the two-
    part framework as “rais[ing] numerous concerns” that “yield[]
    analyses that are entirely inconsistent with Heller”); N.Y. State
    Rifle & Pistol Ass’n, Inc. v. City of New York, 
    140 S. Ct. 1525
    ,
    1540 (2020) (Alito, J., dissenting) (explaining that Heller is
    based “on the scope of the right to keep and bear arms as it was
    understood at the time of the adoption of the Second
    Amendment”); id. at 1527 (Kavanaugh, J., concurring) (“I
    share Justice Alito’s concern that some federal and state courts
    may not be properly applying Heller and McDonald.”). I reach
    that conclusion on two grounds.
    First, the widespread popularity of the two-step
    balancing test does not address the clear repudiation of interest-
    balancing by the Supreme Court in Heller and McDonald.
    When twice presented with the opportunity to import tiered
    scrutiny from decisions considering the First Amendment, the
    Supreme Court instead focused on text, history, and tradition.
    See Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 634
     (declining to apply a specified level
    of scrutiny and observing that “[w]e know of no other
    enumerated constitutional right whose core protection has been
    subjected to a freestanding ‘interest-balancing’ approach.”);
    McDonald, 
    561 U.S. at 785
     (“[W]e expressly rejected the
    argument that the scope of the Second Amendment right
    should be determined by judicial interest balancing”);
    Binderup, 836 F.3d at 378 (Hardiman, J., concurring)
    (“Applying some form of means-end scrutiny in an as-applied
    challenge against an absolute ban—after it has already been
    established that the individual has a right to keep and bear
    arms—eviscerates that right via judicial interest balancing in
    direct contravention of Heller.”).
    Second, this historical approach is significant because,
    as Heller explains, “it has always been widely understood” that
    51
    “[t]he very text of the Second Amendment implicitly
    recognizes the pre-existence of the right and declares only that
    it ‘shall not be infringed.’” Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 592
    (quoting United States v. Cruikshank, 
    92 U.S. 542
    , 553 (1876))
    (“This is not a right granted by the Constitution. Neither is it in
    any manner dependent upon that instrument for its
    existence.”); see also Robertson v. Baldwin, 
    165 U.S. 275
    , 281
    (1897) (“The law is perfectly well settled that the first 10
    amendments to the constitution . . . were not intended to lay
    down any novel principles of government, but simply to
    embody certain guaranties and immunities which we had
    inherited from our English ancestors[.]”). And rather than
    turning to the reservoir of decisions, doctrines, and debates
    flowing from generations of First Amendment cases and tiered
    tolerance of governmental speech restraints, Heller “pores over
    early sources to show that while preventing Congress from
    eliminating state militias was the ‘purpose that prompted the
    [Amendment’s] codification,’” that purpose did not limit the
    right’s substance. Wrenn v. District of Columbia, 
    864 F.3d 650
    ,
    658 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (quoting Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 600
    ). At its
    core, the Second Amendment recognizes the widely accepted
    principle at the Founding that the right to self-defense derived
    directly from the natural right to life, giving the people
    predictable protections for securing the “Blessings of Liberty.”
    U.S. Const. pmbl.; see also Declaration of Independence para.
    2. 21 So “[t]he very enumeration of the right takes out of the
    21
    Several Founding Era documents reflect this sentiment.
    Hamilton wrote in Federalist Paper 28 that the “original right
    of self-defense” is “paramount to all positive forms of
    government.” The Federalist No. 28, at 146 (Alexander
    Hamilton) (Colonial Press, ed., 1901). Similarly, Samuel
    Adams listed self-preservation under “Natural Rights of the
    52
    hands of government—even the Third Branch of
    Government—the power to decide on a case-by-case basis
    whether the right is really worth insisting upon.” Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 634
     (emphasis in original).
    For those reasons, I would follow what I believe to be
    the direction of the Supreme Court and focus our approach
    “based on text, history, and tradition” rather “than under an
    interest-balancing test.” Heller II, 
    670 F.3d at 1275
    (Kavanaugh, J. dissenting).
    IV. CONCLUSION
    The law-of-the-case doctrine can serve important,
    practical purposes in litigation. But it remains a prudential rule
    that “merely expresses the practice of courts generally to refuse
    to reopen what has been decided, not a limit to their power.”
    Messenger v. Anderson, 
    225 U.S. 436
    , 444 (1912). I would
    decline to invoke that discretion here, as I conclude that
    determining whether magazines enjoy the guarantees of the
    Colonists as Men”: “First, a right to life; Secondly, to liberty;
    Thirdly, to property; together with the right to support and
    defend them in the best manner they can.” Samuel Adams, The
    Rights of the Colonists: The Report of the Committee of
    Correspondence to the Boston Town Meeting Nov. 20, 1772
    reprinted in Old South Leaflets no. 173 (Directors of the Old
    South Work 1906). Those sentiments, in turn, echo the
    classical understanding that “[s]elf-defence, therefore, as it is
    justly called the primary law of nature, so it is not, neither can
    it be in fact, taken away by the law of society.” 3 William
    Blackstone, Commentaries *4.
    53
    Second Amendment, and whether that protection varies based
    on their capacity, would “not reopen issues decided in earlier
    stages of the same litigation.” Agostini v. Felton, 
    521 U.S. 203
    ,
    236 (1997). Both issues affect the rights of individuals
    throughout our Circuit. Likewise, resolving those questions
    will allow state governments to design public safety solutions
    that respect the freedoms guarded by the Second Amendment.
    So I would reverse the order of the District Court, hold that
    magazines are arms under the Constitution, and remand this
    matter to permit the State to provide evidence that the Act is
    narrowly tailored to advance the State’s interests. For these
    reasons, I respectfully dissent.
    54
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-3142

Filed Date: 9/1/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/1/2020

Authorities (30)

United States v. Reese , 627 F.3d 792 ( 2010 )

fed-sec-l-rep-p-98388-rosalind-fogel-and-gerald-fogel-v-george-a , 668 F.2d 100 ( 1981 )

public-interest-research-group-of-new-jersey-inc-friends-of-the-earth-new , 123 F.3d 111 ( 1997 )

in-re-city-of-philadelphia-litigation-dc-civil-no-85-cv-02745-ramona , 158 F.3d 711 ( 1998 )

Council Tree Communications, Inc. v. Federal Communications ... , 503 F.3d 284 ( 2007 )

the-pitt-news-v-gerald-j-pappert-in-his-capacity-as-attorney-general-of , 379 F.3d 96 ( 2004 )

hayman-cash-register-company-talco-cash-register-co-inc-stanley-hayman , 669 F.2d 162 ( 1982 )

United States v. Marzzarella , 614 F.3d 85 ( 2010 )

united-artists-theatre-circuit-inc-v-the-township-of-warrington-pa , 316 F.3d 392 ( 2003 )

United States v. Chester , 628 F.3d 673 ( 2010 )

Parker v. District of Columbia , 478 F.3d 370 ( 2007 )

United States v. Greeno , 679 F.3d 510 ( 2012 )

earl-bradley-and-diane-murray-v-pittsburgh-board-of-education-vernon , 910 F.2d 1172 ( 1990 )

the-council-of-alternative-political-parties-green-party-of-nj-natural , 179 F.3d 64 ( 1999 )

United States v. Cruikshank , 23 L. Ed. 588 ( 1876 )

Robertson v. Baldwin , 17 S. Ct. 326 ( 1897 )

Messenger v. Anderson , 32 S. Ct. 739 ( 1912 )

United States v. Miller , 59 S. Ct. 816 ( 1939 )

Heller v. District of Columbia , 670 F.3d 1244 ( 2011 )

Zauderer v. Office of Disciplinary Counsel of the Supreme ... , 105 S. Ct. 2265 ( 1985 )

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