Fooks v. State ( 2022 )


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  • Robert L. Fooks v. State of Maryland, Case No. 269, September Term 2021. Opinion by
    Nazarian, J.
    CONSTITUTIONAL LAW – SECOND AMENDMENT – SECTIONS 5-133(b)(2)
    AND 5-205(b)(2) OF THE PUBLIC SAFETY ARTICLE – FACIAL CHALLENGE
    Sections 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) of the Public Safety Article, which prohibits a person
    from possessing a firearm if that person has been convicted of a violation classified as a
    common law crime and received a sentence of imprisonment of more than two years, are
    not unconstitutional in all their applications and are thus not facially unconstitutional.
    CONSTITUTIONAL LAW – SECOND AMENDMENT – SECTIONS 5-133(b)(2)
    AND 5-205(b)(2) OF THE PUBLIC SAFETY ARTICLE – AS APPLIED
    CHALLENGE – CRIMINAL CONTEMPT
    Sections 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) of the Public Safety Article are presumptively lawful
    and thus not unconstitutional as applied to Mr. Fooks, because a conviction for criminal
    contempt for failure to pay child support does not fall within “the right of law-abiding,
    responsible citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home.” District of Columbia v.
    Heller, 
    554 U.S. 570
    , 635 (2008).
    Circuit Court for Wicomico County
    Case No. C-22-CR-21-000030
    REPORTED
    IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS
    OF MARYLAND
    No. 269
    September Term, 2021
    ______________________________________
    ROBERT L. FOOKS
    v.
    STATE OF MARYLAND
    ______________________________________
    Nazarian,
    Friedman,
    Battaglia, Lynne A.
    (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
    JJ.
    ______________________________________
    Opinion by Nazarian, J.
    ______________________________________
    Filed: June 29, 2022
    Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal
    Materials Act
    (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
    2022-06-29 15:08-04:00
    Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk
    Robert Fooks was charged by way of criminal information with ten counts of illegal
    possession of a rifle or shotgun, three counts of illegal possession of a regulated firearm,
    and one count of theft. He moved to dismiss all firearm-related charges on the ground that
    they violated his Second Amendment right to bear arms. The Circuit Court for Wicomico
    County denied the motion. Mr. Fooks entered a conditional guilty plea to two counts of
    illegal possession of a regulated firearm and reserved the right to appeal the denial of his
    motion to dismiss. On appeal, Mr. Fooks argues that the statutory scheme used to charge
    and convict him is facially unconstitutional or unconstitutional as applied to him. We
    disagree and affirm.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    On January 26, 2021, the State charged Mr. Fooks with thirteen counts of unlawfully
    possessing various firearms between November 12, 2018 and July 18, 2020.1 The criminal
    information alleged that a 2016 conviction of constructive criminal contempt disqualified
    Mr. Fooks from possessing firearms,2 and the charges included violations of two provisions
    of the Public Safety Article (“PS”) of the Maryland Code (2003, 2018 Repl. Vol.). Section
    5-133(b)(2) provides that “a person may not possess a regulated firearm if the person . . .
    has been convicted of a violation classified as a common law crime and received a term of
    1
    Mr. Fooks was charged with illegally possessing regulated firearms, rifles, and
    shotguns. Title 5 of the Public Safety Article, “Firearms,” encompasses both regulated
    firearms and rifles or shotguns. To avoid any confusion, and because it doesn’t alter our
    analysis, we refer to the weapons collectively as “firearms.”
    2
    Mr. Fooks asserts that he was convicted of constructive criminal contempt in 2017.
    However, Maryland’s Electronic Courts case management system indicates that Mr.
    Fooks pleaded guilty to the constructive criminal contempt charge on October 13, 2016.
    imprisonment of more than 2 years[.]” Similarly, PS § 5-205(b)(2) provides that “[a]
    person may not possess a rifle or shotgun . . . if the person has been convicted of a violation
    classified as a crime under common law and received a term of imprisonment of more than
    2 years[.]”3
    On February 3, 2021 defense counsel filed a motion to dismiss, asserting that the
    firearm-related charges infringed on Mr. Fooks’s right to bear arms, as guaranteed to him
    by the Second Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. Mr. Fooks argued that
    PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) were unconstitutional as applied to him because “[t]he
    only reason that Mr. Fooks has been disqualified from possessing a firearm is a prior
    constructive criminal contempt conviction” for failure to pay child support. He cited a line
    of Fourth Circuit cases (we’ll discuss these in detail later) that apply a two-prong test to
    determine the constitutionality of a disarmament law. The defense maintained that the first
    prong of the test requires either (a) the challenger to rebut a presumption of lawfulness by
    proving that the facts of their case are different from “ordinary challenges” to felon
    disarmament laws, or (b) if the challenger is disqualified because of a common law crime
    conviction (and not a statutory felony), a “historical review to evaluate whether rights, as
    understood in 1791, are burdened by the statute . . . .”
    Mr. Fooks argued that he satisfied the first prong under either analysis because he
    was “a law abiding, responsible citizen . . . .” The court could find that PS §§ 5-133(b)(2)
    3
    The court sentenced Mr. Fooks to four years and six months of imprisonment for the
    contempt conviction. The record is unclear, however, on how long of that sentence he
    actually served.
    2
    and 5-205(b)(2) were not presumptively lawful as applied to him, he said, because a
    conviction for constructive criminal contempt is different from a conviction for a violent,
    serious felony. Alternatively, since contempt is considered a common law offense in
    Maryland, the court could engage in a historical review to determine that he would not
    have been excluded from possessing a firearm in 1791.
    If the court finds that the challenger satisfies the first prong, then it proceeds to the
    second prong and determines whether the challenged law passes judicial scrutiny. The
    defense asserted that the State had the burden to demonstrate that PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and
    5-205(b)(2) satisfied intermediate scrutiny, which they defined as “a reasonable fit between
    the challenged regulation and a substantial government objective” (cleaned up). And as
    applied to this case, he argued, “there is not even rational basis to conclude that
    disqualifying a person, convicted for failing to pay child support, serves the government
    goal of reducing gun violence in any capacity.” Because PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2)
    failed to satisfy intermediate scrutiny, the defense asked the court to dismiss the charges
    against Mr. Fooks.
    On March 8, 2021, the State responded. It emphasized that “[w]hile the [r]ight to
    [b]ear [a]rms is a fundamental constitutional right, much like other rights, their bounds are
    not endless.” The State recounted a history of PS § 5-133(b)’s precursor and concluded
    that the statutory text “makes it clear that the legislature recognized that there would be
    certain crimes that did not carry felony convictions, that still should prohibit an individual
    from possessing a firearm.”
    The State argued that Mr. Fooks’s motion “m[et] its demise, squarely on the
    3
    two-pronged framework used in analyzing as-applied challenges to firearm prohibitions.”
    The State asserted that the court didn’t need to conduct a historical review under the first
    prong of the test “‘to determine whether the conduct at issue was understood to be within
    the scope of the Second Amendment at the time of ratification’” (quoting Hamilton v.
    Pallozzi, 
    848 F.3d 614
    , 624 (4th Cir. 2017)). Rather, the court could instead conduct a
    “streamlined analysis,” by “‘supplant[ing] the historical inquiry with the more direct
    question of whether the challenger’s conduct is within the protected Second Amendment
    right of law abiding, responsible, citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home’”
    (quoting Hamilton, 848 F.3d at 624).
    Applying this framework, the State disputed that Mr. Fooks’s conduct fell
    “within the protected right of law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in defense of
    hearth and home,” because although he possessed the firearms, he never owned them.
    Instead, he stole the firearms from a relative (hence the theft charge) and sold them at a
    pawn shop. In other words, the State asserted that because Mr. Fooks did not have a Second
    Amendment right in someone else’s firearms, his case was not different from “ordinary
    challenges” to disarmament laws. Therefore, PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) were not
    unconstitutional as applied to Mr. Fooks and were “valid regulation[s] to one’s Second
    Amendment right.”
    The court held a hearing on the motion to dismiss on March 17, 2021. The defense
    asked the court to evaluate the challenged statutes using the historical inquiry analysis
    because subsections (b)(2) of both §§ 5-133 and 5-205 had never been upheld as valid.
    Because Maryland lacked case law concerning these specific statutory provisions, the
    4
    defense argued, there could be no presumption of validity. The court asked whether it could
    find PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) presumptively valid based solely on the
    legislature’s determination that people convicted of a common law crime who receive a
    prison term of more than two years should be disqualified from possessing a firearm. The
    defense rejected this position, arguing that just because a legislature passes a valid law does
    not make it presumptively constitutional. And under the historical inquiry approach, Mr.
    Fooks claimed there was no evidence that a criminal contempt conviction would have
    barred him from possessing a firearm in 1791.
    Turning to the second prong, Mr. Fooks argued that PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and
    5-205(b)(2) were “not narrowly tailored to serve a significant government interest[,]”and
    that the government’s interest in disqualifying individuals convicted of a crime from
    possessing a firearm “burden[s] substantially more conduct than is necessary . . . .” Mr.
    Fooks’s conduct of failing to pay child support, he argued, fell outside the scope of the
    government’s interest and thus burdened Mr. Fooks more than necessary.
    The court took issue with defense counsel’s characterization of Mr. Fooks’s
    conviction, asserting that “the criminality [was] the contempt of court, not the underlying
    basis for the contempt of court[.]” It was Mr. Fooks’s failure to follow a court order,
    regardless of what that court order specified, that enabled the sentencing court to sentence
    Mr. Fooks to more than two years’ incarceration. Defense counsel suggested that even
    considering the “contempt as a whole” didn’t lead to the conclusion that Mr. Fooks was a
    dangerous person. Based on the State’s failure to prove that Mr. Fooks was a dangerous
    person and the lack of “historical proof” that criminal contempt was meant to be a
    5
    disqualifying crime in 1791, defense counsel contended that PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and
    5-205(b)(2) were unconstitutional as applied to Mr. Fooks.
    The State urged the court to evaluate the constitutionality of §§ PS 5-133(b)(2) and
    5-205(b)(2) using the streamlined approach. Under this analysis, the court would determine
    whether Mr. Fooks “is a law abiding responsible citizen to use arms in defense of hearth
    and home.” The State mentioned the landmark firearms case, District of Columbia v.
    Heller, 
    554 U.S. 570
     (2008), and noted that the Supreme Court “specifically stated that
    nothing in the [Heller] opinion should cast doubt on the prohibitions against the possession
    of firearms.” Therefore, the State argued, Sections 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) were
    presumptively valid. The State also argued that Mr. Fooks lacked standing to challenge his
    firearm-related charges because he didn’t own the firearms, and his possession of them was
    “not used in protection of hearth and home . . . .” And as such, the State asserted, the
    motions court was barred from proceeding to the second prong of the test and considering
    whether the statutory provisions survived judicial scrutiny.
    Defense counsel replied that Mr. Fooks had standing to challenge the laws “by
    virtue of being charged with possession of firearms . . . . ” The court asked whether it
    mattered that Mr. Fooks did not own the firearms he was charged with possessing:
    I suppose, if [Mr. Fooks’s] just here to say [the firearms]
    weren’t mine, I never had possession of them, but I would like
    to assert my Second Amendment right. I don’t know, I might
    be wrong, Counsel, but I saw in the State’s answer that . . . their
    contention that [the guns] were not his, he was not possessing
    them in an effort to protect hearth and home, that he was selling
    them, it was a commercial transaction. And, in essence, that
    raised the question that if . . . the absence of the ability to claim
    ownership or control, other than for purposes of pawning them,
    6
    where does that come into play in this analysis that you’re all
    giving me?
    Defense counsel responded that the court was supposed to consider the conviction that
    disqualifies firearm possession in the first place, not the charge of firearm possession itself.
    The court was confused by this distinction: “If you were just challenging the statute, not as
    applied, but just the statute based on the plain language of the statute, that would be one
    thing. But your argument is as applied, as applied means to the facts.” The court reserved
    ruling on Mr. Fooks’s motion to dismiss and provided the parties with an opportunity to
    research the standing issue.
    On March 22, 2021, Mr. Fooks supplemented his original motion to dismiss. The
    defense argued that Mr. Fooks had standing to make an as-applied challenge to PS
    §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) because Mr. Fooks was “not alleged to have possessed any
    firearms which required special permits.” In addition, defense counsel asserted a facial
    constitutional challenge for the first time:
    Typically, to be successful in challenging a statute on its face,
    a facial challenge must show that there are no circumstances
    under which the statute would be constitutional. [Mr. Fooks]
    was operating under this rule when [he] improvidently
    indicated [at the motions hearing] that [he] was not making a
    facial challenge. However, when a challenged statute infringes
    fundamental rights, such as by being so vague that it violates
    due process, or so overbroad that it infringes on protected
    speech, the Court must strike down the statute. If the statute
    encroaches on fundamental rights in marginal cases, even if not
    directly in the challenger’s case, it provides standing to the
    party to challenge the statute even if it were constitutional on
    an as-applied basis.
    Here, [Mr. Fooks] respectfully requests the Court to consider
    this challenge as well, though [Mr. Fooks] does not believe it
    changes the analysis significantly. On a facial challenge where
    7
    fundamental rights are involved, a court would consider
    imaginary marginal cases, even where the challenger’s case is
    constitutional. As argued at the Motions Hearing, this case is
    the imaginary marginal case: the common law offense which
    disqualified Mr. Fooks is Contempt. Most, if not all, common
    law offenses are more serious than Contempt.
    (Cleaned up.) The supplement concluded that “given the benign nature of Mr. Fooks’[s]
    disqualifying offense,” the analysis of whether PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) were
    facially unconstitutional was “no different” than the analysis of whether the statutes were
    unconstitutional as applied. Counsel asked the court to “avoid the facial challenge” by
    “granting the motion to dismiss[] based on a[n] as-applied challenge.”
    The State replied on April 14, 2021 and reiterated its argument “that Mr. Fooks does
    not have a Second Amendment right in someone else’s guns,” and thus that the statutes
    were both facially constitutional and constitutional as applied. That same day, the circuit
    court, without any explanation, denied Mr. Fooks’s motion to dismiss. Mr. Fooks entered
    a conditional plea and the court sentenced him to two consecutive five-year terms of
    imprisonment, suspending all but time served. The court also placed Mr. Fooks on two
    years of supervised probation.
    Mr. Fooks noted a timely appeal. We supply additional facts as necessary below.
    II.     DISCUSSION
    On appeal, Mr. Fooks contends that the circuit court erred in denying Mr. Fooks’s
    motion to dismiss.4 First, Mr. Fooks argues that Maryland’s statutory scheme regarding
    4
    Mr. Fooks phrased the Question Presented in his brief as follows:
    Did the Motions court err in denying Mr. Fooks’ motion to
    dismiss because Maryland Code, Public Safety Article,
    8
    disarmament laws is facially unconstitutional. Second, he argues that PS §§ 5-133(b)(2)
    and 5-205(b)(2) are unconstitutional as applied to him. The State responds that the circuit
    court properly denied Mr. Fooks’s motion to dismiss because PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and
    5-205(b)(2) “comport with the Second Amendment.”
    “The standard of review of the grant or denial of a motion to dismiss is whether the
    trial court was legally correct.” Myers v. State, 
    248 Md. App. 422
    , 430–31 (2020) (cleaned
    up). “We review the denial of a motion to dismiss de novo.” Id. at 431 (citations omitted).
    Further, “[t]he proper scope of a constitutional right, and its application to a particular set
    of facts, are issues of law.” Pizza di Joey, LLC v. Mayor of Balt., 
    470 Md. 308
    , 339 (2020)
    (citations omitted). “Therefore, we review such questions de novo.” 
    Id.
     (citing Schisler v.
    State, 
    394 Md. 519
    , 535 (2006)).
    A.     A Brief Overview Of Second Amendment Jurisprudence.
    We begin with the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution, which
    provides that “[a] well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the
    right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” U.S. Const. amend. II.
    The Second Amendment applies to the states by way of the Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment. McDonald v. City of Chi., 
    561 U.S. 742
    , 750 (2010).
    § 5-205(b) and § 5-133(b), are unconstitutional, or are
    unconstitutional as applied in this case?
    The State phrased its Question Presented as follows:
    Did the circuit court properly deny Fooks’s motion to dismiss
    because Sections 5-205(b)(2) and 5-133(b)(2) of the Public
    Safety Article of the Maryland Code comport with the Second
    Amendment?
    9
    The analytical starting point in any modern-day Second Amendment case is the
    Supreme Court’s decision in Heller. In Heller, the Court considered the constitutionality
    of the District of Columbia’s prohibition on handgun possession in the home. 
    554 U.S. at 573
    . The seminal issue was whether the Second Amendment “protects only the right to
    possess and carry a firearm in connection with militia service” or whether “it protects an
    individual right to possess a firearm unconnected with service in a militia, and to use that
    arm for traditionally lawful purposes, such as self-defense within the home.” 
    Id. at 577
    .
    The Court reasoned that “[t]he Second Amendment is naturally divided into two parts: its
    prefatory clause and its operative clause.” 
    Id.
     But the Court noted as well that the prefatory
    clause “does not limit the [operative clause] grammatically, but rather announces a
    purpose.” 
    Id.
     The Court concluded, therefore, “that the Second Amendment conferred an
    individual right to keep and bear arms” unconnected with militia service. 
    Id. at 595
    .
    But the Court emphasized that “[l]ike most rights, the right secured by the Second
    Amendment is not unlimited” and observed that “[f]rom 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
     (citation omitted). The Court declined to “undertake an exhaustive
    historical analysis . . . of the full scope of the Second Amendment” and cautioned that
    “nothing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt on the [] prohibitions on the
    possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill, . . . or laws imposing conditions and
    qualifications on the commercial sale of arms.” 
    Id.
     at 626–27. The Court identified “these
    presumptively lawful regulatory measures only as examples” and its list did “not purport
    10
    to be exhaustive.” 
    Id.
     at 627 n.26.
    In McDonald, the Court reiterated Heller’s holding “that individual self-defense is
    ‘the central component’ of the Second Amendment right.” 
    561 U.S. at 767
     (quoting Heller,
    
    554 U.S. at 599
    ) (emphasis in original). The Court maintained that “Heller makes it clear
    that this right is ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition.’” Id. at 768 (quoting
    Washington v. Glucksberg, 
    521 U.S. 702
    , 721 (1997)). It also “repeat[ed] those assurances”
    made in Heller—“that our holding did not cast doubt on such [] regulatory measures as
    ‘prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill,’” 
    id. at 786
    (quoting Heller, 
    554 U.S. at
    626–27), and did “not imperil every law regulating firearms.”
    
    Id.
    This brings us to New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen, No.
    20-843, 597 U.S. --- (June 23, 2022), decided after this case was submitted. Bruen
    addressed the constitutionality of state limitations on carry licenses for law-abiding citizens
    and held that those citizens’ right to own and carry firearms extended beyond the home
    into public spaces. See, e.g., 
    id.,
     slip op. at 1. Bruen didn’t deal at all with limitations
    grounded in prior criminal behavior. The majority opinion refers repeatedly to law-abiding
    citizens’ rights to own and carry handguns and takes care to note that its analysis builds on
    Heller and McDonald, see Bruen, slip op. at 10–22, which, as we discussed just above,
    expressly did not cast doubt on laws limiting disqualified persons’ access to guns. See also
    
    id.
     (“[N]othing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt on 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
    11
    conditions and qualifications on the commercial sales of arms.”) (Kavanaugh, J.,
    concurring), slip op. at 3 (quoting Heller, 
    554 U.S. at
    626–27). As we’ll discuss below,
    Bruen narrowed the general Second Amendment analysis of laws limiting the right to keep
    and bear arms to focus solely on whether limitations on gun ownership fall within the scope
    of protected Second Amendment activity. The Court defined those boundaries solely by
    reference to historical traditions of firearms regulation and eliminated any means-ends
    analysis of those laws. 
    Id.,
     slip op. at 10–22. That analytical shift doesn’t affect the analysis
    or outcome here, though—for reasons we’ll explain, Mr. Fook’s arguments here will fail
    at the first analytical step.
    With this framework in mind, we turn to the contentions before us here.
    B.      PS §§ 5-133(b)(2)          And     5-205(b)(2)    Are     Not    Facially
    Unconstitutional.
    Mr. Fooks argues first that “[t]he contours of the Second Amendment’s guarantee
    of the fundamental right to keep and bear arms do not permit the criminalization of
    possession of a rifle/shotgun or regulated firearm . . . based upon a conviction for the
    common law crime of ‘constructive criminal contempt.’” For that reason, he contends, PS
    §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are facially unconstitutional. The State responds that Mr.
    Fooks’s facial challenge is unpreserved. But even if we find the challenge preserved, the
    State asserts that it’s meritless because Mr. Fooks failed to “assert that there is no set of
    circumstances under which the statutes would be constitutional . . . .”
    1. Mr. Fooks’s facial challenge is preserved.
    Before reaching the merits, we address the State’s contention that Mr. Fooks’s facial
    12
    constitutional challenge is not preserved for appellate review. The State argues Mr. Fooks
    failed to “explicitly state that he is asserting a facial challenge to PS §§ 5-133 and 5-205”
    in any of his pleadings:
    [Mr.] Fooks repeatedly asserted below that he was asserting an
    as-applied challenge. It was not until after the motions hearing
    that [Mr.] Fooks filed a supplement in which he stated that he
    “improvidently indicated that [he] was not making a facial
    challenge.” The circuit court, however, denied [Mr.] Fooks’s
    motion to dismiss before the State filed its response to that
    supplement. [Mr.] Fooks did not properly present his facial
    challenge to the circuit court, and it appears that the court did
    not even address it. This Court should deem the issue waived
    and decline to review it. Md. Rule 8-131(a).
    (Cleaned up.) (Emphasis in original.)
    Generally, we “will not decide any other issue unless it plainly appears by the record
    to have been raised in or decided by the trial court . . . .” Md. Rule 8-131(a) (emphasis
    added). Under the plain language of the Rule, we may consider issues that were not decided
    by the circuit court so long as the parties raised the issues there. See Sellman v. State, 
    152 Md. App. 1
    , 24 (2003) (“It is not necessary that the issue have been decided, so long as it
    was raised.”); Stevenson v. State, 
    180 Md. App. 440
    , 447 (2008) (“Here, the circuit court
    denied appellant’s motion, but declined to address the merits of her claim. Before this
    Court, appellant raises the same issue that she presented to the circuit court; therefore,
    despite the circuit court’s avoidance of that issue, it is properly before us.”).
    During the motions hearing, defense counsel challenged PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and
    5-205(b)(2) only on an as-applied basis. In the supplement, defense counsel acknowledged
    that “to be successful” when asserting a facial constitutional challenge, the “facial
    13
    challenge must show that there are no circumstances under which the statute would be
    constitutional.” The defense stated it “was operating under this rule when it improvidently
    indicated that it was not making a facial challenge” during the motions hearing. The court
    reserved ruling on the motion, however, and provided the parties with an opportunity to
    conduct further research to supplement their arguments. In its supplemental filing, the
    defense found another way to assert a facial constitutional challenge—“when a challenged
    statute infringes fundamental rights . . . the Court must strike down the statute.” In the
    supplement, counsel for Mr. Fooks asked the court explicitly to consider the facial
    challenge when ruling on the motion.
    We are comfortable that Mr. Fooks raised a facial constitutional challenge in the
    circuit court. The fact that the court denied Mr. Fooks’s motion to dismiss without
    explanation does not negate that Mr. Fooks asked the court (albeit in his supplement to the
    original motion) to consider a facial challenge when determining the constitutionality of
    PS § 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2). His appellate claim that these laws are facially
    unconstitutional is preserved adequately, and we will address it.
    2. Despite being preserved, Mr. Fooks’s facial challenge fails.
    The State insists that even if Mr. Fooks’s facial challenge is preserved, it
    nevertheless is “meritless.” Mr. Fooks responds that because a conviction of constructive
    criminal contempt “contains no element of violence, or anything that bespeaks of
    dangerousness[,]” “the statutory [firearm possession] scheme” under which Mr. Fooks was
    charged “infringes upon [his] fundamental, deeply-rooted, Second Amendment right” to
    bear arms. He asserts that not only is criminal contempt “an otherwise nondescript common
    14
    law offense whose nomenclature does not make readily apparent any particular conduct or
    concomitant intent,” it also is “exceedingly broad.”
    The disqualification at issue prohibits a person who “has been convicted of a
    violation classified as a common law crime and received a term of imprisonment of more
    than 2 years” from possessing firearms. PS § 5-133(b)(2).5 Our first task, then, is to
    determine whether constructive criminal contempt meets this definition. Criminal
    contempt is a common law offense. In re Ann M., 
    309 Md. 564
    , 569 (1987). And because
    there are no sentencing guidelines or statutory provisions to guide sentencing for criminal
    contempt convictions,6 a court’s “power to punish for contempt arises from the common
    law and is deemed essential for the protection and existence of the courts.” 
    Id. at 568
    (citations omitted). Moreover, “the only restrictions on sentencing for a common-law crime
    are (absent a penalty prescribed by statute) that the sentence be within the reasonable
    discretion of the trial judge and that it not be cruel and unusual punishment.” Street v. State,
    
    307 Md. 262
    , 266 (1986). When Mr. Fooks was convicted of constructive criminal
    contempt, he received a term of imprisonment of more than four years, so under a plain
    reading of PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2), he is prohibited from possessing firearms.
    We next must determine whether PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are facially
    5
    The language of PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are nearly identical, with the
    exception that § 5-133(b)(2) states “classified as a common law crime” and
    § 5-205(b)(2) states “classified as a crime under common law[.]”
    6
    Indeed, the Maryland Sentencing Guidelines Manual states that criminal contempt is
    “excluded from guidelines coverage[.]” Md. State Comm’n on Crim. Sent’g Pol’y, Md.
    Sent’g Guidelines Manual (Feb. 1, 2022), at 1.
    15
    unconstitutional. A facial constitutional challenge is “[a] claim that a statute is
    unconstitutional on its face—that is, that it always operates unconstitutionally.” Facial
    Challenge, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). “[T]o be successful, a facial challenge
    must establish that there is no set of circumstances under which the statute would be
    constitutional.” Motor Vehicle Admin. v. Seenath, 
    448 Md. 145
    , 181 (2016) (cleaned up).
    “[A] party has standing to raise a facial challenge only if the statute or practice that is the
    subject of the facial challenge may violate a fundamental constitutional right.” 
    Id.
     (citation
    omitted). Because Heller held that the right to bear arms is a fundamental constitutional
    right, Mr. Fooks has standing to raise his facial challenge.
    But Mr. Fooks has failed to show that there are no set of circumstances under which
    PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are constitutional. He makes no mention and provides
    no examples of how PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are unconstitutional in all potential
    applications. Indeed, Mr. Fooks has failed to show that the statutes are unconstitutional in
    any applications. The fact that constructive criminal contempt “contains no elements of
    violence” proves nothing by itself. As we discuss below, there is no requirement that an
    individual be convicted of a violent crime to be prohibited from possessing a firearm.
    As far as we can tell, neither the Court of Appeals nor this Court has considered the
    constitutionality of public safety disqualification provisions.7 In Corcoran v. Sessions, 
    261 F. Supp. 3d 579
     (D. Md. 2017), however, the United States District Court for the District
    7
    Mr. Fooks points us to Williams v. State, 
    417 Md. 479
     (2011), but that case
    concerned a conviction stemming from the Criminal Law article, not the Public Safety
    article.
    16
    of Maryland did. Mr. Corcoran was convicted in Virginia of unauthorized use of a vehicle.
    
    Id. at 583
    . Years later in Maryland, Mr. Corcoran applied for a handgun license. 
    Id. at 584
    .
    The Maryland State Police denied his application because the Virginia conviction
    disqualified him from possessing a firearm in Maryland. 
    Id. at 585
    . Mr. Corcoran sued,
    arguing that Maryland’s firearm prohibitions infringed on his Second Amendment right to
    bear arms “by failing to differentiate between violent and non-violent offenders.” 
    Id. at 587
    .
    The district court disagreed. The court compared the statute under which Mr.
    Corcoran was disqualified from possessing a firearm, PS § 5-133(b)(1), with a federal
    prohibition statute, 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1), which makes it “unlawful for any person[] who
    . . . has been convicted in any court of, a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term
    exceeding one year” to possess a firearm. The court cited United States v. Moore, 
    666 F.3d 313
     (4th Cir. 2012), where the Fourth Circuit cited “Heller’s ‘presumptively lawful’
    language” to conclude that 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1) “did not violate the Second Amendment
    on its face.” Corcoran, 261 F. Supp. 3d at 588. The court determined that the Fourth
    Circuit’s analysis in Moore applied to Mr. Corcoran’s challenge of PS § 5-133(b)(1):
    [Mr.] Corcoran’s attempt to distinguish the federal and
    Maryland laws is unpersuasive. He is correct that § 922(g)(1)
    and the Maryland Firearms Prohibitions differ in that the
    federal law looks to the maximum sentence in the jurisdiction
    in which the proceedings were held, whereas the Maryland
    laws look to the closest equivalent crime listed within its own
    Criminal Article. This distinction, however, does not alter the
    application of the Moore analysis to this case, especially in
    light of the Fourth Circuit’s holding in Hamilton [v. Pallozzi,
    
    848 F.3d 614
     (4th Cir. 2017)] that analysis of 
    18 U.S.C. § 922
    (g)(1) is equally applicable to Maryland’s firearms
    17
    regulatory scheme. . . . In this context, the State to which the
    two laws look to in order to determine whether a crime
    amounts to a disqualifying crime is irrelevant. Thus, Moore’s
    reference to the Supreme Court’s statement in Heller that
    “nothing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt on []
    prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons . . .” has
    equal application to the instant case.
    
    Id.
     at 588–89 (footnotes omitted). Therefore, Mr. Corcoran failed to “show[] that
    Maryland’s Firearms Prohibitions are unconstitutional in all their applications.” Id. at 589.
    So too here. We recognize that the Supreme Court’s presumption that the Second
    Amendment did not apply to “prohibitions on the possession of firearms” only explicitly
    mentioned those classified as “felons and the mentally ill . . . .” Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 626
    .
    But the Court also stated explicitly that this classification was an example and was not
    meant to be an all-inclusive list, 
    id.
     at 627 n.26, and nothing in Bruen even purports to
    question, let alone alter, this principle. A statute prohibiting an individual convicted of a
    common law crime and sentenced to more than two years’ incarceration is presumptively
    lawful, and Mr. Fooks has failed to rebut that presumption. He also has provided us with
    no evidence that PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are unconstitutional in all their
    applications. We hold that PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are facially constitutional.
    C.     PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) And 5-205(b)(2) Are Not Unconstitutional As
    Applied To Mr. Fooks.
    Determining that PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are facially constitutional does
    not resolve Mr. Fooks’s second argument—that the statutes are unconstitutional as applied
    to him. An as-applied challenge is “a claim that a statute is unconstitutional on the facts of
    a particular case or in its application to a particular party.” As-Applied Challenge, Black’s
    18
    Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). “A party always has standing to raise an as-applied
    challenge . . . .” Seenath, 448 Md. at 181.
    Mr. Fooks provides us with several reasons why PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2)
    are unconstitutional as applied to him:
    • A conviction of criminal contempt “is not a felony, per
    se, and is not inherently dangerous.”
    • The State provided no evidence that Mr. Fooks
    sustained a criminal contempt conviction after acting
    violently.
    • Under the historical inquiry analysis, it cannot be said
    with certainty “that constructive criminal contemnors
    were historically considered beyond the scope of the
    protections of the Second Amendment, nor can such an
    offense be fairly considered a ‘serious crime.’”
    • Disqualifying Mr. Fooks from possessing a firearm
    “does nothing to further the State’s interest in
    dispossessing     dangerous      felons     or     violent
    misdemeanants of their firearms.” The prohibition is
    “simply not a ‘reasonable fit’ to the State’s interests.”
    Mr. Fooks asserts that, for these reasons, we “cannot abide a result that criminalizes the
    fundamental Second Amendment constitutional right to keep and bear arms because of a
    prior conviction for a non-violent, non-serious offense that is so inherently broad and vague
    in its nature as ‘constructive criminal contempt,’” for “failure to pay child support.” We
    disagree.
    We walk first through the analysis for determining the constitutionality of an
    as-applied challenged disarmament law. Second, we analyze whether we may consider a
    law presumptively valid and bypass a historical inquiry approach for as-applied challenges,
    and we determine that PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are presumptively valid. Third,
    19
    we conclude that Mr. Fooks’s conduct is not “within the protected Second Amendment
    right of ‘law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home.’”
    Hamilton, 848 F.3d at 624 (quoting Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 635
    ; Moore, 
    666 F.3d at
    318–19).
    And for these reasons, PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are not unconstitutional as
    applied to Mr. Fooks.
    1. The Fourth Circuit framework for as-applied challenges
    Because this is an issue of first impression in Maryland, we look to other
    jurisdictions for guidance. Jocelyn P. v. Joshua P., 
    250 Md. App. 435
    , 468 (2021)
    (“Without Maryland caselaw to guide our inquiry, we look to other states that have
    addressed the issue . . . .”). In 2010, the Fourth Circuit “established a two-prong test for
    assessing a Second Amendment challenge.” Hamilton, 848 F.3d at 623. This is commonly
    called the Chester test. United States v. Chester, 
    628 F.3d 673
     (4th Cir. 2010). The first
    prong requires the court to determine “whether the challenged law imposes a burden on
    conduct falling within the scope of the Second Amendment’s guarantee.” 
    Id. at 680
    (cleaned up). If “the conduct at issue” was not “understood to be within the scope of the
    right at the time of ratification,” the law is valid. 
    Id.
     (citing Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 625
    ). If,
    however, “the challenged regulation burdens conduct that was within the scope of the
    Second Amendment as historically understood,” the court must “apply[] an appropriate
    form of means-end scrutiny.” 
    Id.
     (citing United States v. Marzzarella, 
    614 F.3d 85
    , 89 (3d
    Cir. 2010)).
    Two years later, however, the Fourth Circuit “refined and crystallized” the Chester
    test. Hamilton, 848 F.3d at 623 (citing Moore, 
    666 F.3d at 318
    ). In Moore, 
    666 F.3d at 313
    ,
    20
    the Fourth Circuit allowed for a “‘more streamlined [analysis] when a presumptively lawful
    regulatory measure is under review.’” Hamilton, 848 F.3d at 623 (quoting Moore, 
    666 F.3d at 318
    ). Under the streamlined test, “a litigant claiming an otherwise constitutional
    enactment is invalid as applied to him must show that his factual circumstances remove his
    challenge from the realm of ordinary challenges.” Moore, 
    666 F.3d at 319
    .
    In Hamilton, the Fourth Circuit considered the constitutionality of the same
    Maryland statute considered in Corcoran, PS § 5-133(b)(1). 848 F.3d at 623. PS
    § 5-133(b)(1) provides that “a person may not possess a regulated firearm if the
    person . . . has been convicted of a disqualifying crime[.]” Mr. Hamilton was convicted in
    Virginia of “receiving property by stolen, counterfeit, or misrepresented credit card,”
    “credit card counterfeiting,” and “credit card theft.” Hamilton, 848 F.3d at 619. The first
    two convictions were felonies, thus disqualifying him from possessing a firearm in
    Maryland. Id. Mr. Hamilton wanted to apply for a permit to carry a handgun in Maryland,
    but “was ultimately informed by an Assistant Attorney General that he could not possess a
    firearm in Maryland unless he obtained a full pardon from the Governor of Virginia.” Id.
    So Mr. Hamilton filed a lawsuit, seeking “a declaration that the regulatory scheme [(PS
    §§ 5-133(b)(1) and 5-205(b)(1))] is unconstitutional under the Second Amendment as
    applied to him . . . .” Id.
    The United States District Court for the District of Maryland applied the two-prong
    test and concluded that Mr. Hamilton failed to satisfy the first prong because he did “not
    show[] that his factual circumstances remove his challenge from the realm of ordinary
    challenges.” Id. (cleaned up). After recognizing that PS §§ 5-133(b)(1) and 5-205(b)(1)
    21
    were presumptively lawful, the court proceeded with the streamlined analysis. Because the
    court determined that Mr. Hamilton was not a law-abiding responsible citizen “to whom
    Second Amendment protections enure,” it ended its inquiry and dismissed Mr. Hamilton’s
    compliant. Id. at 623. Mr. Hamilton filed a timely appeal to the Fourth Circuit.
    On appeal, Mr. Hamilton argued against a streamlined analysis, stating that the court
    “essentially dispense[s] with the second step in as-applied felon-disarmament
    challenges . . . , assume[s] there can be no justification for disarming someone who is a
    law-abiding, responsible citizen, and evaluate[s] all the factual circumstances of the
    challenger at step one of the Chester inquiry.” Id. at 623–24 (cleaned up). The Fourth
    Circuit disagreed, reasoning that the court “still conduct[s] the traditional second step of
    applying an appropriate means-end scrutiny even for laws that receive a streamlined
    analysis.” Id. at 624 (citing United States v. Hosford, 
    843 F.3d 161
    , 167 (4th Cir. 2016)).
    The only difference between the traditional Chester test and the streamlined Moore
    test was whether the court had to conduct “an extensive historical inquiry” at the first step.
    
    Id.
     If a challenged law is presumptively valid and the challenger does not rebut the
    presumption, the court will “effectively supplant the historical inquiry with the more direct
    question of whether the challenger’s conduct is within the protected Second Amendment
    right of ‘law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home.’” 
    Id.
    (quoting Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 635
    ; Moore, 
    666 F.3d at
    318–19). If Mr. Hamilton could
    demonstrate that he was a law-abiding, responsible citizen, the court would proceed to the
    second prong and conduct a means-end scrutiny analysis. 
    Id.
    Under the first prong, the Fourth Circuit held “that a challenger convicted of a state
    22
    law felony generally cannot satisfy step one of the Chester inquiry . . . .” Id. at 625. The
    court reasoned that the “conviction of a felony necessarily removes one from the class of
    ‘law-abiding, responsible citizens’ for the purposes of the Second Amendment,” except if
    the “conviction is pardoned or the law defining the crime of conviction is found
    unconstitutional or otherwise unlawful.” Id. at 626. In light of these principles, the court
    concluded that Mr. Hamilton failed to satisfy step one of the Chester inquiry:
    Theft, fraud, and forgery are not merely errors in filling out a
    form or some regulatory misdemeanor offense; these are
    significant offenses reflecting disrespect for the law.
    [Mr.] Hamilton is a state law felon, has not received a pardon,
    and the basis for his conviction has not been declared
    unconstitutional or otherwise unlawful. As such, he cannot
    state a claim for an as-applied Second Amendment to
    Maryland’s regulatory scheme for handguns and long guns.
    Id. at 627–28 (footnote omitted). Because Mr. Hamilton failed the first step of the
    two-prong test, the court was not required to conduct a means-end analysis. The Fourth
    Circuit affirmed the dismissal.
    In Bruen, in the context of evaluating New York’s licensing laws, the Supreme
    Court declined to adopt both prongs of the two-prong test. “Despite the popularity of this
    two-step approach” and the fact that the federal Courts of Appeals unanimously had
    adopted and followed it, the Court considered the test to contain “one step too many.”
    Bruen, slip op. at 10. “In keeping with Heller,” the Court held that “when the Second
    Amendment’s plain text covers an individual’s conduct, the Constitution presumptively
    protects that conduct”:
    To justify its regulation, the government may not simply posit
    that the regulation serves an important interest. Rather, the
    23
    government must demonstrate that the regulation is consistent
    with this Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.
    Only if a firearm regulation is consistent with this Nation’s
    historical tradition may a court conclude that the individual’s
    conduct falls outside the Second Amendment’s “unqualified
    command.” Konigsberg v. State Bar of Cal., 
    366 U.S. 36
    , 50
    n.10 (1961).
    Bruen, slip op. at 8 (footnote omitted). The Court rejected the notion that Heller and
    McDonald supported means-ends scrutiny in the Second Amendment context. “Instead,
    the government must affirmatively prove that its firearms regulation is part of the historical
    tradition that delimits the outer bounds of the right to keep and bear arms.” Id. at 10.
    2. PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are presumptively lawful.
    Our first task, then, is to determine whether PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are
    presumptively lawful. As discussed above, we hold that they are. The burden is on Mr.
    Fooks to rebut the presumption. He disputes that a prohibition from possessing firearms
    because of a criminal contempt conviction is presumptively lawful. He argues that because
    “the Supreme Court did not include ‘criminal contemnors as a class,’ and it is at least
    unclear whether history meant to include them, it must be assumed that Mr. Fooks’[s]
    Second Amendment rights remained intact” (cleaned up). But again, the Supreme Court
    recognized in Heller the “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.” 
    554 U.S. at
    626–27. These “presumptively lawful regulatory
    measures” were merely examples and not meant “to be exhaustive.” 
    Id.
     at 627 n.26.
    24
    We agree with the circuit court that a court could find a statute presumptively valid
    based solely on the legislature’s determination that people convicted of a common law
    crime who receive a prison term of more than two years should be disqualified from
    possessing a firearm. A look at the statutory language also supports a conclusion that the
    statutes are presumptively valid. Section 5-133(b)(2) provides that “a person may not
    possess a . . . firearm if the person . . . has been convicted of a violation classified as a
    common law crime and received a term of imprisonment of more than 2 years[.]”
    (Emphasis added.) The statute is not ambiguous. The legislature didn’t provide that any
    common law conviction disqualified an individual from possessing firearms. It enumerated
    specifically that the individual had to receive a sentence of more than two years to be
    disqualified. It is the sentence imposed, not the classification of the common law crime,
    that determines the seriousness of the offense. As the State characterized it in its brief,
    “[Mr.] Fooks was not stripped of his constitutional right to keep and bear arms because he
    simply failed to pay child support” (emphasis in original). Rather, he “was convicted of
    willfully refusing to comply with a court order to support his children, and the
    circumstances of his defiance were so egregious that the circuit court sentenced [him] to
    serve over two years’ incarceration.” (Emphasis in original.) This is hardly a controversial
    prospect—indeed, the Family Law Article authorizes sentences of up to three years for
    failing to pay child support. See Maryland Code (1984, 2019 Repl. Vol.), § 10-203(c) of
    the Family Law Article (providing for a three-year maximum penalty for willfully failing
    to pay child support). We don’t know why Mr. Fook’s underlying case proceeded under
    common law criminal contempt rather than as a family law case, but it doesn’t matter. The
    25
    conviction and sentence are valid, and PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are
    presumptively lawful.
    3. Mr. Fooks’s conduct does not fall “within the protected Second
    Amendment right of law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms
    in defense of hearth and home.”8
    Because the statutes are presumptively lawful, the Fourth Circuit’s analysis directed
    us to look next at whether Mr. Fooks’s “conduct is within the protected Second
    Amendment right of ‘law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and
    home.’” Hamilton, 848 F.3d at 624 (quoting Heller, 
    554 U.S. at 635
    ; Moore, 
    666 F.3d at
    318–19). Bruen does as well, but it defines the boundaries of firearms regulation solely in
    historical terms. Bruen, slip op. at 17 (“The test that we set forth in Heller and apply today
    requires courts to assess whether modern firearms regulations are consistent with the
    Second Amendment’s text and historical understanding.”).
    Beyond saying, without historical support, that criminal contemnors weren’t
    included in the historic definition of “felons” excluded from firearms regulation, Mr. Fooks
    asks us, in effect, to treat him as a law-abiding, responsible citizen for Second Amendment
    purposes because criminal contempt is non-violent and the State failed to prove that he is
    a dangerous person. The State responds that the correct question is whether the
    disqualifying offense is serious, not whether it’s violent. In the State’s view, the fact “[t]hat
    there is concededly no evidence of violence in the record is therefore not dispositive of
    whether” Mr. Fooks is a law-abiding, responsible citizen for these purposes.
    8
    Hamilton, 848 F.3d at 624 (cleaned up).
    26
    Again, Maryland courts have not addressed this directly, but others have. Last year,
    the Supreme Court of Wisconsin addressed an as-applied Second Amendment challenge in
    a case similar to this one. State v. Roundtree, 
    952 N.W.2d 765
     (Wis. 2021). Mr. Roundtree
    appealed his conviction for possession of a firearm as a felon, arguing that “Wisconsin’s
    lifetime firearm ban for all felons is unconstitutional as applied . . . because his conviction
    over ten years ago for failure to pay child support does not justify such a ban.” Id. at 767.
    Mr. Roundtree asserted that his conviction for failure to pay child support was “a
    nonviolent felony” and that disqualifying him from owning a firearm served “no public
    safety objective . . . .” Id. The court held that the felon-in-possession “statute [was]
    constitutional as applied to [Mr.] Roundtree because it is substantially related to important
    governmental objectives, namely public safety and the prevention of gun violence.” Id.
    The court reasoned that “failure to pay child support is every bit as serious as [other
    crimes]. Those who fail to make support payments deprive the very people they should be
    protecting most, their own children, from receiving basic necessities. . . . By all accounts
    this is a serious offense.” Id. at 773. And “[s]imply because [Mr. Roundtree’s] crime was
    not physically violent in nature, it does not follow that the felon-in-possession statute
    cannot be constitutionally applied to” him. Id. at 774. The Court concluded that “even if a
    felon has not exhibited signs of physical violence, it is reasonable for the State to want to
    keep firearms out of the hands of those who have shown a willingness to not only break
    the law, but to commit a crime serious enough that the legislature has denominated it a
    felony . . . .” Id.
    Although it’s true that Wisconsin classifies failure to pay child support as a felony
    27
    and Maryland doesn’t, the way we label an offense doesn’t necessarily preclude us from
    still considering that offense serious. A quick glance at the statutory language confirms
    this. PS § 5-133(b)(1) prohibits an individual convicted of a disqualifying crime from
    possessing a firearm, and the range of disqualifying crimes includes crimes that aren’t
    felonies or violent:
    (1) a crime of violence;
    (2) a violation classified as a felony in the State; or
    (3) a violation classified as a misdemeanor in the State that
    carries a statutory penalty of more than 2 years.
    PS § 5-101(g)(1)–(3). By its plain language, then, the legislature intended for individuals
    convicted of violent crimes to be disqualified from possessing a firearm. But the legislature
    also prohibits a “fugitive from justice” from possessing a firearm. PS § 5-133(b)(3).
    Although there is no indication that fugitives from justice are dangerous or violent, the
    legislature decided that such a status was serious enough to prohibit a fugitive from
    possessing a firearm. The same rationale applies to individuals convicted of common law
    offenses who receive a term of imprisonment of more than two years. In other words, all
    of the prohibitions enumerated in PS § 5-133(b)(1)–(13) are defined by conduct and
    statuses that the legislature has denominated as serious enough to be disqualifying.9
    Mr. Fooks is not, for these purposes, a law-abiding citizen. It’s not just that he failed
    to pay child support, but his failure rose to the level of criminal contempt that was punished
    by a sentence of longer than two years. His conduct fell outside the scope protected by the
    9
    These same thirteen prohibitions are enumerated in PS § 5-205—the only difference
    being these prohibitions apply to shotguns and rifles, not regulated firearms.
    28
    Second Amendment, and PS §§ 5-133(b)(2) and 5-205(b)(2) are not unconstitutional as
    applied to him.
    JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
    FOR WICOMICO COUNTY AFFIRMED.
    APPELLANT TO PAY COSTS.
    29