By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Gun GravyGun GravyGun Gravy
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Reading: Gorsuch name-checks Founding Fathers who were ‘habitual’ drinkers in SCOTUS fight over marijuana users
Share
Font ResizerAa
Gun GravyGun Gravy
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Search
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Firearms
  • Tactical
  • Videos
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
Gun Gravy > Latest News > Gorsuch name-checks Founding Fathers who were ‘habitual’ drinkers in SCOTUS fight over marijuana users
Gorsuch name-checks Founding Fathers who were ‘habitual’ drinkers in SCOTUS fight over marijuana users
Latest News

Gorsuch name-checks Founding Fathers who were ‘habitual’ drinkers in SCOTUS fight over marijuana users

Jim Flanders
Last updated: March 4, 2026 4:36 pm
Jim Flanders Published March 4, 2026
Share
SHARE

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Justice Neil Gorsuch spent a portion of the Supreme Court’s oral arguments this week exploring what a “habitual drunkard” is as part of a case centered on whether a drug user is allowed to own a gun.

Gorsuch questioned a Department of Justice lawyer on how gun restrictions for habitual drunkards in early American history compared to today’s law restricting drug users from owning guns. The DOJ was required to point to a strong historical comparison to prove the modern law was constitutional, and it chose to use the founding-era laws about habitual drunkards.

“The American Temperance Society, back in the day, said eight shots of whiskey a day only made you an occasional drunkard,” Gorsuch said.

A habitual drunkard, Gorsuch said, had to “double that.”

The conservative justice pointed to the Founding Fathers’ drinking habits to convey his skepticism about the DOJ’s argument that a habitual drunkard was similar to a modern-day drug user and that both were worthy of being disarmed. 

“John Adams took a tankard of hard cider with his breakfast every day. James Madison reportedly drank a pint of whiskey every day. Thomas Jefferson said he wasn’t much of a user of alcohol. He only had three or four glasses of wine a night,” Gorsuch said.

SUPREME COURT RULING ON SECRETIVE CALIFORNIA GENDER POLICY COULD RESHAPE PARENT RIGHTS FIGHTS NATIONWIDE

“Are they habitual drunkards who would be properly disarmed for life under your theory?” Gorsuch said.

The case, U.S. v. Hemani, centered on a Texas man who had been charged after the FBI discovered he possessed a handgun and smoked marijuana every other day. The law at issue, 922(g)(3), gained national attention after President Joe Biden’s son Hunter was convicted under it for possessing a gun in 2018 while addicted to crack cocaine.

Hunter Biden arrives court

“We don’t even know the quantity of how much he uses every other day. What if he took one gummy bear with a medical prescription in Colorado?” Gorsuch asked. “Let’s say he had one to help him sleep every other day. Disarm him for life?”

The DOJ argued the man, Ali Hemani, illegally owned the gun while a habitual user of marijuana and that he was rightly charged for it. Second Amendment advocates are closely watching the case. The National Rifle Association and Gun Owners of America are supporting Hemani, while several Democratic states are backing the DOJ in the case, setting up strange alliances in a test of what exceptions to gun ownership are allowed by law.

An attorney for Hemani argued to the Supreme Court that the DOJ could not adequately define what a habitual drug user was.

GUNS AND GANJA: SUPREME COURT SKEPTICAL OF FEDERAL LAW BANNING FIREARM POSSESSION FOR REGULAR MARIJUANA USERS

Supreme Court building

“The only historical tradition it has offered is one of imposing restrictions on habitual drunkards,” the lawyer said. “That entire line of argument rests on a category mistake because the laws to which the government points applied only to habitual drunkards, not to habitual drinkers.”

The DOJ, meanwhile, downplayed the implications of the law, saying in court papers that it would impose only a “limited, inherently temporary” restriction on a drug user that the person could remove by curtailing drug use.

“This restriction provides a modest, modern analogue of much harsher founding-era restrictions on habitual drunkards, and so it stands solidly within our Nation’s history and tradition of regulation,” DOJ lawyers wrote. “And habitual illegal drug users with firearms present unique dangers to society—especially because they pose a grave risk of armed, hostile encounters with police officers while impaired.”

Gorsuch was among several justices to express skepticism of the DOJ’s argument, though the justices could keep their ruling narrow and only address Hemani’s case.

The high court is expected to issue a decision by the summer.

Fox News’ Bill Mears contributed to this report.

Related Article

Gun rights on private property debated at Supreme Court

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Armed Robbery at Tennessee Exxon Ends With Suspect Dead After Shooting

Colombian nationals allegedly ran fake law firm, impersonated federal judges to defraud migrants out of $100K

What Would It Be Like To Have A Glock In The Old West?

Ohio mother charged with murdering two daughters found buried in suitcases near Cleveland

Idaho prison officials reject reports of Bryan Kohberger transfer despite ongoing complaints about conditions

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

We Recommend
The ULTIMATE  Pre-Made Survival Kit You MUST OWN On Amazon!
Videos

The ULTIMATE $25 Pre-Made Survival Kit You MUST OWN On Amazon!

Survival Gear Survival Gear June 13, 2026
Oncologist Testifies Before Senate: COVID mRNA Vaccines May Trigger Cancer Relapses
Game Stop Employee’s INSANE Crash Out | Active Self Protection
Proper Display of the American Flag | Flag Day 2026 | Tactical Rifleman
“He Found Out I Had Training”: Marine Vet Trades Shots With Body-Armor Wearing Gunman
The TOP 10 Most Old West Brutal Revolvers EVER Made!
“US-Iran Deal Is Near” Narrative Returns, But Tehran Refuses To Surrender Hormuz Leverage
Tactical

“US-Iran Deal Is Near” Narrative Returns, But Tehran Refuses To Surrender Hormuz Leverage

Jim Flanders Jim Flanders June 12, 2026
Maryland Court Rules Carrying a Gun Alone No Longer Justifies a Police Stop
Latest News

Maryland Court Rules Carrying a Gun Alone No Longer Justifies a Police Stop

Jim Flanders Jim Flanders June 12, 2026
Ohio Supreme Court Rules State Judges Can Restore Gun Rights Despite Federal Ban
Latest News

Ohio Supreme Court Rules State Judges Can Restore Gun Rights Despite Federal Ban

Jim Flanders Jim Flanders June 12, 2026
  • Latest News
  • Videos
  • Tactical
  • Firearms
2024 © Gun Gravy. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?