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No. 10671246
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
United States v. Brandon Jackson
No. 10671246 · Decided September 12, 2025
No. 10671246·Fourth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Decided
September 12, 2025
Citation
No. 10671246
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 24-4114
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff − Appellee,
v.
BRANDON GLEN JACKSON,
Defendant – Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.
Ellen Lipton Hollander, Senior District Judge. (1:22–cr–00141–ELH–1)
Argued: May 8, 2025 Decided: September 12, 2025
Before DIAZ, Chief Judge, and WYNN and THACKER, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed by published opinion. Chief Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in which Judge Wynn
and Judge Thacker joined.
ARGUED: Cullen Oakes Macbeth, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER,
Greenbelt, Maryland, for Appellant. Jason Daniel Medinger, OFFICE OF THE UNITED
STATES ATTORNEY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: James Wyda,
Federal Public Defender, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Baltimore,
Maryland, for Appellant. Erek L. Barron, United States Attorney, David C. Bornstein,
Assistant United States Attorney, Chief, Appellate Division, OFFICE OF THE UNITED
STATES ATTORNEY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.
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DIAZ, Chief Judge:
Brandon Glen Jackson traveled with a gun across state lines while indicted for a
state-law felony. That’s a federal crime. The question before us is whether prosecuting
Jackson for that act violated the Second Amendment.
Jackson’s conduct is presumptively protected by the Constitution. But because the
government has overcome that presumption, we affirm Jackson’s conviction.
I.
Arizona bans short-barreled rifles. Ariz. Rev. Stat. §§ 13-3101(A)(8)(a)(iv),
13-3102(A)(3). In December 2020, a Phoenix police officer alleged that Brandon Glen
Jackson “knowingly did manufacture, possess, transport, sell, or transfer” one. J.A. 58.
That alleged conduct led state prosecutors to charge Jackson with a felony called
“misconduct involving weapons.” Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 13-3102(A)(3), (M). A state-court
judge released Jackson on bail pending trial. Shortly after his release, Jackson lawfully
acquired a Smith & Wesson 9mm handgun.
A state grand jury indicted Jackson on the same charge. Impeded by the COVID-
19 pandemic, the case moved slowly. 1 In February 2022, while the misconduct-involving-
1
After more than a year of pretrial proceedings, prosecutors dismissed Jackson’s
indictment and re-charged him, this time without the misconduct-involving-weapons
offense. The new indictment alleged hindering prosecution (a felony) and passively
resisting arrest (a misdemeanor).
Two years later, Jackson pleaded guilty to the misdemeanor charge, the state
dropped the felony charge, and the court sentenced Jackson to six months’ unsupervised
probation. Sent’g Order at 2, State v. Jackson, No. CR2022-006716-001 (Ariz. Super. Ct.
June 10, 2024). Jackson’s probation ended without incident in November 2024.
2
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weapons charge was still pending, Jackson drove from Arizona to the East Coast. He
brought his handgun with him.
Jackson’s drive brought him to Hagerstown, Maryland. There, state police arrested
him after he admitted to carrying his gun without a permit. See Md. Code, Crim. Law § 4-
203 (making it a misdemeanor to do so). When the police discovered Jackson’s Arizona
charges, they referred his case to Maryland federal prosecutors. In April 2022, a federal
grand jury charged Jackson with violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(n), a statute that (in relevant
part) makes it “unlawful for any person who is under indictment for a [felony] to ship or
transport in interstate or foreign commerce any firearm or ammunition.”
When Jackson was indicted, this circuit used a “‘two-step’ framework for analyzing
Second Amendment challenges that combine[d] history with means-end scrutiny.” N.Y.
State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1, 17 (2022); see United States v. Staten, 666
F.3d 154, 159 (4th Cir. 2011). But the Supreme Court rejected that test for another one two
months after Jackson was charged. Bruen, 597 U.S. at 17.
Jackson seized on the new standard and moved to dismiss his federal indictment as
unconstitutional. The district court denied the motion. United States v. Jackson, 661 F.
Supp. 3d 392, 415 (D. Md. 2023).
Jackson then conditionally pleaded guilty. See Fed. R. Crim. P. 11(a)(2). Jackson’s
plea deal preserved his right to appeal the district court’s denial of his motion to dismiss.
The district court sentenced him to time served, and this appeal followed.
3
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II.
Jackson presents a single issue on appeal: whether 18 U.S.C. § 922(n), as applied to
him, violates his constitutional right to keep and bear arms. 2 It doesn’t.
A.
The Second Amendment protects “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms.”
U.S. Const. amend. II. To decide whether the government has trodden on that right, we
apply a “text-and-history standard.” Bruen, 597 U.S. at 39. If “the Second Amendment’s
plain text covers an individual’s conduct,” the state may regulate only within the “historical
tradition that delimits the outer bounds of the right to keep and bear arms.” Id. at 17, 19.
Our circuit applies Bruen in two steps. First, we ask “whether the Second
Amendment’s plain text covers the conduct at issue.” United States v. Price, 111 F.4th 392,
398 (4th Cir. 2024) (en banc), cert. denied, 145 S. Ct. 1891 (2025). To answer that question,
we ask three others: (1) whether the person challenging the gun regulation is among “‘the
people whom the Second Amendment protects,’” (2) whether the person’s weapons are “‘in
common use’ for a lawful purpose,” and (3) whether the person’s “proposed course of
conduct” is covered by the textual right to keep or to bear arms. Id. at 400–01 (quoting
Bruen, 597 U.S. at 31–32).
At Bruen step two, the government bears the burden of proof. See Md. Shall Issue,
Inc. v. Moore, 116 F.4th 211, 219 (4th Cir. 2024) (en banc), cert. denied, 145 S. Ct. 1049
(2025). There, we ask “whether the Government has justified the regulation as consistent
2
We review that question de novo. United States v. Collins, 982 F.3d 236, 243 (4th
Cir. 2020).
4
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with the ‘principles that underpin’ our nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.”
Price, 111 F.4th at 398 (quoting United States v. Rahimi, 602 U.S. 680, 692 (2024)).
“Why and how the regulation burdens the right are central to [the step two] inquiry.”
Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 692. If founding-era laws “regulated firearm use to address particular
problems,” then modern laws “imposing similar restrictions for similar reasons”
presumably pass constitutional muster, so long as they don’t burden the right to bear arms
“to an extent beyond what was done at the founding.” Id.
B.
The government thinks that Jackson never gets past Bruen step one. It invites us to
hold that Jackson’s offense—transporting a gun across state lines—falls “outside of what
the plain text of the Second Amendment protects.” 3 Appellee’s Br. at 10. We decline.
1.
The Second Amendment’s “plain text,” Bruen, 597 U.S. at 32, protects “the right of
the people to keep and bear Arms,” U.S. Const. amend. II. To “keep Arms” means “to
‘have weapons’”—that is, to “possess[]” them. District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S.
570, 582–83 (2008). To “bear arms” means “to wear, bear, or carry upon the person or in
the clothing or in a pocket, for the purpose of being armed and ready for offensive or
defensive action in a case of conflict with another person.” Bruen, 597 U.S. at 32 (cleaned
up) (quoting Heller, 554 U.S. at 584). The right to “bear arms” thus includes a right to
carry firearms in public for self-defense. Id. at 32–33.
The government doesn’t contest that Jackson is “part of the people” or that his
3
handgun is “in common use for a lawful purpose.” Price, 111 F.4th at 400 (cleaned up).
5
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The government cites Heller and Bruen’s definitions of the “keep” and “bear” rights
to argue that Jackson’s conduct—shipping or transporting a firearm—“has nothing to do
with ‘keeping’ or ‘bearing.’” Appellee’s Br. at 12.
Perhaps some acts criminalized by § 922(n) fall outside the Second Amendment’s
plain text. For example, placing a gun inside a crate and mailing it to another state might
violate § 922(n)’s command not “to ship or transport in interstate or foreign commerce any
firearm” and yet not burden a person’s ability to keep or bear arms. 4 And if some conduct
proscribed by § 922(n) is unprotected at Bruen step one, then that would be enough to
defeat a facial challenge to the statute. See Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 693.
But Jackson doesn’t argue that § 922(n) is invalid on its face. He challenges the law
as applied to him, so we must consider his “course of conduct.” Bruen, 597 U.S. at 32.
Jackson placed a handgun in a car and then drove across state lines. It’s that conduct—not
“shipping” or “transporting” a firearm in the abstract, Appellee’s Br. at 12—that the Second
Amendment’s text must protect at Bruen step one.
By traveling with his gun, Jackson “kept” it in the constitutional sense: he
“retain[ed]” it in his “custody.” Heller, 554 U.S. at 582. So the Second Amendment’s
plain text covers his conduct.
4
It may also be possible to infringe a person’s Second Amendment rights without
directly regulating keeping or bearing. But this case doesn’t require us to decide whether
“the Second Amendment also protects ancillary rights necessary” to the rights to keep and
bear arms. B & L Prods., Inc. v. Newsom, 104 F.4th 108, 117–18 (9th Cir. 2024) (quotation
omitted).
6
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2.
The government has other step one arguments, but none persuade us. The
government, for instance, says that felony indictees had few rights at the founding, since
they were usually detained pending trial. According to the government, that means there
was “no historical tradition” of giving indictees freedom to travel across state lines with
firearms in tow. Appellee’s Br. at 13. The government also says that interstate
transportation of firearms was heavily regulated at the founding, so “the pre-existing right
to keep and bear arms did not include an unfettered right to transport arms . . . across state
lines.” Id. at 15.
It’s true that our Second Amendment decisions have held that “we can only properly
apply step one of the Bruen framework by looking to the historical scope of the Second
Amendment right.” Price, 111 F.4th at 401 (emphasis in original); see Bianchi v. Brown,
111 F.4th 438, 447–48 (4th Cir. 2024) (en banc) (similar), cert. denied, 145 S. Ct. 1534
(2025). But Bruen itself forecloses the government’s position.
The petitioners in Bruen wanted to “carry[] handguns publicly for self-defense,”
Bruen, 597 U.S. at 32, and they challenged “New York’s licensing regime” because it
“condition[ed] issuance” of a public-carry license “on a citizen’s showing of some
additional special need” for public carry, id. at 11. The Court found that the “definition of
‘bear’ naturally encompasses public carry” and concluded that the petitioners’ desired
conduct was protected by the “text of the Second Amendment.” Id. at 32–33. The Court
never asked, at the threshold, whether the right to “bear” included a right to bear without a
special need. That question didn’t relate to the Second Amendment’s plain text.
7
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We don’t think that the “course of conduct” part of Bruen step one allows a free-
floating inquiry into the historical scope of firearms rights that Bruen itself didn’t invite.
Whether felony indictees could bear arms at the founding doesn’t determine the meaning
of “bear,” and whether founding-era citizens had a right to keep arms during interstate
travel doesn’t determine the meaning of “keep.”
Historical limitations on firearms rights matter; they “define the scope of ‘the right
to keep and bear arms’ as it was originally understood.” Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 737 (Barrett,
J., concurring). They just matter at Bruen step two. Importing an untethered historical
limitations test into Bruen step one all but inverts the Court’s instruction that the
government “bears the burden to justify its regulation” of “arms-bearing conduct.” Id. at
691 (majority opinion) (quotation omitted).
C.
On to step two—historical tradition. The government offers “three distinct
historical threads” that it claims justify subjecting Jackson to § 922(n): laws governing bail
and pretrial detention, surety laws, and laws disarming “dangerous or untrustworthy
persons.” Appellee’s Br. at 20.
After exploring § 922(n)’s purposes, we sift through the government’s evidence. On
the record before us, we can’t agree that bail and pretrial detention reflect a guiding
principle that helps the government.
But surety laws, as construed in Rahimi, reveal that those accused of possessing
dangerous weapons can be temporarily disarmed. And circuit precedent compels an even
broader rule for “dangerous persons” laws: we’ve held that legislatures can rely on
8
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categorical judgments (and “past conduct”) to disarm those “who might be expected to
misuse” guns. United States v. Hunt, 123 F.4th 697, 707 (4th Cir. 2024) (quotation
omitted), cert. denied, 93 U.S.L.W. 3329 (2025).
1.
“Why and how” § 922(n) burdens the right to keep and bear arms “are central” to
Bruen step two. Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 692. The statute’s “how” is straightforward:
temporary disarmament, on pain of criminal sanction. But § 922(n)’s “why,” as reflected
in the statute’s history, demands more explanation.
Section 922(n)’s first federal ancestor was section 2(e) of the Federal Firearms Act.
Ch. 850, 52 Stat. 1250, 1251 (1938). As codified, that law prohibited “any person who is
under indictment or who has been convicted of a crime of violence or who is a fug[i]tive
from justice to ship, transport, or cause to be shipped or transported in interstate or foreign
commerce any firearm or ammunition.” 15 U.S.C. § 902(e) (1940) (repealed 1968). The
Senate Committee on Commerce thought the Federal Firearms Act’s goal was to “eliminate
the gun from the crooks’ hands, while interfering as little as possible with . . . law-abiding
citizen[s],” who had opposed “any attempt to take from [them] [their] means of protection
from the outlaws.” S. Rep. No. 75-82, at 2 (1937).
Twenty-three years later, Congress expanded § 902(e)’s reach from “crimes of
violence” to felonies in general—that is, all crimes “punishable by imprisonment for a term
exceeding one year.” Act of Oct. 3, 1961, Pub. L. No. 87-342, § 2, 75 Stat. 757, 757. The
amendment was “anticrime” legislation meant to “make it more difficult for the criminal
9
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elements in our society to obtain firearms.” H.R. Rep. No. 87-1202, at 2 (1961), as
reprinted in 1961 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3067, 3068.
Seven years after that, Congress revised and recodified 15 U.S.C. § 902(e) as part
of the Omnibus Crime Control & Safe Streets Act of 1968. 5 Pub. L. No. 90-351, § 902, 82
Stat. 197, 231.
The policy behind the Crime Control Act closely resembled that of its predecessors.
Congress found “that the ease with which any person can acquire firearms other than a rifle
or shotgun (including criminals, juveniles, . . . and others whose possession of such
weapons is similarly contrary to the public interest) is a significant factor in the prevalence
of lawlessness and violent crime.” Id. § 901(a)(2), 82 Stat. at 225. Just as before, Congress
determined that guns were dangerous in the hands of dangerous people. See United States
v. Quiroz, 125 F.4th 713, 718 & n.24 (5th Cir. 2025) (glossing § 922(n) in the same way).
Subsection (n) took its current form in 1986:
It shall be unlawful for any person who is under indictment for a crime
punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year to ship or
transport in interstate or foreign commerce any firearm or ammunition or
5
As amended soon after, the statute read:
It shall be unlawful for any person—
(1) who is under indictment for, or has been convicted in any court of, a
crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year; [or]
(2) who is a fugitive from justice;
....
to ship or transport any firearm or ammunition in interstate or foreign
commerce.
18 U.S.C. § 922(g) (1970).
10
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receive any firearm or ammunition which has been shipped or transported in
interstate or foreign commerce.
Firearm Owners’ Protection Act, Pub. L. No. 99-308, § 102(8), 100 Stat. 449, 452 (1986).
The Protection Act’s focus was on liberalizing the gun control laws and protecting
Second Amendment rights. See id. § 1(b)(1), 100 Stat. at 449. Section 922(n), as revised,
served that goal: it disaggregated convicts from indictees and imposed a lighter burden on
the latter. H.R. Rep. No. 99-495, at 23 n.15 (1986), as reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N.
1327, 1360 (“[Indictees] are prohibited from receiving or transporting firearms but may
continue to possess them.”).
In sum, § 922(n) and its predecessors strike a balance between the public’s interest
in keeping arms away from those who might misuse them and the rights of individuals to
be free from government intrusion. That’s the “why” of the statute. 6
2.
The parties spend much time discussing pretrial detention. The government says
that if it could have detained Jackson pretrial, it can take the lesser step of disarming him
during that time. Two of our sister circuits have accepted this argument in decisions
6
The government says that § 922(n) is also meant to “maintain[] the integrity of the
judicial process” by preventing felony indictees from getting “a new gun which might be
used to threaten or kill” those involved in the case. Appellee’s Br. at 20.
There’s no historical support for that theory. The government relies instead on the
Sixth Circuit’s decision in United States v. Gore, which cited no authority for what it called
§ 922(n)’s “obvious justifications.” 118 F.4th 808, 814 (6th Cir. 2024).
With all respect to our sister circuit, we aren’t willing to guess at the policy goals
§ 922(n) serves. Section 922(n)’s extensive statutory and legislative history nowhere
mentions safeguarding the judicial process. We see no need to supplement that record with
our speculation.
11
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sustaining § 922(n) on its face. See Quiroz, 125 F.4th at 718–25; United States v. Gore,
118 F.4th 808, 814–17 (6th Cir. 2024).
The argument makes intuitive sense. A pretrial detainee loses most liberties,
including the ability to keep and bear arms. If states can impose that greater burden, then
§ 922(n)’s “lesser restriction of temporary disarmament” must be permitted, too. Rahimi,
602 U.S. at 699; see Quiroz, 125 F.4th at 718; Gore, 118 F.4th at 815. So if defendants at
the founding were detained pretrial for policy reasons that resemble § 922(n)’s, then there’s
a match on both “why” and “how,” and § 922(n) survives Bruen.
The government claims it’s made that showing. At the founding, says the
government, defendants indicted on capital offenses were imprisoned pending trial without
bail. Because the Founders were far looser with capital punishment than we are now,
“many modern-day felonies were capital offenses at the founding.” Quiroz, 125 F.4th at
723; see Gore, 118 F.4th at 814–15. That makes for a match on the “how.” And because
(the government asserts) founding-era pretrial detention was partly meant to prevent
indictees from causing harm, there’s a match to § 922(n)’s “why.” Quiroz, 125 F.4th at
724–25; Gore, 118 F.4th at 814.
But even if historical pretrial detention matches § 922(n)’s “how,” on this record,
we doubt it matches the “why.” That’s because the government has provided no evidence
for its claim that founding-era pretrial detention served preventive ends.
In another case and on a different record, we may be persuaded otherwise. But
today (as we explain), we choose not to rest on the history of pretrial detention.
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a.
In the 1780s, roughly half of the colonies followed a “common-law model” of bail
based on English law, and roughly half followed a more defendant-friendly “dissenter
model” pioneered in Massachusetts and Pennsylvania. Kellen R. Funk & Sandra G.
Mayson, Bail at the Founding, 137 Harv. L. Rev. 1816, 1826 (2024).
On the common-law model, bail was forbidden for serious crimes, required for petty
ones, and discretionary for “the vast majority of cases” between. Id. at 1832–33. For cases
where discretion was allowed, bail was largely based on “probability of guilt,” but the
defendant’s reputation mattered, too. Id. at 1833–34 & n.97.
On the dissenter model, pretrial detention was never mandatory. Most prisoners had
a right to bail, but magistrates had discretion to deny bail for capital crimes. Id. at 1842.
Even in capital cases, bail could be denied only “where the proof [was] evident or the
presumption great.” Id.; see Matthew J. Hegreness, America’s Fundamental and Vanishing
Right to Bail, 55 Ariz. L. Rev. 909, 921 n.40 (2013) (finding similar language in forty-two
state constitutions).
The dissenter model would become the national standard. The Confederation
Congress made it the rule for the Northwest Territory. Northwest Ordinance art. II, 1 Stat.
51, 52 n.(a) (1787). The First Congress passed a version of it for the federal system.
Judiciary Act of 1789, ch. 20, § 33, 1 Stat. 73, 91. And almost every new state admitted to
the Union adopted it.
But at the founding, it might “not yet have been clear” that the dissenter model
would become the rule. Funk & Mayson, supra, at 1842. By the end of 1792, nine states
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followed the common-law model, and six states followed the dissenter model. See id. at
1842–43 & nn.156–57; Hegreness, supra, at 922–23 & n.40. So we take both systems to
be relevant to our analysis.
In common-law states, those charged with serious crimes were denied bail. Under
the “inherited English model” that those jurisdictions adopted, Funk & Mayson, supra, at
1832, defendants charged with treason, murder, burglary, arson, forgery, and horse-stealing
(not to mention “persons excommunicated”) were “clearly not admissible to bail by a
justice of the peace.” 1 Joseph Chitty, A Practical Treatise on the Criminal Law 95–96
(London 1816); see Anthony Highmore, A Digest of the Doctrine of Bail 164–70 (London,
T. Cadell 1783); Charles Petersdorff, A Practical Treatise on the Law of Bail *489–96
(Philadelphia, John S. Littell 1835).
In dissenter states, there was no such thing as a non-bailable crime. Even in capital
cases, pretrial detention wasn’t mandatory unless “the proof [was] positive or the
presumption great.” E.g., Del. Const. of 1792, art. I, § 12. So when the evidence against
a defendant was weak, that defendant could be granted bail. See, e.g., United States v.
Hamilton, 3 U.S. (3 Dall.) 17, 17–18 (1795) (reversing a district court that refused bail to
an accused traitor).
But in dissenter jurisdictions, the rule changed after indictment. The famous trial
of Aaron Burr provides a good example. On June 24, 1807, partway through the
proceedings, a Richmond grand jury indicted Burr on treason charges. 1 David Robertson,
Reports of the Trials of Colonel Aaron Burr 305–06 (Philadelphia, Hopkins & Earle 1808).
The government moved to have Burr committed pretrial. Id. at 306. Chief Justice
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Marshall, riding circuit, opined that the Judiciary Act “enabled the court to bail a prisoner
arrested for treason,” but that “the finding of the grand jury would be the evidence on which
the court would have to judge” whether to do so. Id. at 310–11.
Marshall “doubted extremely, whether the court had the right to bail any person,
after an indictment for treason had been found against him by a grand jury.” Id. at 311. He
could think of no case where a court could examine evidence outside the indictment to
decide whether to permit bail, and he demanded “adjudged cases, to prove that the court
could bail a party, against whom an indictment had been found.” Id. at 312. Burr had none,
so he was “conducted to the gaol of [the] city, and the court adjourned.” Id.
Marshall’s suspicions quickly became settled law. In dissenter states, capital
defendants had a right to bail unless the proof was evident or the presumption great. But
many states held that “an indictment for a capital offense does of itself furnish a
presumption of the guilt too great to entitle [the defendant] to bail.” People v. Tinder, 19
Cal. 539, 543 (1862) (Field, C.J.). After indictment, “a Defendant [was] presumed to be
guilty” (except for purposes of “trial before a petit jury”), and that “presumption [was] so
strong, that in the case of a capital felony, the party [could not] be let to bail.” 7 State v.
Mills, 13 N.C. (2 Dev.) 420, 421–22 (1830); see Hight v. United States, Morris 407, 412
(Iowa 1845); Territory v. Benoit, 1 Mart. (o.s.) 142, 142–43 (Orleans 1810) (per curiam);
7
Some states put much less stock in an indictment. In Virginia and South Carolina
(both common-law states pre-Civil War, see Hegreness, supra, at 930, 989), judges could
consider evidence not before the grand jury when deciding whether to grant bail to a person
accused of a capital crime. Commonwealth v. Rutherford, 26 Va. (5 Rand.) 646, 648–49
(1826); State v. Hill, 6 S.C.L. (1 Tread.) 242, 244 (1812) (opinion of Brevard, J.). But
theirs seems to have been the minority rule.
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cf. Ex Parte Tayloe, 5 Cow. 39, 56 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1825) (opinion of Sutherland, J.) (“The
indictment must be taken as conclusive upon the degree of the crime.”). 8
b.
In sum, after indictment for a capital crime, bail was forbidden, whether at common
law or in the so-called “dissenter” states. Assuming that felony offenses today can fairly
be analogized to capital crimes at the founding, 9 that makes pretrial detention relevantly
similar to § 922(n)’s “how.”
That said, it’s difficult to analogize the “why” of pretrial detention to the “why” of
§ 922(n). Section 922(n)’s goal, in essence, is preventive (i.e., forward-looking) justice.
Congress sought to disarm felony indictees because it believed that they were especially
likely to commit firearms offenses.
At the founding, mandatory post-indictment detention in capital cases seems to have
served different, backward-facing goals. Bail was supposed to be denied in discretionary
cases (including in dissenter-jurisdiction capital cases) based on likelihood of guilt, not
odds of harm to the public. Funk & Mayson, supra, at 1833, 1842.
8
New York wasn’t a dissenter state. Hegreness, supra, at 930; see People v. Van
Horne, 8 Barb. 158, 163 (N.Y. Oyer & Terminer 1850). Still, the views of New York courts
were persuasive in dissenter jurisdictions. See, e.g., Tinder, 19 Cal. at 544–46 (quoting and
citing New York cases).
9
That premise, to be clear, may not hold true. Maybe capital crimes at the founding
are too unlike the set of all modern-day felonies in 2025 to be properly analogous. Perhaps
even archetypal felonies like “theft, burglary, and robbery were, on the whole, not capital”
at the turn of the nineteenth century. Kanter v. Barr, 919 F.3d 437, 459 (7th Cir. 2019)
(Barrett, J., dissenting) (cleaned up); see Range v. Att’y Gen., 124 F.4th 218, 227 (3d Cir.
2024) (en banc). Our circuit hasn’t weighed in on either the history or the analogy, and we
take no position today.
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Lord Coke, describing the common-law rule, explained that “[a] man arrested or
imprisoned (and bailable) for felony shal be bailed before it appeareth whether he be guilty
or no.” 4 Edward Coke, The Institutes of the Laws of England 178 (London, W. Lee & D.
Pakeman 1644). The same rule justified denying post-conviction bail: “if a man be
convicted by verdict or confession, &c. he is not bailable, because it appeareth that he is
guilty.” Id. One Antebellum judge could find no “adjudged case, or any text book of
respectability, which question[ed]” that rule. People v. Dixon, 3 Abb. Pr. 395, 397 (N.Y.
Sup. Ct. 1856).
A court deciding whether to grant bail to a capital defendant had to look at the
strength of the evidence for the charged offense. But grand jury evidence was kept secret.
Because judges had no way to review the grand jury’s decision, they had to defer to it. 10
See Benoit, 1 Mart. (o.s.) at 142; Tinder, 19 Cal. at 544; United States v. Reed, 27 F. Cas.
727, 738 (C.C.N.D.N.Y. 1852) (No. 16,134) (Nelson, Circuit Justice); see also 1 Chitty,
supra, at 129–30. In places where the evidence before the grand jury was available for
review, some courts held that “[t]he question of bail” was “open to consideration to the
10
The English Court of King’s Bench, which had discretion to grant bail even in
capital cases, see Highmore, supra, at 179–80, observed a similar rule for similar reasons:
If a man be found guilty of murder by the coroner’s inquest, we sometimes
bail him, because the coroner proceeds upon depositions taken in writing
which we may look into. Otherwise, if a man be found guilty of murder by
a grand jury; because the Court cannot take notice of their evidence, which
they by their oath are bound to conceal.
Lord Mohun’s Case (1697) 91 Eng. Rep. 96; 1 Salk. 104.
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same extent that it would be if applied for before indictment.” People v. Baker, 10 How.
Pr. 567, 570 (N.Y. Oyer & Terminer 1855) (murder prosecution).
The government offers no evidence that the founding generation denied bail to
prevent future offenses; nor does it argue that the Founders’ backwards-facing concerns
resemble § 922(n)’s forward-looking goals. Instead, the government asserts that both
§ 922(n) and founding-era laws were meant to “ensure the defendant’s appearance at trial
and to keep the public safe in the meantime.” Appellee’s Br. at 23 (quoting Gore, 118 F.4th
at 814). But we don’t see how § 922(n) serves the former purpose, and the historical
evidence we’ve surveyed suggests that founding-era pretrial detention wasn’t seen as
serving the latter.
The government’s only authority is Gore, but that case’s sources don’t withstand
scrutiny. Gore asserts that public safety was a goal of the bail system. 118 F.4th at 814
(citing Funk & Mayson, supra, at 1853). But bail law served that public safety function
because bail bonds would typically “guarantee a defendant’s ‘good behavior’ as well as
their appearance.” Funk & Mayson, supra, at 1853. In other words, public safety was
served by granting bail, not denying it. See 4 Coke, supra, at 180 (discussing bail in the
form of “surety of the peace, and surety of the good behavior”).
One of Gore’s other sources does say in passing that bail wasn’t universal in criminal
cases so “that the safety of the people should be preserved against the lawless depredations
of atrocious offenders.” Highmore, supra, at vii. But that view, to our knowledge, wasn’t
endorsed by founding-era courts, and modern scholars “disagree as to when pretrial law
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first endorsed restraint for dangerousness.” Sandra G. Mayson, Dangerous Defendants,
127 Yale L.J. 490, 502 (2018).
The best we can say for now is that the history of pretrial detention “does not
establish that community protection was unimportant.” Albert W. Alschuler, Preventive
Pretrial Detention and the Failure of Interest-Balancing Approaches to Due Process, 85
Mich. L. Rev. 510, 549 (1986). Under Bruen, that ambivalence weighs against the
government.
c.
To a modern-day court, the preventive purpose of pretrial detention seems obvious.
But today’s common sense is yesterday’s nonsense. Within living memory, the idea of
denying bail “to protect society from predicted but unconsummated offenses” seemed
“unprecedented in this country,” even to avoid “[g]rave public danger” from what a
defendant “may be expected to do.” Williamson v. United States, 184 F.2d 280, 282 (2d
Cir. 1950) (Jackson, Circuit Justice). “Clearly,” to some judges, “it [was] not the function
of bail to prevent the commission of crimes between indictment and trial.” United States
v. Foster, 79 F. Supp. 422, 423 (S.D.N.Y. 1948). The government has given us no reliable
evidence that the founding generation thought differently.
We don’t need to finally resolve whether founding-era pretrial detention is
“relevantly similar” to some § 922(n) prosecutions. Bruen, 597 U.S. at 29. We conclude
only that the government hasn’t proven, on this record, that it is.
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3.
The government next contends that founding-era surety laws justify Jackson’s
prosecution. This second tradition makes a better match, and we find it sufficiently
analogous to this case.
At the founding, surety laws made up an “individualized . . . regime” that
“authorized magistrates to require individuals suspected of future misbehavior to post a
bond.” Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 695; see Bruen, 597 U.S. at 56–57. Absent a bond, the person
“would be jailed.” Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 695. And if the person “did post a bond and then
broke the peace, the bond would be forfeit.” Id.
Surety laws “typically targeted only those threatening to do harm.” Bruen, 597 U.S.
at 55. But they “could be invoked to prevent all forms of violence, including spousal
abuse” and “the misuse of firearms.” Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 695–96. One statute even
authorized “the imposition of bonds from individuals ‘[who went] armed with . . . offensive
and dangerous weapon[s].’” Id. at 696 (quoting Mass. Rev. Stat. ch. 134, § 16 (1836)).
a.
Section 922(n), as applied to Jackson, limited his right to keep arms after a grand
jury found probable cause that he “knowingly did manufacture, possess, transport, sell, or
transfer a 10[.]5-inch barrel rifle, a prohibited weapon.” J.A. 63. That burden on Jackson’s
rights bears relevant similarities to historical surety laws.
Conduct triggering the restriction. Jackson’s rights were limited because he
exercised control in some way over a dangerous weapon. That’s analogous to the surety
statutes, which penalized “go[ing] armed with a . . . pistol[] or other offensive and
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dangerous weapon,” whatever the person’s reason. Mass. Rev. Stat. ch. 134, § 16 (1836);
see also, e.g., Act of Mar. 14, 1848, ch. 120, 1847–1848 Va. Acts 93, 129 (enacting Va.
Crim. Code ch. 14, § 16 (1848)); Bruen, 597 U.S. at 56 (“Between 1838 and 1871, nine
other jurisdictions adopted variants of [Mass. Rev. Stat. ch. 134, § 16].”).
True, many surety statutes had self-defense exceptions, and § 922(n) doesn’t. But
some surety statutes, like Massachusetts’s, reached all pistols, and Jackson was indicted in
Arizona for possessing an unusually dangerous gun. It’s hard to say that § 922(n), as
applied, imposes a greater burden on the right to bear in this respect. See Rahimi, 602 U.S.
at 698–99.
Process before restriction. Jackson’s rights were limited only after a grand jury
found probable cause that he’d already committed a felony. Surety laws generally required
no more than “reasonable cause to fear that the accused would do [a person] harm or breach
the peace.” See id. at 696 (quotation omitted). And a magistrate decided whether there
was reasonable cause. Id. at 695. These procedural protections closely resemble § 922(n).
Jackson protests that surety laws required adversarial proceedings, and that a grand
jury is hardly a serious obstacle for the government. But Massachusetts’s surety law, at
least, required an adversarial proceeding only after a magistrate judge had found reasonable
cause. Mass. Rev. Stat. ch. 134, § 3. When the accused came before the magistrate, he
could be “heard in his defense,” but the magistrate could make the accused “enter into a
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recognizance” then and there—with no indication from the statute that a higher burden of
proof was needed for the deprivation. 11 Id. § 4.
Nor does substituting a grand jury in for a neutral magistrate destroy the analogy to
§ 922(n). Yesterday’s magistrate, like today’s grand jury, could burden gun rights ex parte
and on probable (or reasonable) cause. And those that voted for the Bill of Rights expected
the grand jury’s “functional independence” to be a “buffer” against government abuses.
United States v. Williams, 504 U.S. 36, 47–48 (1992); see Costello v. United States, 350
U.S. 359, 362 (1956); Charge to Grand Jury, 30 F. Cas. 992, 993 (C.C.D. Cal. 1872)
(No. 18,255) (Field, Circuit Justice). We doubt the Founders wrote grand juries into the
Bill of Rights to curtail civil liberties.
Time-boundedness. Sureties were “limited [in their] duration,” and so is § 922(n).
Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 699. The statute in Rahimi releases its grip on regulated persons as
soon as the restraining order they are subject to expires. Id. Likewise, Jackson was only
disarmed for as long as he was under felony indictment.
The historical sureties discussed in Rahimi didn’t last longer than six months. Id. at
697. Jackson was under indictment for fifteen months on his first felony indictment and
fifteen more months on his second. But that’s not much longer, in the aggregate, than
11
Bruen and Rahimi treat Massachusetts’s surety law as representative, so we feel
justified in doing the same. Bruen, 597 U.S. at 55–57; Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 696–97. But
other states’ laws reinforce our conclusion. In Maine, for instance, justices of the peace
could require sureties from persons “going armed” with dangerous weapons “on the
complaint of any person having cause”—no adversarial process required. Contrast 12 Me.
Rev. Stat. ch. 169, § 16 (1840), with id. § 5 (for other accusations, sureties permitted only
after “defence has been heard”). The same was true in Wisconsin. See An Act to Prevent
the Commission of Crimes § 16, 1838 Wis. Terr. Stat. 379, 381.
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Zackey Rahimi’s two-year restraining order. Id. at 687. In fact, it’s probably shorter,
considering that Rahimi’s restraining order will remain in force for one or two years after
he finishes his federal sentence. Id. If Rahimi’s disability was time-limited enough, then
so is Jackson’s.
Severity of the burden. Section 922(n) burdens Jackson’s Second Amendment
rights less than either the statute in Rahimi or the historical laws Rahimi relied on. Surety
laws could imprison a person without the resources to pay a bond merely on suspicion of
future misbehavior. Id. at 695. Their cousins, the “going armed” laws, imprisoned those
who breached the peace while armed with dangerous weapons. Id. at 697. One can’t carry
arms in prison, so the greater penalty of imprisonment permits the lesser penalty of
disarmament. Id. at 699.
And Jackson, unlike Rahimi, was never completely deprived of his Second
Amendment rights. While under felony indictment, Jackson could possess and carry guns
and ammunition, so long as he got those guns and ammunition pre-indictment and didn’t
carry them across state lines. See 18 U.S.C. § 922(n). That’s far from a categorical
prohibition, even if it limits one’s ability to keep and bear arms.
b.
Having identified an analogous “how,” we easily dispense with the “why.” Surety
laws existed to prevent persons who “would do . . . harm or breach the peace” from having
an opportunity to do so. Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 696. The point was to stop harm before it
happened.
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Section 922(n)’s rationale is identical: to “eliminate the gun from the crooks’
hands,” S. Rep. No. 75-82, at 2, and to prevent harm by keeping weapons from those who
would abuse them, see Omnibus Crime Control Act § 901(a)(2), 82 Stat. at 225. Since
§ 922(n) and surety laws share a key purpose—prevention—we can conclude with
confidence that the latter justifies subjecting Jackson to the former.
The “principles that underpin” surety laws, Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 681, lead to a rule:
just as legislatures have the power to disarm those “who threaten physical harm to others,”
id. at 690, so too can they disarm those who possess dangerous weapons while under felony
indictment. Section 922(n), as applied to Jackson, comports with that tradition and thus
Bruen.
4.
The government offers a third historical tradition to buttress its position. It contends
that our precedent on “dangerous persons” demands that we affirm the district court. Here,
too, we agree. Even if our discussion of founding-era surety laws were mistaken, we would
still sustain Jackson’s conviction.
a.
Our recent decision in United States v. Hunt disposes of both the “how” and the
“why” of § 922(n). Hunt held that 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), the felon-in-possession statute,
is constitutional as applied no matter what felony the defendant was convicted of. 123
F.4th 697, 700 (4th Cir. 2024). Hunt concluded that our historical tradition of gun
regulation allows “status-based restrictions to disqualify categories of persons from
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possessing firearms.” Id. at 705 (quoting United States v. Jackson, 110 F.4th 1120, 1129
(8th Cir. 2024) (no relation), cert. denied, 221 L. Ed. 2d 970 (U.S. 2025)).
Two families of gun restrictions produced two regulatory principles, and both
supported Hunt’s conclusion. Under the first principle, early legislatures could (and did)
disarm those who “demonstrated disrespect for legal norms.” Hunt, 123 F.4th at 706
(quoting Jackson, 110 F.4th at 1127). Indeed, they often did so categorically, based on
membership in a distrusted group. Id. at 706–07. Under the second, legislatures could
prohibit gun ownership by groups of persons that the legislature deemed “potentially
violent or dangerous.” Id. at 707. Thus, “[e]ven though ‘not all Protestants or Catholics
in England, not all Native Americans, not all Catholics in Maryland, not all early
Americans who declined to swear an oath of loyalty . . . were violent or dangerous persons,’
all could be disarmed.” Id. (quoting Jackson, 110 F.4th at 1128).
Hunt’s second principle—risk of dangerousness—supports the government’s
position here. When Congress passed § 922(n), it feared letting guns fall into criminal
hands. Hunt holds that Congress can legislate using proxies for dangerousness. Id. at
707–08. And although “felony indictment” is a less effective proxy for dangerousness than
“felony conviction,” § 922(n)’s temporary and partial disarmament burdens Second
Amendment rights far less severely than does § 922(g)(1)’s lifetime ban. 12
12
Our recent decision in United States v. Gould confirms this understanding. There,
we reaffirmed Hunt’s conclusion that, at the founding, “legislatures had the authority . . .
to disarm categories of people based on a belief that the class posed a threat of
dangerousness.” 146 F.4th 421, 431 (4th Cir. 2025).
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b.
Jackson flees Hunt, but he can’t escape it. Before addressing the Bruen test, Hunt
concluded that our pre-Bruen precedents rejecting as-applied challenges to § 922(g)(1)
were still binding. Id. at 703–04. Jackson contends that once Hunt reached that conclusion,
“every part of [its] reasoning” was unnecessary to its holding and thus dictum. Reply Br.
at 11.
Wrong. Hunt indicates throughout that its Bruen step two holding was issued in the
alternative to its other conclusions. See, e.g., 123 F.4th at 702 (“even if we were
unconstrained” by panel precedent); id. at 704 (“even if”); id. at 705 (“even if”). And
alternative holdings aren’t dicta. United States v. Mitchell, 120 F.4th 1233, 1240 (4th Cir.
2024).
To be sure, Hunt’s language isn’t dispositive. Judges “cannot transmute dictum into
decision by waving a wand and uttering the word ‘hold.’” United States v. Rubin, 609 F.2d
51, 69 n.2 (2d Cir. 1979) (Friendly, J., concurring). But Hunt’s holdings are truly
alternative; each is “broad enough to sustain [the decision] independently” of the others.
United States v. Title Ins. & Tr. Co., 265 U.S. 472, 486 (1924).
Jackson disagrees. When a panel’s first holding undermines its ability to make
others, he says, “the panel’s ‘further conclusions constitut[e] dicta.’” 13 Reply Br. at 13
In support, Jackson relies on United States v. Horsley, where we defined “dictum”
13
as any statement “that could have been deleted without seriously impairing the analytical
foundations of the holding.” 105 F.4th 193, 212 (4th Cir. 2024) (cleaned up). But Horsley’s
definition can’t be read as broadly as Jackson would like. Horsley didn’t confront
alternative holdings, and its rule, if applied blindly, would destroy them.
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(quoting Freed v. Thomas, 976 F.3d 729, 739 (6th Cir. 2020)). Using that language, Jackson
contends that Hunt couldn’t have gone past panel precedent. In his view, once Hunt
determined that it was bound by pre-Bruen caselaw, that meant Bruen didn’t apply—and
the panel thus “could not apply” it. Id.
Wrong again. Freed discussed a prior Sixth Circuit case that concluded “the district
court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction.” 976 F.3d at 738 (discussing Wayside Church v.
Van Buren County, 847 F.3d 812 (6th Cir. 2017)). Wayside Church then went on to discuss
other grounds for reversal. Freed, 976 F.3d at 739. But if the district court didn’t have
jurisdiction, Freed reasoned, the panel in Wayside Church didn’t either, so that panel had
no power to do anything but dismiss. Id.; see Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t, 523
U.S. 83, 94 (1998). Under those circumstances, Freed refused to give binding effect to
Wayside Church’s later discussion. 976 F.3d at 740.
In our view, Freed was limited to jurisdictional rules—that is, those rules that affect
a court’s “power to hear a case.” United States v. Cotton, 535 U.S. 625, 630 (2002). But
just as the law-of-the-case doctrine and the mandate rule go to merits, not jurisdiction,
Crow Tribe of Indians v. Repsis, 74 F.4th 1208, 1221 (10th Cir. 2023), the panel precedent
rule doesn’t undermine our power to decide.
So Freed can’t rescue Jackson from Hunt.
When a case renders two alternative holdings, each independently supports the
result. Since each could be deleted without impairing the judgment, neither is necessary,
so (on Jackson’s view) both are dicta. But if both holdings are dicta, that implies the case
decided nothing at all. We don’t read Horsley to endorse that result. See United States v.
Johnson, 256 F.3d 895, 914–15 & n.8 (9th Cir. 2001) (en banc) (separate opinion of
Kozinski, J.) (reasoning similarly).
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III.
Jackson’s conduct is entitled to Second Amendment protection, but two different
regulatory traditions permit the government to punish him all the same. Our nation’s
history and tradition of gun regulation shows that those accused of possessing unlawful
weapons can be temporarily disarmed today. And our nation’s tradition of categorically
disarming potentially dangerous groups separately justifies Jackson’s prosecution. On the
facts here, 18 U.S.C. § 922(n) presents no constitutional problem.
The district court’s judgment is therefore
AFFIRMED.
28
Plain English Summary
USCA4 Appeal: 24-4114 Doc: 57 Filed: 09/12/2025 Pg: 1 of 28 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
Key Points
01USCA4 Appeal: 24-4114 Doc: 57 Filed: 09/12/2025 Pg: 1 of 28 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
02(1:22–cr–00141–ELH–1) Argued: May 8, 2025 Decided: September 12, 2025 Before DIAZ, Chief Judge, and WYNN and THACKER, Circuit Judges.
03Chief Judge Diaz wrote the opinion, in which Judge Wynn and Judge Thacker joined.
04ARGUED: Cullen Oakes Macbeth, OFFICE OF THE FEDERAL PUBLIC DEFENDER, Greenbelt, Maryland, for Appellant.
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USCA4 Appeal: 24-4114 Doc: 57 Filed: 09/12/2025 Pg: 1 of 28 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
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