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No. 10768266
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
United States v. Vazquez-Ramirez
No. 10768266 · Decided January 2, 2026
No. 10768266·Ninth Circuit · 2026·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
January 2, 2026
Citation
No. 10768266
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No. 24-3544
D.C. No.
Plaintiff - Appellee,
2:22-cr-00087-
RMP-1
v.
OSCAR VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ,
OPINION
Defendant - Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Washington
Rosanna Malouf Peterson, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted June 2, 2025
Seattle, Washington
Filed January 2, 2026
Before: Johnnie B. Rawlinson, Daniel A. Bress, and Patrick
J. Bumatay, Circuit Judges.
Per Curiam Opinion;
Concurrence by Judge Bumatay
2 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
SUMMARY *
Criminal Law
The panel affirmed Oscar Vazquez-Ramirez’s
conviction for violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5)(A), which
prohibits persons “illegally or unlawfully in the United
States” from possessing a firearm.
Vazquez-Ramirez moved to dismiss the indictment,
raising an as-applied Second Amendment challenge to
§ 922(g)(5)(A). The district court denied the motion.
The panel concluded that this court’s previous holding
that Second Amendment challenges to § 922(g)(5)(A) are
subject to intermediate scrutiny, see United States v. Torres,
911 F.3d 1253, 1263 (9th Cir. 2019), is clearly irreconcilable
with N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Assoc’n v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1,
24 (2022), and is overruled.
Applying Bruen’s two-step framework for evaluating
Second Amendment challenges, the panel (1) assumed
without deciding that noncitizens illegally present in the
United States could be considered part of “the people”
protected by the Second Amendment, but (2) concluded that
the government met its burden to show that § 922(g)(5)(A)
is consistent with the nation’s historical tradition of firearm
regulation. Thus, Vazquez-Ramirez’s as-applied challenge
fails.
Concurring in the judgment, Judge Bumatay would hold
that “the people” refers only to “members of the [nation’s]
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 3
political community,” which categorically excludes illegal
aliens, and that § 922(g)(5)(A) prosecutions thus don’t
implicate the Constitution’s “plain text” and are not subject
to a Second Amendment challenge.
COUNSEL
Michael J. Ellis (argued), Assistant United States Attorney;
Vanessa R. Waldref, United States Attorney; Office of the
United States Attorney, United States Department of Justice,
Spokane, Washington; for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Carter L. Powers Beggs (argued), Assistant Federal
Defender, Federal Public Defenders of Eastern Washington
and Idaho, Spokane, Washington; John B. McEntire IV,
Connelly Law Offices PLLC, Tacoma, Washington; for
Defendant-Appellant.
4 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
OPINION
PER CURIAM:
Oscar Vazquez-Ramirez brings a Second Amendment
challenge to his conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5)(A),
which prohibits persons “illegally or unlawfully in the
United States” from possessing a firearm. We join all our
sister circuits in concluding that the Second Amendment
does not invalidate § 922(g)(5)(A). See United States v.
Perez, 6 F.4th 448, 450 (2d Cir. 2021); United States v.
Carpio-Leon, 701 F.3d 974, 975 (4th Cir. 2012); United
States v. Portillo-Munoz, 643 F.3d 437, 442 (5th Cir. 2011);
United States v. Escobar-Temal, No. 24-5668, 2025 WL
3632831, at *12 (6th Cir. Dec. 15, 2025); United States v.
Carbajal-Flores, 143 F.4th 877, 889 (7th Cir. 2025); United
States v. Flores, 663 F.3d 1022 (8th Cir. 2011); United States
v. Huitron-Guizar, 678 F.3d 1164, 1170 (10th Cir. 2012);
United States v. Jimenez-Shilon, 34 F.4th 1042, 1050 (11th
Cir. 2022). Thus, Vazquez-Ramirez’s as-applied challenge
to § 922(g)(5)(A) fails.
I.
Born in Mexico, Oscar Vazquez-Ramirez came to the
United States unlawfully when he was seven years old.
Vazquez-Ramirez is not a United States citizen and has no
legal immigration status in the country. In December 2021,
Vazquez-Ramirez was pulled over in Othello, Washington,
for failing to yield at a crosswalk. At the time, Vazquez-
Ramirez had a firearm in his waistband. He was then
arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol and for
unlawful possession of a firearm.
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 5
In July 2022, Vazquez-Ramirez was charged in a single-
count federal indictment with 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5)(A)—
“Unlawful Alien in Possession of a Firearm and
Ammunition.” Vazquez-Ramirez moved to dismiss his
indictment, raising an as-applied Second Amendment
challenge to § 922(g)(5)(A). The district court denied the
motion. Afterward, Vazquez-Ramirez entered a conditional
guilty plea, preserving his right to appeal the Second
Amendment ruling. The district court sentenced him to five
years’ probation.
Vazquez-Ramirez now appeals his conviction, which we
review de novo. See United States v. Oliver, 41 F.4th 1093,
1097 (9th Cir. 2022).
II.
Section 922(g)(5)(A) prohibits “any person . . . who
being an alien—is illegally or unlawfully in the United
States” from possessing any firearm or ammunition. 18
U.S.C. § 922(g)(5)(A). Although Vazquez-Ramirez doesn’t
contest that he is “illegally or unlawfully in the United
States,” he argues that, as a long-time resident of the country,
he is entitled to the protection of the Second Amendment.
While we previously held that Second Amendment
challenges to § 922(g)(5)(A) are subject to intermediate
scrutiny, see United States v. Torres, 911 F.3d 1253, 1263
(9th Cir. 2019), that ruling is “clearly irreconcilable” with
N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Assoc’n v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1, 24
(2022), and is overruled. See Miller v. Gammie, 335 F.3d
889, 900 (9th Cir. 2003) (en banc).
Bruen establishes a two-step framework for evaluating
Second Amendment challenges. First, we consider “whether
the Second Amendment’s plain text covers an individual’s
6 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
proposed course of conduct.” United States v. Duarte, 137
F.4th 743, 752 (9th Cir. 2025) (en banc) (simplified).
Second, if the conduct is covered by its plain text, “the
Second Amendment presumptively protects that conduct[,
and] [t]he Government then bears the burden of justifying
the challenged regulation by showing that it is consistent
with our nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation.”
Id. (simplified).
Under Bruen’s second step, we “must engage in
analogical reasoning to determine whether the modern
regulation is relevantly similar to historical laws and
traditions . . . so as to evince[ ] a comparable tradition of
regulation.” Id. at 755 (simplified). In conducting this
analogical reasoning, we examine: “(1) ‘whether modern
and historical regulations impose a comparable burden on
the right of armed self-defense’ (the ‘how’); and
(2) ‘whether that burden is comparably justified’ (the
‘why’).” Id. (quoting Bruen, 597 U.S. at 29). This
examination requires only “a well-established and
representative historical analogue, not a historical twin.” Id.
(quoting Bruen, 597 U.S. at 30). In the end, “‘the
appropriate analysis involves considering whether the
challenged regulation is consistent with the principles that
underpin our regulatory tradition.’” Id. (quoting United
States v. Rahimi, 602 U.S. 680, 692 (2024) (emphasis
added)).
As it is not necessary to resolve the issue in this case, like
several of our sister circuits, we will assume without
deciding that noncitizens illegally present in the United
States could be considered part of “the people” protected by
the Second Amendment. See Perez, 6 F.4th at 453; Jimenez-
Shilon, 34 F.4th at 1045–46; Carbajal-Flores, 143 F.4th at
882. And like our sister circuits, we conclude that the
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 7
government has met its burden to show that § 922(g)(5)(A)
is consistent with the nation’s historical tradition of firearm
regulation. See Jimenez-Shilon, 34 F.4th at 1049–50;
Carbajal-Flores, 143 F.4th at 888.
A.
To determine whether our historical tradition supports a
modern federal firearms regulation, we consider “primarily
. . . historical regulations extant when the Second and
Fourteenth Amendments were adopted in 1791 and 1868,
respectively,” and “pre-and post-ratification history to the
extent that it does not contravene founding-era evidence.”
Duarte, 137 F.4th at 755. Here, common law, pre-
ratification, and post-ratification history all show a tradition
of the government permissibly restricting the firearms rights
of non-citizens.
1. First, “[i]n the English tradition, one’s alien status
carried with it a smaller basket of rights.” Carbajal-Flores,
143 F.4th at 883. The common law distinguished between
“aliens and natural-born subjects.” 1 William Blackstone,
Commentaries on the Laws of England *354 (1765).
Natural-born subjects were born in the king’s dominion and
owed “perpetual” allegiance to the king. Id. at 354, 357. In
exchange for that allegiance, natural-born subjects received
the “protection which the king affords the subject.” Id. at
354. Thus, natural subjects had a “great variety of rights.”
Id. at 359. In contrast, “aliens” were born outside of the
king’s dominion and owed merely “[l]ocal allegiance” to the
king, which existed only while the alien resided in the
dominion. Id. at 358. This “local and temporary” allegiance
meant aliens were entitled to a “much more circumscribed”
list of rights. Id. at 359.
8 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
The right to keep and bear arms was among those rights
circumscribed for non-citizens. For example, an English
statute prohibited non-landowners from having or keeping
“Guns, Bowes” or other hunting equipment. An Act for the
Better Preservation of the Game, 22 & 23 Car. 2, c. 25
(1671). This effectively prevented “aliens” from owning
firearms because they could not permanently own land. See
1 Blackstone, Commentaries at *360; see also Jimenez-
Shilon, 34 F.4th at 1046 (citing sources). According to
Blackstone, “aliens” could not purchase land for their own
use because doing so would expose the nation to “foreign
influence.” Id. at 360–61. Aliens could only gain the right
to land ownership, and with it the right to arms, through
naturalization. Carbajal-Flores, 143 F.4th at 884.
Similarly, several statutes restricted gun ownership for
English Catholics, who “were perceived as resident enemy
aliens because they owed an allegiance to a foreign
sovereign, the Pope.” Id. For example, one law made it a
crime for Catholics to possess firearms and punished
violators with forfeiture of their firearms and imprisonment.
An Act for the Better Securing the Government by
Disarming Papists and Reputed Papists, 1 W. & M., Sess. 1
(1689). For the English, the fact “[t]hat ‘[Catholics]
acknowledge[d] a foreign power, superior to the sovereignty
of the kingdom,’ meant Catholics were not entitled to bear
arms as ‘good subjects’ were.” Carbajal-Flores, 143 F.4th
at 884 (quoting C. Kevin Marshall, Why Can’t Martha
Stewart Have a Gun?, 32 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 695, 722–
23 (2009)). Although laws such as this would encounter
problems “under other parts” our Constitution, they are still
“reflective” of history and tradition. Duarte, 137 F.4th at
760. Thus, “[a]ll told, the English tradition establishes a
historical pattern of disarming persons who lacked
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 9
allegiance to the sovereign,” which included non-naturalized
aliens living in England. Carbajal-Flores, 143 F.4th at 884.
2. Second, pre-ratification colonial statutes similarly
restricted the gun ownership of non-citizens and other
individuals with questionable loyalties. See Carbajal-
Flores, 143 F.4th at 884–86; Jimenez-Shilon, 34 F.4th at
1047–48. Several colonies, for example, prohibited
Englishmen from giving guns or ammunition to Native
Americans. See, e.g., Mass. Gen. Laws, ch. 58, § 2 (1633),
reprinted in The Charters and General Laws of the Colony
and Province of Massachusetts Bay 133 (T.B. Wait & Co.
1814); The Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut,
1665, 80, 529 (Brown & Parsons 1850); Nathaniel B.
Shurtleff & David Pulsifer, eds., 5 Records of the Colony of
New Plymouth, in New England, 173 (AMS Press 1968)
(“[Giving arms] to the Indians is pnisious [sic] and
destructive to the English”); see generally Joseph Blocher &
Caitlin Carberry, Historical Gun Laws Targeting
“Dangerous” Groups and Outsiders, Duke Law School
Public Law & Legal Theory Series No. 2020-80 (2020).
After the Revolution, States passed statutes depriving
firearms from those who refused to swear allegiance and
fidelity to their respective State. See Duarte, 137 F.4th at
765 & n.5 (Collins, J. concurring) (compiling State “laws
disarming loyalists or those who refused to take loyalty
oaths”). Take a Pennsylvania law that found it “very
improper and dangerous that persons disaffected to the
liberty and independence of this state should possess or have
in their keeping, or elsewhere, any firearms, or other
weapons used in war, or any gun powder[.]” Pa. Laws 198,
198–99 §§ 4–5 (1779) (emphasis added). So the State was
“empowered to disarm any person who shall not have taken
10 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
any oath or affirmation of allegiance to this or any other
state.” Id.
By tying firearm possession directly to national
allegiance, our Founding generation made the “disarmament
of groups associated with foreign elements” “an early
feature” of our historical tradition of gun regulation.
Pratheepan Gulasekaram, “The People” of the Second
Amendment: Citizenship and the Right to Bear Arms, 85
N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1521, 1548–49 (2010).
3. Third, our post-ratification history confirms the
tradition of disarming noncitizens. Justice Story interpreted
the Second Amendment right as “[t]he right of the citizens
to keep and bear arms . . . against the usurpation and arbitrary
power of rulers.” 3 Joseph Story, Commentaries on the
Constitution of the United States § 1890 (1833) (emphasis
added). And many States prohibited non-citizens from
possessing firearms because of their alienage or lack of
allegiance. See Jimenez-Shilon, 34 F.4th at 1047; Carbajal-
Flores, 143 F.4th at 886; see also Kanter v. Barr, 919 F.3d
437, 457–58 (7th Cir. 2019) (Barrett, J. dissenting).
***
We thus agree with the Seventh Circuit that, “[f]rom the
common law onward, aliens have historically been disarmed
unless and until they swore an oath of allegiance to the
sovereign.” Carbajal-Flores, 143 F.4th at 888.
B.
Section 922(g)(5)(A) fits comfortably with the “how”
and the “why” of our Nation’s regulatory tradition of
disarming noncitizens and those who have not sworn
allegiance to our country. See Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 692.
First, the federal statute has a similar “how” to historical
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 11
statutes. It disarms persons unwilling or unable to swear the
oath of allegiance and loyalty to the United States. See
Jimenez-Shilon, 34 F.4th at 1048. “The way § 922(g)(5)(A)
operates maps onto [our] tradition[,]” disarming those who
have illegally entered the country, and foregone
naturalization. Carbajal-Flores, 143 F.4th at 888. Second,
§ 922(g)(5)(A) has a similar “why” to the historical tradition.
We have historically disarmed those who, by their lack of
allegiance, our country has deemed untrustworthy or
potentially dangerous. NRA v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms, and Explosives, 700 F.3d 185, 200 (5th Cir. 2012);
Kanter, 919 F.3d at 457 (Barrett, J., dissenting). Noncitizens
illegally present in the United States are “person[s] whose
unregistered presence in this country, without more,
constitutes a crime.” INS v. Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. 1032,
1047 (1984). Aliens cannot “surreptitiously enter a foreign
nation in violation of the immigration prerogatives of the
sovereign and expect to receive all the rights and protections
of the citizenry.” Jimenez-Shilon, 34 F.4th at 1049.
Accordingly, Vazquez-Ramirez’s as-applied challenge
to § 922(g)(5)(A) fails.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the denial of the
motion to dismiss the indictment.
AFFIRMED.
12 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
BUMATAY, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment:
The Second Amendment declares 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. By its plain text,
the Second Amendment protects only “the people.” But who
are “the people” entitled to the Second Amendment right?
Does “the people” include aliens “illegally or unlawfully in
the United States”—the basis for prosecution under 18
U.S.C. § 922(g)(5)(A)?
The per curiam opinion assumes illegal aliens are part of
the “people” but concludes that our historical tradition
justifies disarming them. I analyze the question differently.
Based on the Second Amendment’s text, I would hold that
“the people” refers only to “members of the [Nation’s]
political community,” District of Columbia v. Heller, 554
U.S. 570, 580 (2008), which categorically excludes illegal
aliens. Thus, § 922(g)(5)(A) prosecutions don’t implicate
the Constitution’s “plain text” and are not subject to a
Second Amendment challenge. See N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol
Assoc’n v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1, 24 (2022).
I.
Under Bruen, we first ask whether “the Second
Amendment’s plain text covers [the defendant’s] conduct.”
Id. If not, the Second Amendment inquiry ends, and we need
not go any further. I would end this case at the first step.
A.
The Second Amendment expressly protects only “the
people” from the infringement of the right to keep and bear
arms. Based on the Constitution’s text, structure, and
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 13
history, the phrase “the people” is a “term of art” referring
only to the “members of the [Nation’s] political
community.” Heller, 554 U.S. at 580 (quoting United States
v. Verdugo-Urquidez, 494 U.S. 259, 265 (1990)). Whoever
is included in the American “political community,” it cannot
include illegal aliens, who owe their allegiance to another
sovereign and whose very presence in the country violates
federal law. See 8 U.S.C. § 1325.
First Principles
To understand the Constitution’s use of “the people,”
one must first understand the American constitutional
project’s philosophical foundations. Our Constitution was
not ratified on a blank slate. Instead, it resulted from a
revolutionary movement firmly rooted in the principles of
popular sovereignty and self-government. Placing the
Constitution in the context of these background principles
shows that “the people” consists only of the sovereign
political community.
The revolutionary generation was well-versed in the
political philosophy of the Enlightenment, which imbued
special meaning in the term “the people.” “The founding-
era,” for instance, “was heavily influenced by John Locke”
and cited his works in “‘pamphlet after pamphlet’[.]”
Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644, 726 (2015) (Thomas,
J., dissenting) (quoting Bernard Bailyn, The Ideological
Origin of the American Revolution 27 (1967)). Locke
believed that government must operate “for no other end
ultimately but the good of the people” and derives its
legitimacy from “the consent of the people[.]” John Locke,
The Second Treatise of Government § 142 (1689) (reprinted
in John Locke Political Writings (David Wootton ed.) 335
(1993)). Because government derives its legitimacy from
14 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
consent, “the people [retain] a supreme power to remove or
alter” it. Id. § 149, pg. 337. In this way, then, “the people”
are “always the supreme power.” Id. § 149, pg. 338. For
Locke, “the body of the people” is the fundamental authority
in political society. Id. § 242, pg. 386.
Montesquieu, who also viewed the “people” as a term of
art central to legitimate government, was similarly
influential. See Gordon S. Wood, Friends Divided: John
Adams and Thomas Jefferson 111 (2017) (explaining that
Montesquieu’s work, The Spirit of Laws, was “the political
work most widely read by the revolutionaries.”).
Montesquieu argued that, in a republican form of
government, “the supreme power resides” in “[t]he people”
as sovereign. Montesquieu, The Spirit of Laws 26 (Thomas
Nugent trans., Batoche Books 2001) (1748). Because “the
people” hold the supreme power as sovereign, it is “a
fundamental maxim . . . that the people should choose” their
representatives in a republican government. Id.
Montesquieu, like Locke, used “the people” to describe the
ultimate source of authority in republican civil government.
So two of the most prominent political theorists of the
age–whose works inspired the revolutionary generation–
used “the people” as a term of art in political theory. When
they spoke of “the people,” they were referring to the
members of a sovereign polity with the power to choose their
government. In short, they were referring to the “political
community.”
This concept of “the people” also appears in perhaps the
most famous document in our Nation’s history: The
Declaration of Independence. There, the Founding
generation declared that when a government fails to secure
unalienable rights, “it is the Right of the People to alter or to
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 15
abolish [the government], and to institute new Government,
laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its
powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to
effect their Safety and Happiness.” Declaration of
Independence (1776) (emphasis added). So our Nation’s
initial founding document uses “the People” to represent the
polity entitled to determine self-governance.
The Declaration’s language was no accident. Rather, it
was the revolutionaries’ political philosophy in action.
Writing his wife while stationed in Philadelphia during the
Continental Congress, John Adams explained that “a
Government under the People” was the natural preference in
the American Colonies. Letter from John Adams to Abigail
Adams, May 17, 1776 (partially reprinted in Wood, Friends
Divided, at 107). Another delegate to the Congress, Oliver
Wolcott, wrote a friend that “[a] Revolution in Government”
was in the works in the Colonies, one “founded in Compact”
among “the People at large.” Letter from Oliver Wolcott to
Samuel Lyman, May 16, 1776 (reprinted in 4 Letters of
Delegates to Congress, 1774–1789 16–17 (Paul H. Smith, et
al., eds.) (1979)). And reflecting on the revolutionary era in
his retirement, Thomas Jefferson wrote that the “mother
principle” of republicanism requires the government to
“embody the will of their people, and execute it.” Letter
from Thomas Jefferson to Samuel Kercheval, July 12, 1816
(partially reprinted in Wood, Friends Divided, at 119). Even
John Dickinson, who opposed the Declaration, recognized
that the “full & free Consent of the People” was a valid basis
“to change a Government.” John Dickinson’s Notes for a
Speech in Congress, June 1776 (reprinted in 4 Letters of
Delegates to Congress, at 166). The upshot of these
background principles is that the American Revolution’s
leading figures believed that “the people” were the supreme
16 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
authority in a political system. And when the Founding
generation used that term, they meant the sovereign
community that consented to a legitimate government. Put
another way, when they used “the people,” they meant the
political community.
Text and Structure
Connecting these principles, the Constitution’s text and
structure establish that “the people” in the Second
Amendment include only members of the country’s political
community.
Start with the Preamble. “The Preamble declares that the
Constitution is ordained and established by ‘the People of
the United States.’” Verdugo-Urquidez, 494 U.S. at 265. So
from the beginning of the Constitution, “We the People”
reflects those who “ordained and established” the
constitutional compact, which necessarily excludes those
outside the nation’s political community. After all, “the
Constitution of the United States is . . . a compact made by
the people of the United States to govern themselves[.]”
Chisholm v. Georgia, 2 U.S. (2 Dall.) 419, 471 (1793); see
also McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, 404–
05 (1819) (“The government of the Union . . . is,
emphatically and truly, a government of the people. In form,
and in substance, it emanates from them. Its powers are
granted by them, and are to be exercised directly on them,
and for their benefit.”). Thus, we must read the Second
Amendment with the Preamble’s understanding of “the
People” in mind. See Akhil Reed Amar, The Bill of Rights:
Creation and Reconstruction 48–49 (1998) (“[T]he ‘people’
at the core of the Second Amendment were the same ‘We the
People’ who in conventions had ‘ordain[ed] and
establish[ed]’ the Constitution[.]”).
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 17
The only other time the phrase “the People” appears in
the original Constitution, it is associated with those who may
participate in our representative democracy. See U.S. Const.
art. I, § 2, cl. 1 (“The House of Representatives shall be
composed of Members chosen every second Year by the
People of the several States[.]”). There, “the People” refers
to those who select the body politic’s representatives. The
“Members” of the “House of Representatives” represent “the
People of the several States,” id., who in turn make up “the
People of the United States,” id. Preamble. So “the People”
describes not just any collective group of individual persons,
but “the highest authority known to our system” of
government: the political community. James Monroe,
Views of the President of the United States on the Subject of
Internal Improvements (May 4, 1822) (reprinted in 2 James
D. Richardson, A Compilation of the Messages and Papers
of the Presidents, 1789–1897 152–55 (1902)).
One need not look far beyond Article 1, Section 2, to find
another provision supporting this reading of “the people.”
Article I, Section 8 provides that “Congress shall have Power
. . . To establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization[.]” U.S.
Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 4. Under the Articles of Confederation,
each State was free to develop its own rules of naturalization.
See Articles of Confederation of 1781, art. IV, para. 1. This
“dissimilarity in the rules of naturalization,” James Madison
remarked, was a “fault in our system” that left the Articles
vulnerable to “serious embarrassment on [the] subject.” The
Federalist No. 42, at 265–66 (J. Madison) (Clinton Rossiter
ed., 1961). Why? Because different rules for “naturalizing
aliens” in each State created different “qualifications” for
“the rights of citizenship.” Id. at 266. By granting Congress
the exclusive power to fashion rules of naturalization, the
Constitution removes these dissimilarities. See Chirac v.
18 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
Chirac’s Lessee, 15 U.S. (2 Wheat.) 259, 269 (1817)
(Marshall, C.J.) (“That the power of naturalization is
exclusively in congress does not seem to be, and certainly
ought not to be, controverted[.])”
The power to naturalize aliens, then, is the power to
welcome outsiders into the political community and “confer
the rights of citizenship” on them. Federalist No. 42. See
also 2 James Kent, Commentaries on American Law 65–66
(1827) (explaining that a “duly naturalized” alien “becomes
entitled to all the privileges and immunities” of citizens). In
his famous treatise, Justice Joseph Story described the power
of naturalization as the power to “admit[]” aliens “to enjoy
all the rights of citizens[.]” 3 Joseph Story, Commentaries
on the Constitution § 1098 (1833). Outsiders must be
welcomed into something. The question is what that
something is. The most natural answer is that they are
admitted into “the people” of the United States. After all,
“the People” “ordain[ed] and establish[ed]” the Constitution.
U.S. Const. Preamble. And “the people” select their
representatives. U.S. Const. art. I, § 2, cl. 1. But the
ratifying generation also recognized the advantages of
welcoming foreigners into the Union. See 5 James Madison,
Debates on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution 411–14
(Jonathan Elliot ed.) (1836). So they included a mechanism
for the national government to admit foreigners into their
ranks.
And the power to admit suggests a corresponding power
to exclude. Cf. Ping v. United States, 130 U.S. 581, 609
(1889) (explaining that “[t]he power of exclusion of
foreigners” is “part of those sovereign powers delegated by
the [C]onstitution” to “the government of the United
States”). By creating a mechanism for the Union to admit—
and exclude—outsiders, the Constitution recognizes that
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 19
some individuals are not part of “the people.” Through their
representatives, the Nation’s sovereign political community
can choose to admit or exclude others from “the people.”
Next, consider the close connection between “the
people” in the First and Second Amendments. The First
Amendment provides that “Congress shall make no law . . .
abridging . . . the right of the people peaceably to assemble,
and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
See U.S. Const. amend. I. Like the Second Amendment’s
“safeguard against tyranny[,]” Heller, 554 U.S. at 600, the
guarantee of assembly and petition protects the political
community’s “popular right to alter or abolish the national
government,” Amar, The Bill of Rights at 47; see also United
States ex rel. Turner v. Williams, 194 U.S. 279, 292 (1904)
(questioning whether an illegal alien gains the First
Amendment’s protections because “[h]e does not become
one of the people to whom these things are secured by our
Constitution by an attempt to enter forbidden by law”).
Thus, the use of “the people” in the First Amendment further
cements that the concept of “the people” in the Second
Amendment refers to our nation’s political community. 1
1
Of course, the “people” is also used in the Fourth, Ninth, and Tenth
Amendments. The Tenth Amendment supports reading the term as
referring exclusively to the political community because it uses “the
people” in conjunction with the “powers” reserved to them and the
States. And while the Ninth Amendment’s text does not compel a strong
conclusion either way, the Fourth Amendment might be a closer call.
That amendment protects the “right of the people” against “unreasonable
searches and seizures.” See U.S. Const. amend. IV. The defendant here,
Oscar Vazquez-Ramirez, argues that interpreting the Second
Amendment’s “the people” to exclude illegal aliens would mean that
they are also outside the Fourth Amendment’s protection. On one hand,
it’s sensible to give this term a consistent meaning throughout the Bill of
Rights. See Antonin Scalia and Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The
20 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
We also can’t forget the Second Amendment’s prefatory
clause. It announces a purpose of the right—maintenance of
“[a] well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of
a free State[.]” U.S. Const. amend. II. While the “prefatory
clause does not limit or expand the scope of the operative
clause,” there is an obvious “link” between the two. Heller,
554 U.S. at 577–78. As Heller recognized, the right to keep
and bear arms secured a “free State” because it helped repel
invasion, suppress insurrections, and resist tyranny. See id.
at 597–98. And the militias were an enterprise for able-
bodied citizens. James Madison called the militia “citizens
with arms in their hands.” Id. at 595 (quoting Federalist No.
46). Indeed, shortly after ratification, in 1792, Congress
passed the Militia Act, which defined the militia as “each
and every free able-bodied white male citizen of the
respective states, resident therein,” between the ages of 18
and 45. Id. at 596 (quoting Act of May 8, 1792, 1 Stat. 271).
Interpretation of Legal Texts 170 (2012) (“[A] word or phrase is
presumed to bear the same meaning throughout a text[.]”). Indeed, the
Supreme Court has not directly held that aliens unlawfully in the United
States are members of the Fourth Amendment’s “the people,” only
“assum[ing without deciding] that illegal aliens in the United States have
Fourth Amendment rights.” See Verdugo-Urquidez, 494 U.S. at 263
(citing INS v. Lopez-Mendoza, 468 U.S. 1032 (1984)). On the other
hand, the Fifth Circuit has ruled that references to “the people” do not
necessarily “cover exactly the same groups of people” because “[t]he
purposes of the Second and Fourth Amendment[s] are different.” United
States v. Portillo-Munoz, 643 F.3d 437, 440–41 (5th Cir. 2011). Given
that “[t]he Second Amendment grants an affirmative right . . . while the
Fourth Amendment is at its core a protective right,” the Fifth Circuit
concluded “it [was] reasonable that an affirmative right would be
extended to fewer groups than would a protective right.” Id. at 441. In
the end, I see no need to resolve this question because the evidence
overwhelmingly points to the limited meaning of “the people” in the
Second Amendment.
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 21
Thus, the prefatory clause’s link between a “Militia” and a
“free State” reflects the Amendment’s “concern with
democratic self-government,” Amar, The Bill of Rights at 47,
which only implicates the political community—not all
persons within the country.
All in all, text and structure establish that “the people” of
the Second Amendment was understood to narrowly
encompass only our country’s political community. Unlike
other constitutional provisions that broadly reference all
“person[s],” see, e.g., U.S. Const. amend. V, the Second
Amendment guarantee only applies to a smaller subset. As
used in the Constitution, “the people” is not the plural form
of “person.” It is instead a term of art used to describe the
sovereign political community. See Heller, 554 U.S. at 580.
Pre-Ratification History
Return to pre-ratification history. Examples abound
highlighting that certain groups were considered outside the
political community and thus were not part of “the people.” 2
Before the Second Amendment, the preexisting right to
keep arms was recognized as “one of the fundamental rights
of Englishmen,” Heller, 554 U.S. at 593–94 (citing 1
2
The per curiam opinion uses many of these same examples as evidence
of a historical tradition of firearm regulation disarming aliens under
Bruen’s second step, which requires analogical reasoning between
Founding-era and present-day firearms regulations. While that is
reasonable, I take this historical evidence to mean that certain groups
were undoubtedly not considered part of the political community in the
pre-ratification era and that, when the Founding generation ratified “the
people” in the Second Amendment, they would have understood the term
not to include these groups. In this way, then, the examples more support
Bruen’s first-step textual analysis that the Second Amendment’s “the
people” does not cover illegal aliens.
22 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England
*136, *139–40 (1765)). But that preexisting right to keep
arms did not extend to noncitizens, the disloyal, or those
considered “potential subversives” outside the political
community. Joyce Lee Malcolm, To Keep and Bear Arms:
The Origins of the Anglo-American Right 140 (1994). 3
Consider the treatment of Indians. At the Founding,
Indians were considered “peoples outside the polity of the
United States” and so they were not entitled to the Second
Amendment’s protection “at the time.” Angela R. Riley,
Indians and Guns, 100 Geo. L.J. 1675, 1697 (2012). Many
colonies (and later States) banned the sale or trade of
firearms to Indians. See, e.g., Acts Respecting the Indians,
3
While Blackstone observed that “aliens” enjoyed fewer rights than
natural-born English subjects, he included “aliens” in the “denomination
of the people,” dividing “the people” into aliens and subjects. See 1
William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England *354, *355–
56 (1765). The Eleventh Circuit has taken Blackstone’s statement to
suggest that “aliens” may be included within “the people” as that term is
used in the Constitution. See United States v. Jimenez-Shilon, 34 F.4th
1042, 1045 (11th Cir. 2022). But this broader meaning of “the people”
doesn’t reflect the use of the phrase in a founding document like the
Constitution or in reference to the right to keep and bear arms. The
Eleventh Circuit also relied on James Madison’s statement that “‘some
aliens’ are entitled to the ‘protection and advantage’ of the Constitution.”
Id. (quoting 4 Jonathan Elliot, The Debates in the Several State
Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution 556 (2d ed.
1836)). But Madison doesn’t appear to be discussing all constitutional
rights there. Instead, he specifically referenced the jury right and “other
incidents to a fair trial.” Id. That’s consistent with the original
Constitution’s guarantee of a jury in trials of “all Crimes,” U.S. Const.
Art. III, § 2 cl.3, the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of due process and
grand jury indictments for any “person” rather than “the people,” U.S.
Const. amend. V, and the Sixth Amendment’s jury-trial guarantee in
“all” criminal prosecutions. U.S. Const. amend. VI.
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 23
ch. 58, § 2, reprinted in The Charters and General Laws of
the Colony and Province of Massachusetts Bay 133 (1814)
(enacted 1633); No. 17 Trade for Powder &c Felony,
reprinted in Acts of the General Assembly, Jan. 6, 1639–40,
4 Wm. & Mary Coll. Q. Hist. Mag. at 150 (July 1924)
(enacted by the Virginia colony in 1639); An Act for
Preventing Lending Guns, Ammunition, &c. to the Indians,
1723 Conn. Pub. Acts 292; An Act to Regulate the Indian
Trade; and for Other Purposes Therein Mentioned, §§ 2–3,
reprinted in Robert & George Watkins, A Digest of Laws of
the State of Georgia 288, 288–89 (R. Aitken ed., 1800)
(enacted 1784). And given the close connection between
militias and the protection of the nation’s political rights, it
is no wonder that several States exempted Indians from
compulsory militia service. See, e.g., An Act for Regulating
the Militia of the State of New-York, ch. 33, § 1, reprinted
in Laws of the State of New-York, Commencing with the First
Session of the Senate and Assembly, After the Declaration of
Independency, and the Organization of the New Government
of the State, Anno 1777, at 31 (John Holt ed., 1782) (enacted
1778); An Act for Forming and Regulating the Militia
Within This State, and for Repealing All the Laws
Heretofore Made for that Purpose, reprinted in The Laws of
the State of New-Hampshire, Together with the Declaration
of Independence: The Definitive Treaty of Peace Between
the United States of America and His Britannic Majesty; the
Constitution of New-Hampshire, and the Constitution of the
United States, with Its Proposed Amendments 357 (John
Melcher ed., 1792) (enacted 1786).
Likewise, as then-outsiders to the political community,
slaves were denied the right to possess firearms in colonial
America. In 1741, North Carolina passed a law banning
slaves from bearing any arm—firearms or otherwise. An
24 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
Act, Concerning Servants and Slaves, ch. 24, §§ 40–42
reprinted in A Collection of All the Public Acts of Assembly,
of the Province of North-Carolina, Now in Force and Use:
Together with the Titles of All Such Laws as Are Obsolete,
Expir’d, or Repeal’d; and Also, an Exact Table of the Titles
of the Acts in Force 170 (James Davis ed., 1752) (enacted
1741). Several States followed in the years leading to the
ratification of the Constitution and beyond. See, e.g., An Act
relating to Servants and Slaves, reprinted in Acts of
Assembly, Passed in the Province of Maryland, from 1692,
to 1715, at 147 (John Baskett ed., 1723) (enacted 1715);
Slaves, tit. 157, §§ 25–27, reprinted in 2 Joseph Brevard,
Alphabetical Digest of the Public Statute Law of South
Carolina 234–35 (1814) (enacted 1740); An Act to amend
and continue an Act for the establishing and regulating
Patrols, and for preventing any Person from purchasing
Provisions or any other Commodities from, or selling such
to any Slave, unless such Slave shall produce a Ticket from
his or her Owner, Manager, or Employer, §§ 1–2, 1768 Ga.
Laws 4, 4–5; An Act to reduce into one the several acts
respecting Slaves, Free Negroes, Mulattoes and Indians,
ch. 54, § 5, 1798 Ky. Acts 105, 106; A Law for the
regulation of Slaves, 1799 Miss. Laws 112, 113; An Act
Prescribing the Rules and Conduct to Be Observed with
Respect to Negroes and Other Slaves of This Territory,
§§ 19–21, reprinted in L. Moreau Lislet, 1 A General Digest
of the Acts of the Legislature of Louisiana 103–04 (1828)
(enacted 1806); An Act for preventing Suppressing and
punishing the Conspiracy and Insurrection of Negroes and
other Slaves, ch. 250, reprinted in 1 The Colonial Laws of
New York from the Year 1664 to the Revolution 766–67
(1894) (enacted 1712).
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 25
Reinforcing that the right to keep arms only protected
members of the political community, several States
disarmed free white men during the Revolutionary War “if
they refused a test of allegiance that defined membership in
the body politic.” Robert H. Churchill, Gun Regulation, the
Police Power, and the Right to Keep Arms in Early America:
The Legal Context of the Second Amendment, 25 Law &
Hist. Rev. 139, 158 (2007). In 1776, “the Continental
Congress recommended that provincial legislatures disarm
all persons ‘who are notoriously disaffected to the cause of
America, or who have not associated, and shall refuse to
associate, to defend, by arms, these United Colonies.’” Id.
at 159 n.49 (quoting 4 Journals of the Continental Congress,
1774–1789 201–05 (Washington, D.C.: Government
Printing Office, 1906)). Several States followed that
recommendation. See, e.g., An Act for Executing in the
Colony of Massachusetts-Bay, in New England, one Resolve
of the American Congress, dated March 14, 1776, 1776
Mass. Acts 31, 31–35; An Act, obligating the male white
inhabitants of this State to give assurances of allegiance to
the same, and for other purposes therein mentioned, ch. 21,
§§ 2 & 4, 1777 Pa. Laws 37, 37–39; An Act to Amend an
Act Declaring What Crimes and Practices Against the State
Shall Be Treason, ch. 6, § 9, 1777 N.C. Sess. Laws 41, 43–
44.
Even before revolutionary times, colonial governments
restricted militia service or disarmed certain religious
minorities out of fears they were not loyal. A 1756 Virginia
law barred Catholics from owning firearms unless they took
oaths of allegiance and supremacy to the Commonwealth.
An Act for Disarming Papists, and Reputed Papists,
Refusing to Take the Oaths to the Government ch. 4 §§ 1–7,
1756 Va. Acts 35, 35–38. This disarmament was not on the
26 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
basis of faith, but “on the basis of allegiance.” Churchill,
Gun Regulation, 25 Law & Hist. Rev. at 157. Only if “those
Catholics [were] willing to swear undivided allegiance to the
sovereign,” “abjuring the ecclesiastical authority of the
Pope” would they earn the right to possess firearms. Id. And
though Maryland did not outright bar Catholics from
possessing firearms, the colony did bar Catholics from
enrolling in the colonial militia or possessing firearms in
public. 1744 Md. Laws 315, 315–16. This exemption from
militia duty was rooted in the colonial government’s belief
that Catholics “were not completely trusted.” Clayton E.
Cramer, Colonial Firearm Regulation, 16 J. on Firearms &
Pub. Pol’y 1, 22 (2004).
And Catholics were not the only minority, religious or
otherwise, excluded from enjoying the colonial-era
possession of firearms. Acadians, a group of French settlers
and ancestors to the Cajuns, “refused to be loyal subjects of
the British government” during the French and Indian War.
Id. at 23. When this group moved from Nova Scotia to
Georgia, “the suspicion of disloyalty followed them.” Id. In
response, colonial Georgia barred indentured Acadians from
“hav[ing] or us[ing] any fire Arms or other Offensive
Weapon otherwise than in his Masters Plantation.” An Act
providing for & disposing of the Acadians now in this
Province, 1757 Ga. Laws 188, 190, reprinted in 18 The
Colonial Records of the State of Georgia 190 (Allen Daniel
Candler ed., 1910). This disarmament was based solely on
loyalty concerns. Cramer, Colonial Firearm Regulation, 16
J. on Firearms & Pub. Pol’y, at 23. These examples are not
exhaustive, but show that throughout colonial America,
governments denied gun rights to outsiders who posed
threats of rebellion against the colonies.
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 27
This evidence demonstrates that, in the years before the
Constitution’s ratification, the American colonies viewed
some groups as outside the Nation’s sovereign body politic.
That the Constitution was ratified against this backdrop
suggests that “the people” does not include those outside the
political community.
Post-Ratification History
Next, post-ratification history also shows the limited
meaning of “the people.” Of course, we must be mindful to
“guard against giving postenactment history more weight
than it can rightly bear.” Bruen, 597 U.S. at 35. But courts
can, and do, examine sources from the early post-ratification
period “to determine the public understanding of a legal
text[.]” Heller, 554 U.S. at 605. Here, early post-ratification
sources also confirm that “the people” refers only to the
members of the political community.
Leading post-ratification commentators support this
view. Justice Joseph Story interpreted “the people” in the
Second Amendment as referring only to citizens. He wrote,
The right of the citizens to keep and bear
arms has justly been considered, as the
palladium of the liberties of a republic; since
it offers a strong moral check against the
usurpation and arbitrary power of rulers; and
will generally, even if these are successful in
the first instance, enable the people to resist
and triumph over them.
3 Story, Commentaries § 1890. Story thus tied the Second
Amendment right to protecting popular sovereignty and thus
the right was only necessary for the political community.
28 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
William Rawle, another leading post-ratification jurist,
interpreted “the people” as the basis for political authority.
“In a republic[,]” Rawle explained, “sovereignty resides
essentially, and entirely in the people.” William Rawle, A
View of the Constitution of the United States of America 85
(2d ed. 1829). And “citizens” are the ones who “compose
the people, and partake of this sovereignty[.]” Id. Even if
the political community can support more than just citizens,
Story and Rawle’s views confirm that “the people” is a
sovereign political entity, not a meaningless group
encompassing all individuals.
And in the 30 years after the Constitution’s ratification,
several States adopted “Second Amendment analogues” in
their state constitutions. Heller, 554 U.S. at 602. At least
six of them—Alabama, Connecticut, Kentucky, Maine,
Mississippi, and Pennsylvania—expressly limited the right
to “citizen[s].” See United States v. Perez, 6 F.4th 448, 463
n.6 (2d Cir. 2021) (Menashi, J., concurring) (quoting state
constitutions). At least another four States—Vermont, Ohio,
Indiana, and Missouri—described the right as belonging to
“the people.” See Heller, 554 U.S. at 585 n.8 (quoting state
constitutions). But the Supreme Court viewed the terms “the
people” and “citizens” synonymously and interpreted these
state analogues to “unequivocally protect[] an individual
citizen’s right to self-defense.” Id. at 603 (emphasis added).
Thus, immediately after the Second Amendment’s
ratification, the right to keep and bear arms was understood
to belong only to members of the political community
regardless of whether the term “citizen” or “the people” was
used.
Although anathema today, free Black Americans were
often viewed as outside the American polity in many
southern States post-ratification and concomitantly
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 29
restricted from the right to bear arms. See Paul Finkelman,
Prelude to the Fourteenth Amendment: Black Legal Rights
in the Antebellum North, 17 Rutgers L.J. 415, 419–421
(1986) (describing that while some northern States vested
political rights onto Black Americans, this was in great
contrast to the political conditions in the antebellum South);
1792 Va. Acts ch. 103, §§ 8–9 (generally banning firearms
from free Blacks with few exceptions); Act of Feb. 8, 1798,
ch. 54, § 5, 1798 Ky. Acts 105, 106; 1806 Md. Laws ch. 81,
§§ 1–2, at 46, 47; see also Clayton E. Cramer, The Racist
Roots of Gun Control, 4 Kan. J. L. & Pub. Pol’y 17, 18–20
(1995) (describing similar laws in New Orleans (1803),
Tennessee (1834), and North Carolina (1840)).
These post-ratification sources thus further establish that
“the people” did not include those considered outside the
political community.
Modern Precedent
Reading the Second Amendment’s “the people” to mean
only the members of the political community also follows
from Supreme Court precedent.
Consider Heller. That case stated that “‘the people’
. . . unambiguously refers to all members of the political
community.” Heller, 554 U.S. at 580 (emphasis added). It
then repeatedly affirmed that the Second Amendment right
belonged to “Americans” or “citizens.” See id. at 581 (“We
start . . . with a strong presumption that the Second
Amendment right is exercised individually and belongs to all
Americans.”); id. at 625 (“[T]he Second Amendment does
not protect those weapons not typically possessed by law-
abiding citizens for lawful purposes[.]”); id. at 630 (The
District’s handgun ban “makes it impossible for citizens to
use them for the core lawful purpose of self-defense and is
30 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
hence unconstitutional.”); id. at 635 (“[The Second
Amendment] surely elevates above all other interests the
right of law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in
defense of hearth and home.”). Thus, Heller suggested that
citizenship was a touchstone of the Second Amendment
right.
True, Heller also quoted Verdugo-Urquidez, which
defined “the people” under the Fourth Amendment more
broadly to include the “class of persons who are part of a
national community or who have otherwise developed
sufficient connection with this country to be considered part
of that community.” Id. at 580 (quoting Verdugo-Urquidez,
494 U.S. at 265). But Heller also explained that “the people”
“unambiguously refers to all members of the political
community[.]” Heller, 554 U.S. at 580. As Vazquez-
Ramirez’s own expert opined, this choice was no accident.
See Pratheepan Gulasekaram, “The People” of the Second
Amendment: Citizenship and the Right to Bear Arms, 85
N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1521, 1536 (2010) (Heller’s shift in
language was “intended to constrict the constitutional
definition of ‘the people.’ Reformulating membership with
a ‘political’ rather than a ‘national’ lens is significant
because the former implies only those with political rights—
e.g., voting, public office—while the latter is malleable,
potentially including all who believe in the ideals of, and are
connected to, the nation.”); see also id. at 1530–31 (“[I]n
deliberately trying to situate the right of armed self-defense
in the pantheon of constitutional rights,” Heller “identifies
the right-holders at different points as ‘all members of the
political community,’ ‘all Americans,’ ‘citizens,’
‘Americans,’ and ‘law-abiding citizens.’”). We thus can’t
ignore Heller’s gloss on the meaning of “the people,”
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 31
especially given its consistency with the phrase’s historical
understanding.
After Heller, the Supreme Court repeatedly assumed that
citizenship was a prerequisite for asserting the Second
Amendment right. McDonald was first, observing that the
Second Amendment means that “citizens must be permitted
‘to use [handguns] for the core lawful purpose of self-
defense.’” McDonald v. City of Chicago, Ill., 561 U.S. 742,
767–68 (2010) (plurality opinion) (simplified) (emphasis
added) (quoting Heller, 554 U.S. at 630). Bruen similarly
defined the Amendment’s scope to protect “ordinary, law-
abiding citizens.” See 597 U.S. at 9 (emphasis added), see
also id. at 11, 15, 26, 29–31, 38, 60, 70–71. So too in
Rahimi. United States v. Rahimi, 602 U.S. 680, 691, 701
(describing the Second Amendment as applying to “ordinary
citizens” (emphasis added)). Even our court has recognized
the scholarly consensus that “the right to bear arms was
inextricably tied to the concept of a virtuous citizenry.”
United States v. Vongxay, 594 F.3d 1111, 1118 (9th Cir.
2010) (simplified), abrogated on other grounds by, Bruen,
597 U.S. at 19.
* * *
Text, history, and precedent all align. At the ratification
of the Second Amendment, the right belonged only to “the
people,” which was understood as the members of the
nation’s political community. True, at the Founding, that
political community was narrowly drawn. We have
rightfully broadened the political community’s scope. But it
still has its limits.
32 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
B.
Having determined that the Second Amendment right
only protects members of our nation’s political community,
I next consider whether illegal aliens belong in that group.
They do not.
Illegal aliens in the United States today are not among
“the people” protected by the Second Amendment’s text.
Illegal aliens lack any allegiance to the United States and are
unlawfully present in the country. Definitionally, illegal
aliens are not part of the sovereign body politic. Under
federal law, an “alien” is “any person not a citizen or national
of the United States.” 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(3). And a
“national” is “a person owing permanent allegiance to a
state.” § 1101(a)(21). So an “alien” is a person who is
neither “a citizen of the United States” nor “a person who,
though not a citizen of the United States, owes permanent
allegiance to the United States.” § 1101(a)(22). Federal law
thus recognizes the commonsense principle that an illegal
alien—a “national” of another state—owes his or her
permanent allegiance to another sovereign.
Indeed, the naturalization process requires an alien to
take an oath “renounc[ing] and abjur[ing] absolutely and
entirely all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince,
potentate, state, or sovereignty[.]” 8 U.S.C. § 1448(a)(2). In
exercising its authority to welcome outsiders into the
political community, Congress considers allegiance a key to
admission. See Federalist No. 42; 2 Kent, Commentaries 65.
Allegiance is thus a necessary condition for membership in
“the people.” Because illegal aliens owe their allegiance to
a foreign sovereign, they are not part of the political
community that the Constitution contemplates.
USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ 33
Lacking any allegiance to our country, illegal aliens
cannot exercise many of the political rights of citizens of our
country. They cannot vote in federal elections. 18 U.S.C.
§ 611(a). They cannot hold federal office. U.S. Const. art.
I, § 2, cl. 2; id. art. I § 3, cl. 3; id. art. II, § 1, cl. 5. And they
cannot serve on federal juries. 28 U.S.C. § 1865(b)(1).
Unlawful presence—and its consequences—also show
that illegal aliens are not part of “the people.” Their very
presence in the United States violates federal law. 8 U.S.C.
§ 1325. As the Fourth Circuit observed, “the crime of illegal
entry inherently carries this additional aspect that leaves an
illegal alien’s status substantially unprotected by the
Constitution in many respects.” United States v. Carpio-
Leon, 701 F.3d 974, 981 (4th Cir. 2012). And, subject to
limited exceptions, the federal government may remove
them from the country at any time. See 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a).
As a result, illegal aliens “are likely to maintain no
permanent address in this country.” Portillo-Munoz, 643
F.3d at 441 (simplified). Indeed, for the most part, illegal
aliens can’t even be lawfully employed. See 8 U.S.C.
§ 1324a; see also Sugarman v. Dougall, 413 U.S. 634, 649
(1973) (observing that “[a] restriction on the employment of
noncitizens” could be relevant for “defining ‘political
community.’”).
All this reinforces what common sense suggests: illegal
aliens cannot fully participate in our nation politically,
socially, or economically. They simply “cannot assert the
rights in general obtaining in a land [to which] they do not
belong as citizens or otherwise.” Williams, 194 U.S. at 292.
They thus cannot be considered members of the political
community entitled to Second Amendment protection.
34 USA V. VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ
Because illegal aliens are not covered by the Second
Amendment’s plain text, Vasquez-Ramirez’s as-applied
challenge to § 922(g)(5)(A) fails. See Bruen, 597 U.S. at 32.
And so I agree with the per curiam opinion affirming his
conviction.
Of course, this doesn’t answer every question. While
illegal aliens are not among “the people” protected by the
Second Amendment, this doesn’t answer whether legally
present aliens, such as legal permanent residents, may
invoke the Second Amendment guarantee. This also doesn’t
answer how the Second Amendment’s incorporation against
the States through the Due Process Clause, which applies to
“person[s],” changes the analysis for a state law challenge.
See McDonald, 561 U.S. at 850 n.19 (Thomas, J.,
concurring). Those are difficult questions on which I
express no views. For now, it is enough to make clear that
illegal aliens are not among “the people” the Second
Amendment protects.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No.
02VAZQUEZ-RAMIREZ SUMMARY * Criminal Law The panel affirmed Oscar Vazquez-Ramirez’s conviction for violating 18 U.S.C.
03§ 922(g)(5)(A), which prohibits persons “illegally or unlawfully in the United States” from possessing a firearm.
04Vazquez-Ramirez moved to dismiss the indictment, raising an as-applied Second Amendment challenge to § 922(g)(5)(A).
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for United States v. Vazquez-Ramirez in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on January 2, 2026.
Use the citation No. 10768266 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.