The Trump administration has directed federal prosecutors in Washington, D.C., not to pursue felony charges against individuals carrying rifles or shotguns in public without a license. This policy shift was announced by U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro, who stated that prosecuting such cases would violate Supreme Court rulings in District of Columbia v. Heller and New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen. According to an email reviewed by The Washington Post and multiple reports, this instruction applies regardless of the strength of the evidence. Pirro emphasized that the District’s ban on carrying rifles and shotguns conflicts with constitutional protections affirmed by the Supreme Court. This marks a notable change in the enforcement of gun laws in the nation’s capital under the Trump administration.
The Trump administration’s aggressive defense of gun rights has at least one exception. The government’s lawyers want the Supreme Court to make clear that regular pot smokers – and other drug users − shouldn’t be allowed to own firearms. An appeals court has said a federal law https://t.co/B2PEwRf5Qs
U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro's office has instructed D.C.'s federal prosecutors not to seek felony charges against people carrying rifles or shotguns in the capital. https://t.co/l9zGWAOlDk
You can now carry rifles, shotguns in Washington DC without facing charges: Judge Jeanine announces new Trump policy /// "In a statement, Pirro was quoted by the Washington Post as saying that the District’s ban on carrying rifles and shotguns conflicts with Supreme Court