Gun Rights vs Drug Use — The US Supreme Court Faces a Historic Decision - KH & PARTNERS
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Gun Rights vs Drug Use — The US Supreme Court Faces a Historic Decision

News 04 March, 2026

Washington, March 2, 2026

One of the most consequential cases in recent years was heard today at the US Supreme Court — centering on the Second Amendment and a federal ban on firearm possession for drug users, including marijuana. The case United States v. Paola Heyman could become a turning point for millions of Americans.


Constitutional Right or Public Safety Threat?

At the heart of the dispute is federal law — 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3) — which makes it a criminal offense for anyone who “unlawfully uses a controlled substance” to possess a firearm.

The case placed the Court before a sharp dilemma:

The prosecution: The Trump administration argues that drug users represent a potentially dangerous category and that restricting their rights is historically justified.

The defense: Heyman’s attorneys contend that occasional marijuana use does not automatically make someone a violent criminal. In their view, a blanket, no-exception firearms ban constitutes a direct violation of the Constitution.


A Divided Court — Different Perspectives

Differences of opinion among the justices were clearly visible during the hearing.

Conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch questioned how it could be fair to strip someone of a fundamental constitutional right simply because they once used medical marijuana — in a state where doing so is entirely legal.

Justices Roberts and Alito, by contrast, expressed caution: they feared that striking down this restriction could set a precedent allowing heavily addicted drug users unrestricted access to firearms.


Kh & Partners: Analysis and Position

The legal team at Kh & Partners is closely monitoring the proceedings, as their outcome will extend well beyond US borders and inject new momentum into global debates on gun control.

Our experts identify three critical issues:

Legal ambiguity. The current law does not precisely define the term “user” — how frequent or intensive must substance use be for a person to be considered in violation? This vagueness creates a real risk of arbitrary enforcement by law enforcement agencies.

The exhaustion of historical analogies. The Supreme Court relies on the so-called Bruen test, which measures legal norms against historical tradition. However, the social and legal understanding of drug use in 18th-century America was radically different from today — making the application of this test in this particular case highly unpredictable.

The likely outcome. It is entirely plausible that the Court will seek a middle ground between the polarized positions: it may uphold restrictions on firearm possession during periods of active intoxication, while striking down permanent bans for those who use substances occasionally or for medical purposes.


“We believe that any restriction depriving a person of a constitutional right must be as specific as possible and grounded in an individual threat assessment — not broad categorization. The state must prove a person’s actual dangerousness, not merely their lifestyle.”

Kh & Partners

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