Dangerous and Unusual Weapons

The "dangerous and unusual weapons" doctrine recognizes that certain arms fall outside Second Amendment protection. This limitation, acknowledged in DC v. Heller, derives from historical tradition and distinguishes between protected arms in common use and those that are unusually dangerous.

Historical Origin

English Common Law Foundation

The concept traces to English common law restrictions on carrying certain weapons:

"The offence of riding or going armed, with dangerous or unusual weapons, is a crime against the public peace, by terrifying the good people of the land."

— William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1769)

Early American Understanding

Colonial and state laws reflected similar principles:

  • 1686 New Jersey: Prohibited concealed carry of "unusual and unlawful weapons"
  • 1801 Tennessee: Banned carrying arms "to the terror of the people"
  • 1813 Louisiana: Restricted carrying weapons "in a manner calculated to inspire terror"

19th Century Development

State courts elaborated the distinction:

"The right to bear arms is not infringed by laws prohibiting the carrying of weapons in a manner calculated to create terror and breach of the peace, or forbidding the carrying of unusual weapons, such as disguised or uncommon arms."

— State v. Huntly, 25 N.C. 418, 422-23 (1843)

Historical Pattern

Laws consistently distinguished between ordinary weapons used for lawful purposes and those that were either unusually dangerous or primarily suited for criminal use.

The Heller Framework

Supreme Court Recognition

DC v. Heller explicitly recognized this limitation:

"We also recognize another important limitation on the right to keep and carry arms. Miller said, as we have explained, that the sorts of weapons protected were those 'in common use at the time.' We think that limitation is fairly supported by the historical tradition of prohibiting the carrying of 'dangerous and unusual weapons.'"

— Justice Scalia, DC v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 627 (2008)

The Conjunctive Reading

Courts debate whether weapons must be both dangerous AND unusual:

  • Conjunctive View: Weapon must be both dangerous and unusual to lose protection
  • Disjunctive View: Either dangerous or unusual sufficient for prohibition
  • Heller's Language: Suggests conjunctive ("dangerous and unusual")
  • Practical Application: Most courts apply conjunctive test

Relationship to Common Use

The doctrines work together:

  1. Weapons in common use are presumptively protected
  2. Weapons both dangerous and unusual are not protected
  3. All weapons are dangerous to some degree
  4. Unusual danger plus unusual nature removes protection

Defining the Terms

"Dangerous"

Courts consider several factors in assessing danger:

Factors Suggesting Unusual Danger

  • Rate of fire capability
  • Destructive power
  • Indiscriminate effect
  • Difficulty of defense
  • Concealability with lethality
  • No legitimate civilian use

Not Sufficient Alone

  • Lethality (all guns are lethal)
  • Semi-automatic function
  • Large magazine capacity
  • Military appearance
  • Use in crimes

"Unusual"

Unusual typically means:

  • Not in common use: Rarely possessed by law-abiding citizens
  • Not typically possessed: For lawful purposes
  • Extraordinary nature: Beyond ordinary weapons for self-defense
  • Historical anomaly: No tradition of civilian possession

Circuit Court Example

"M-16 rifles are unusual because they are 'extraordinarily powerful military weapons' primarily useful in military service." — Kolbe v. Hogan, 849 F.3d 114 (4th Cir. 2017)

Categories of Unprotected Weapons

Generally Recognized as Dangerous and Unusual

Weapons Courts Find Unprotected
Category Examples Reasoning Legal Status
Machine Guns M-16, fully automatic weapons Extraordinary rate of fire, military nature Heavily regulated (NFA), new ones banned (1986)
Destructive Devices Grenades, bombs, missiles Indiscriminate destruction, no self-defense use NFA regulated
Ordnance Rockets, mortars, artillery Military weapons, mass destruction Generally prohibited
Poison Gas Chemical weapons Indiscriminate, treaty obligations Prohibited
Disguised Weapons Cane guns, pen guns Deceptive nature, assassination tools NFA regulated

Disputed Categories

Weapons Subject to Circuit Splits
Category Arguments For Protection Arguments Against Current Status
Semi-Automatic Rifles Millions owned, common use, self-defense Military features, unusual lethality Circuit split
Large Capacity Magazines Standard equipment, widely owned Enable mass casualties Circuit split
Short-Barreled Rifles Arbitrary length distinction Concealable rifles, NFA history NFA regulated, challenged
Suppressors Hearing protection, hunting use Criminal use concerns NFA regulated

The Machine Gun Question

Historical Treatment

Machine guns represent the clearest application of the doctrine:

  • 1934: National Firearms Act imposed registration and tax
  • 1939: Miller didn't address machine guns directly
  • 1968: Gun Control Act added regulations
  • 1986: Hughes Amendment banned new civilian machine guns

Circuit Court Consensus

Federal circuits uniformly hold machine guns unprotected:

"[M]achine guns are 'dangerous and unusual' weapons that are not protected by the Second Amendment... They are 'weapons most useful in military service' and thus outside the scope of the Second Amendment."

— United States v. Henry, 688 F.3d 637, 640 (9th Cir. 2012)

The Circular Ban Problem

Critics note a circularity issue:

  1. 1986 ban prevented machine guns from becoming common
  2. Lack of common use justifies continued ban
  3. Ban creates its own justification

Courts respond that:

  • Machine guns were regulated before becoming uncommon
  • Unusually dangerous nature justifies different treatment
  • Military-civilian distinction has historical roots

NFA Weapons and the Doctrine

National Firearms Act Categories

The NFA regulates several weapon types as dangerous and unusual:

Short-Barreled Rifles (SBRs)

  • Barrel less than 16 inches or overall length under 26 inches
  • Regulated due to concealability concerns
  • Some courts questioning continued justification

Short-Barreled Shotguns (SBSs)

  • Barrel less than 18 inches or overall length under 26 inches
  • Miller upheld regulation in 1939
  • Limited militia/self-defense utility cited

Suppressors/Silencers

  • Device to muffle gunshot sound
  • Regulated over criminal use concerns
  • Growing sporting/safety use arguments

Destructive Devices

  • Explosive devices, large-bore weapons
  • Clearly dangerous and unusual
  • No serious constitutional challenges

Any Other Weapons (AOWs)

  • Catch-all category for disguised/smooth-bore pistols
  • Includes pen guns, cane guns
  • Unusual by definition

Post-Bruen Challenges

Recent challenges to NFA categories argue:

  • No founding-era analogues for barrel length restrictions
  • Suppressors have legitimate uses
  • SBRs functionally similar to pistols with braces
  • Text, history, tradition test requires reevaluation

Circuit Court Applications

Different Approaches

Circuits apply the doctrine differently:

Fourth Circuit - Military Weapon Focus

Kolbe v. Hogan found assault weapons are "like M-16 rifles" and thus dangerous and unusual, receiving no Second Amendment protection.

Seventh Circuit - Common Use Emphasis

Friedman v. Highland Park acknowledged popularity but upheld ban based on unusual danger and availability of alternatives.

Ninth Circuit - Historical Tradition

Young v. Hawaii emphasized historical restrictions on unusual weapons in upholding various regulations.

D.C. Circuit - Intermediate Position

Heller II found assault weapons not categorically unprotected but subject to intermediate scrutiny.

Post-Bruen Uncertainty

Bruen's text, history, and tradition test creates new questions:

  • Must find historical analogues for "dangerous and unusual" determinations
  • Cannot use means-end scrutiny or balancing tests
  • Focus shifts to founding-era understanding
  • Modern technology challenges historical comparisons

Criticisms and Debates

Definitional Problems

Critics identify several issues:

  1. Vagueness: No clear line between dangerous/unusual and protected
  2. All Weapons Dangerous: Every weapon designed to be dangerous
  3. Subjective Standards: "Unusual" depends on perspective
  4. Moving Target: Technology and culture change over time

Constitutional Concerns

Originalist Critique

Some originalists argue the Founders would not have accepted categorical exclusions, as the militia was expected to bring military-suitable arms.

Living Constitution Response

Others contend the Founders could not have envisioned modern military weapons and their destructive capacity.

Policy Implications

Policy Debates Around the Doctrine
Issue Gun Rights Position Gun Control Position
Assault Weapons Common use protects them Unusually dangerous despite popularity
Future Technology Innovation shouldn't be banned New dangers require flexibility
Military-Civilian Line Arbitrary distinction Necessary for public safety
Historical Analogues Few restrictions at founding Different weapons, different rules

Academic Perspectives

"The dangerous and unusual standard is problematic because it potentially validates prohibitions that gain acceptance simply through their persistence, regardless of their constitutional pedigree."

— Joseph Blocher & Darrell A.H. Miller, The Positive Second Amendment (2018)

How to Cite This Page

APA: SecondAmendment.net. (2024). Dangerous and Unusual Weapons. Retrieved from https://secondamendment.net/concepts/dangerous-unusual/

MLA: "Dangerous and Unusual Weapons." SecondAmendment.net, 2024, secondamendment.net/concepts/dangerous-unusual/.

Chicago: SecondAmendment.net. "Dangerous and Unusual Weapons." Accessed [Date]. https://secondamendment.net/concepts/dangerous-unusual/.