Jun 18, 2015 08:32 AM EDT
California Gun Rights - Court Uncertain For Concealed Handgun in Public

The 11 judges of the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco, on Tuesday, will hear statements over requirements in California's applicants that will show "good cause" to acquire a permit to carry a concealed handgun in public.

The case involves challenges to regulations in San Diego and Yolo, where Sheriffs' opinions that one's personal safety alone does not justify to have a concealed-carry permit.

Despite the Second Amendment rights that will probably crush the objections of the rules,  a number of members of a special 11-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals - support to have a restriction on gun owners to carry concealed weapons in public.

A law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, Adam Winkler - who has written extensively on guns and the Constitution stated:  "It's the big, looming unanswered question under the Second Amendment - whether you have a right to carry a gun in public, and under what conditions."

In recent years of the case, the uncertainty that has formed through the lower courts, made the experts on both sides of the issue suspects that the court will get involved soon - as the experts observed that with unclear reasons the Supreme Court will go on the recent Second Amendment cases.

But former U.S. Solicitor General during the Bush administration, Paul Clement, disagree the regulations like in San Diego, that it went too far regarding the restrictions of their right to self-defense  and gun owners are forced that they evidently have that right under arbitrary laws.

Paul Clement stated: "The government can't completely foreclose an avenue for exercising an important Second Amendment right."

The senior counsel with Everytown for Gun Safety, Adam Skaggs, filed a friend-of-the court brief in support of the law - stated: "These are local officials on the front lines of efforts to confront gun violence who know best how to keep communities safe," and "The decision California has made to vest discretion and authority with these officials in light of that makes a lot of sense."

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