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The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Thursday that federal prosecutors cannot charge a Texas man with a felony for possessing a handgun in his home while he occasionally used marijuana. Read the full opinion here.

The case involved Ali Danial Hemani, a dual U.S.-Pakistan citizen born and raised in Texas. In 2022, FBI agents raided his family’s home in Lewisville as part of a national security investigation into suspected ties to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. During the search, agents discovered a handgun, roughly 60 grams of marijuana, and a small amount of cocaine. Hemani told agents he smoked marijuana about every other day

Prosecutors charged him solely under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3), the federal statute that prohibits “unlawful users” of controlled substances from possessing firearms. They did not pursue charges related to the cocaine or allege that he was armed while impaired.

Justice Neil Gorsuch authored the Court’s opinion. Lower courts dismissed the indictment. The Fifth Circuit held that the charge violated the Second Amendment under the framework established in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen (2022). The Supreme Court agreed.  Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote the opinion for the Court.

The government defended the statute by citing historical laws disarming “habitual drunkards.” The Court found these analogies to be unpersuasive. Nineteenth-century statutes generally required a specific judicial determination that the individual was dangerous or otherwise incapacitated.

In contrast, Section 922(g)(3), as applied here, imposed a blanket ban based solely on regular marijuana use, even when that use was not shown to be impairing, and without any evidence of a present risk to others. 

Gorsuch emphasized the distinction. 

While historical tradition has long permitted the disarmament of individuals whose extreme alcohol use rendered them genuinely incapacitated, the federal statute sweeps more broadly by reaching someone who uses marijuana regularly but shows no signs of impairment or danger.

The Supreme Court emphasized that its decision is narrow. 

It does not resolve whether addicts or individuals who are actively intoxicated may be barred from possessing firearms, nor does it foreclose other prophylactic measures Congress could adopt. 

The ruling also leaves unresolved whether the government could prosecute under §922(g)(3) when it provides individualized evidence that a defendant’s drug use creates a genuine danger.

This ruling is the latest in a series of Second Amendment cases following Bruen. With more states legalizing marijuana, the longstanding federal prohibition has come under increasing pressure. 

This ruling changes how millions of adults in states where marijuana is legal could face fewer barriers to exercising their gun rights, even as the substance remains a Schedule I drug under federal law. 

In April 2026, the Trump administration via DOJ/DEA order moved FDA-approved marijuana products and state-licensed medical marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule III. A broader rescheduling hearing for all marijuana began in late June 2026, but as of the ruling date June 18, recreational/illicit marijuana remained Schedule I federally.

Gun-rights groups, civil-liberties organizations, and marijuana-reform advocates have found common ground in these challenges. 

The decision contrasts with the Court’s 2024 ruling in United States v. Rahimi, which upheld restrictions on firearm possession for individuals subject to domestic-violence restraining orders. Broad, categorical disarmament lacking strong historical analogues or individualized findings of dangerousness now faces stricter scrutiny.

Hunter Biden was convicted under the same statute in 2024 before receiving a pardon from his father.

The Court rejected the federal government’s argument that any marijuana use inherently makes someone dangerous. “We appreciate that drugs and guns can sometimes make for a dangerous mix, of course,” Gorsuch wrote, “but the government’s reliance on historical laws disarming habitual drunkards misses the mark.”

The ruling significantly limits how broadly the federal prohibition can be enforced. It protects the right of “regular” or occasional marijuana users to possess firearms when they are not shown to be intoxicated or addicted in a manner that creates a clear, present danger at the time of possession.

At the same time, the decision stops short of invalidating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(3) entirely. This leaves room for additional challenges that will test the outer boundaries of the statute in future cases. 

Lower courts nationwide will now start applying this precedent to the dozens of similar challenges already moving through the federal system.

The Supreme Court has once again upheld the Second Amendment right of law-abiding citizens to keep and bear arms for self-defense, while stopping short of lifting every federal restriction on marijuana users who possess guns. This ruling marks another incremental step in the Bruen framework.

There are moments in history when the veil of official deception is suddenly torn away and the public is permitted to glimpse what powerful people worked desperately to keep hidden. The declassification of COVID-19 origin documents by Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Tulsi Gabbard on June 18, 2026, may prove to be one of those moments. Like the opening of long sealed archives after the fall of a corrupt regime, the release of these documents offers Americans an unprecedented opportunity to examine the origins of the greatest public health catastrophe of our lifetime and the actions of those entrusted with protecting the public interest.

For years Americans were told that questioning the origins of COVID-19 was irresponsible. They were told that the possibility of a laboratory leak was a fringe theory. They were censored on social media, ridiculed by corporate media outlets, and dismissed by government officials. Citizens who simply wanted answers were portrayed as dangerous conspiracy theorists. Yet today, after the release of thousands of pages of declassified records, emails, intelligence materials, and whistleblower information, many of those same questions once considered unacceptable now appear not only reasonable but essential.

The significance of this release cannot be overstated. Tulsi Gabbard’s decision to declassify these materials represents one of the most consequential acts of government transparency in modern American history. Acting under President Donald Trump’s mandate for maximum transparency, Gabbard opened a window into years of bureaucratic maneuvering, scientific controversy, intelligence community infighting, and what many Americans increasingly view as a deliberate effort to suppress uncomfortable truths. The release is not merely about COVID-19. It is about accountability. It is about whether government officials can manipulate information without consequence. Most importantly, it is about whether the American people still possess the right to know what was done in their name and with their tax dollars.

At the center of this controversy stands Dr. Anthony Fauci, who for decades occupied one of the most powerful positions in American public health as Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. According to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), Fauci oversaw the distribution of millions of taxpayer dollars that ultimately funded coronavirus research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology in Communist China. The newly released materials argue that this research involved dangerous manipulation of bat coronaviruses and that such work is now widely viewed by many experts as a potential source of the virus that unleashed a global pandemic.

The funding trail itself is no longer seriously disputed. Through grants administered by EcoHealth Alliance under the leadership of Peter Daszak, American taxpayer money flowed to the Wuhan laboratory for years. Public records have long established that approximately six hundred thousand dollars in NIAID funding reached Wuhan researchers between 2014 and 2019. The controversy centers on the nature of the research itself. Critics have argued for years that the experiments constituted gain of function research or closely related forms of viral enhancement. Fauci and his defenders repeatedly denied that characterization. The newly declassified documents reignite that debate with extraordinary force.

What emerges from these records is a portrait of a scientific and intelligence establishment struggling to control a narrative while facing mounting evidence that challenged its preferred conclusions. The documents allege that Fauci recommended specific scientists and experts to intelligence agencies tasked with evaluating the origins of COVID-19. Many of these individuals had direct or indirect connections to federally funded research programs. According to the declassified materials, intelligence agencies frequently incorporated Fauci’s recommendations into their assessments, creating what critics describe as a circular process in which the same small network of experts repeatedly reinforced one another’s conclusions.

One of the most controversial aspects of the release concerns the now famous “Proximal Origin” paper published in March of 2020. That paper became one of the most influential scientific documents of the pandemic. It was repeatedly cited as proof that COVID-19 emerged naturally and was not the product of laboratory activity. Yet subsequent disclosures revealed that several scientists involved in drafting the paper had privately expressed concerns about the virus’s unusual characteristics before publicly dismissing the laboratory leak hypothesis. The new declassified records suggest that Fauci actively promoted this paper as a key reference for intelligence agencies evaluating COVID-19 origins. Critics argue that this transformed what was presented as independent scientific analysis into something far more political and strategic.

The documents also shed new light on early intelligence community debates. According to summaries contained within the release, some intelligence analysts initially favored a laboratory associated origin. There were concerns regarding biosafety procedures at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. There were reports regarding illnesses among laboratory personnel in late 2019. There were questions surrounding unusual genetic features of the virus itself. Yet over time, according to whistleblower accounts cited in the release, analysts who challenged prevailing assumptions allegedly faced intimidation, professional retaliation, and pressure to conform to preferred conclusions.

The image that emerges is reminiscent of a great stone cathedral whose foundation contains hidden cracks. For years the structure appeared stable and authoritative. Citizens were expected to admire its grandeur and trust its architects. Yet beneath the surface, competing interests, conflicting evidence, and institutional self preservation were quietly at work. The declassified documents do not merely reveal isolated disagreements. They suggest the existence of a broader ecosystem dedicated to protecting reputations, preserving funding streams, and avoiding scrutiny.

Particularly troubling are allegations that Fauci’s congressional testimony failed to accurately reflect his interactions with intelligence agencies. According to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, some newly released materials contradict statements made under oath regarding his knowledge of intelligence community involvement in COVID-19 related matters. These allegations will undoubtedly become the focus of future congressional inquiries and possible legal scrutiny. Whether such accusations ultimately withstand examination remains to be seen, but their seriousness cannot be dismissed.

President Donald Trump deserves substantial credit for insisting that these records be made public. From the earliest days of the pandemic, Trump faced extraordinary opposition when raising questions about Wuhan, Chinese transparency, and the possibility of a laboratory leak. Political opponents mocked him. Media organizations dismissed him. Bureaucrats attempted to marginalize him. Yet history has a remarkable habit of rewarding persistence and punishing arrogance. The declassification ordered under his transparency initiative represents a victory not merely for one political figure but for the principle that government information belongs to the people.

Tulsi Gabbard likewise deserves enormous recognition for her courage in releasing these records. In an era when too many public officials view information as a form of political currency to be hoarded and manipulated, Gabbard chose disclosure over concealment. She chose sunlight over shadows. She chose transparency over bureaucratic self protection. Whether one agrees with every conclusion contained within the released materials is ultimately beside the point. The American people have the right to examine the evidence and reach their own judgments.

The tragedy of COVID-19 extends far beyond infection statistics and economic losses. Millions suffered. Families lost loved ones without the comfort of final goodbyes. Businesses built over generations vanished. Children lost years of education. Entire communities endured isolation, fear, and uncertainty. The pandemic was not merely a medical event. It was a civilizational trauma whose effects continue to reverberate throughout society. Such a calamity demands answers commensurate with its scale.

The search for those answers is far from over. The newly declassified materials do not provide a single definitive document proving precisely how SARS-CoV-2 entered the human population. They do not offer a neat and tidy conclusion that resolves every scientific dispute. What they do provide is something perhaps even more important. They provide transparency. They provide context. They provide evidence that Americans were not wrong to ask difficult questions.

In the end, truth is like a river that disappears beneath the earth. For a time it may be concealed from view. Powerful interests may build structures above it and pretend it no longer exists. Yet eventually the river resurfaces. It finds daylight. It continues its journey toward the sea regardless of how many obstacles stand in its path. The declassification ordered by President Trump and carried out by Tulsi Gabbard represents another place where that river has broken through the surface. The American people now have an opportunity to follow it wherever it leads.

For a nation founded upon liberty, accountability, and the consent of the governed, there can be no higher calling than the pursuit of truth.

Every nation has defining moments. Days when history bends toward justice. Days when a promise, long delayed, finally becomes reality. For the United States, Juneteenth is one of those days. On June 19, 1865, Union Major General Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston, Texas, and issued General Order No. 3, announcing that all enslaved people were free. More than 250,000 black American men, women, and children living in bondage in Texas learned that the institution which had controlled their lives was finally at an end. The Civil War was effectively over. The Confederacy had collapsed. The Emancipation Proclamation had been law for more than two years. Yet in Texas, slavery persisted until federal authority arrived to enforce freedom.

The movement to make Juneteenth a federal holiday did not begin recently. For decades, activists and lawmakers sought national recognition of the day. After overwhelming bipartisan support in Congress, the Juneteenth National Independence Day Act passed the Senate on June 15, 2021, passed the House the following day, and was signed into law on June 17, 2021.

Although President Joe Biden ultimately signed the legislation, there is often an overlooked chapter in this story. During the 2020 presidential campaign, President Donald Trump included making Juneteenth a national holiday as part of his “Platinum Plan” for Black America. Trump publicly pledged support for federal recognition of Juneteenth, helping bring additional national attention to the holiday during a period when public awareness of its history was expanding rapidly.

It is difficult for modern Americans to fully comprehend the emotions of that day. Imagine awakening one morning as property and going to sleep that evening as a free human being. Imagine hearing that your children could no longer be sold away from you. Imagine learning that your labor, your future, and your very life now belonged to you and not to another person. Eyewitness accounts describe scenes of jubilation, prayer, tears, singing, embraces, and spontaneous celebrations. Churches filled with worshippers offering thanks to Almighty God. Families separated by slavery began searching for one another. Many freedmen immediately left plantations in pursuit of relatives, opportunity, education, land ownership, and a new beginning.

The reactions were not universally joyful. Many slaveholders were furious. Some resisted. Others delayed informing enslaved workers of their freedom for as long as possible in order to squeeze one final harvest from unpaid labor. In some areas, violence accompanied emancipation as former masters struggled to accept a world they had never imagined. Yet history had turned its page. The institution of slavery was dying, and no amount of resentment could stop the advance of freedom.

Juneteenth reminds us of an important truth about America. We are not a perfect nation. No nation composed of imperfect human beings can ever claim perfection. But America possesses something rare in human history. We possess the capacity for self-correction. We confront our failures. We debate them. We fight over them. We struggle with them. And ultimately, more often than not, we strive to right our wrongs. Slavery was one of those wrongs.

The enslavement of our fellow human beings violated the fundamental principles articulated in the Declaration of Independence. More importantly, it violated God’s law. Every man and woman is created in the image of Almighty God and endowed with inherent dignity. Human bondage was incompatible with that truth. The road toward abolition was long and painful, but Americans ultimately paid an extraordinary price to preserve the Union and eradicate slavery. More than 600,000 Americans perished during the Civil War, more than half of which were Union Army soldiers. The sacrifices of the Union Army forever altered the nation and forever expanded the blessings of liberty.

No individual better illustrates the meaning of Juneteenth than Bass Reeves. Born into slavery in Arkansas in 1838, Reeves was brought to Texas as a child when his enslavers relocated to Grayson County. He spent much of his youth in Texas laboring under a system that denied him freedom, opportunity, and basic human rights. Had he remained there, he would have been among the thousands of enslaved Texans awaiting the arrival of Union troops in June of 1865.

But Bass Reeves was not content to wait for history to rescue him. During the early years of the Civil War, Reeves displayed the courage and audacity that would later make him a legendary lawman. Following a confrontation with his owner, he escaped bondage and fled into Indian Territory. The journey was perilous. Capture could have meant severe punishment or death. Yet Reeves chose freedom over fear. He survived among American Indian tribes, learned multiple languages, mastered tracking and wilderness skills, and built the foundation for an extraordinary future.

His story provides one of the most compelling “what if” questions in American history. Had Bass Reeves lacked the courage to flee, he likely would have remained enslaved in Texas for years longer. He would have been among those awaiting the announcement that finally arrived in Galveston on June 19, 1865. Instead, his determination altered the trajectory of his life long before Juneteenth reached Texas.

By the time General Granger issued his famous order, Reeves had already escaped bondage and was living as a free man. Yet his life remained inseparably connected to the meaning of Juneteenth because he understood firsthand what freedom was worth.

Following the war, Reeves became a farmer, rancher, and family man. Then, in 1875, he was appointed a Deputy United States Marshal (DUSM). The United States Marshals Service (USMS), established in 1789, remains the oldest federal law enforcement agency in American history. Reeves became one of its most remarkable officers.

Patrolling tens of thousands of square miles across Indian Territory, Reeves pursued some of the most dangerous criminals in the American frontier. He was a master tracker, an expert marksman, and a fearless lawman. He reportedly arrested more than 3,000 fugitives during a career spanning more than three decades. His reputation for honesty became legendary. When his own son was charged with murder, Reeves personally executed the arrest warrant rather than permit family loyalty to interfere with justice.

Think about the magnitude of that transformation. A man who once could not legally own his own labor became an officer sworn to uphold the law. A former slave became one of the most respected DUSM’s in American history. A man who was once not acknowledged as a human being with basic rights became a guardian of justice for others. That is the American story at its best.

Juneteenth is not merely about the end of slavery. It is about the triumph of freedom over oppression. It is about faith over despair. It is about the extraordinary resilience of the human spirit. It is about men and women who endured unimaginable hardship yet refused to surrender hope.

The freed slaves who celebrated in Texas on that June day in 1865 could not have known what the future held. They did not know the struggles that still lay ahead. They did not know the challenges their children and grandchildren would face. But they knew one thing with certainty. They were free. And freedom changes everything.

As Americans gather to commemorate Juneteenth, we should remember both the suffering that preceded it and the blessings that followed it. We should honor those who endured slavery, those who fought to end it, and those who built new lives in its aftermath. We should remember Deputy United States Marshal Bass Reeves, who escaped bondage in Texas and rose to become a symbol of courage, integrity, and perseverance. And we should remember that while America has often stumbled, it has also demonstrated an unparalleled ability to correct its course and move closer to the ideals upon which it was founded.

Juneteenth stands as living proof that liberty, though sometimes delayed, ultimately prevails.

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