Supreme Court Strikes Down Hawaii Gun Carry Law
The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 against a Hawaii law requiring permission to carry guns in stores and hotels, reinforcing Second Amendment rights. This decision allows individuals to carry firearms on private property unless explicitly prohibited by the owners.
Where it's breaking
Local coverage
Supreme Court Overturns Hawaii's Concealed Carry Restrictions
Supreme Court Overturns Hawaii's Concealed Carry Restrictions
Supreme Court Overturns Hawaii Gun Carry Law, Impacting Second Amendment Rights
Supreme Court bars 'vampire rules' on gun ownership
Supreme Court bars 'vampire rules' on gun ownership
Supreme Court Overturns Hawaii's Concealed Carry Restrictions
Supreme Court Overturns Hawaii Gun Law, Expanding Second Amendment Rights
Supreme Court strikes down Hawaii law requiring permission to carry guns in stores and hotels
Supreme Court strikes down Hawaii law requiring permission to carry guns in stores and hotels
Supreme Court strikes down Hawaii law requiring permission to carry guns in stores and hotels
Supreme Court strikes down Hawaii law requiring permission to carry guns in stores and hotels
Sources cited
Original outlets that filed on this story across the contributing metros. Click through for the underlying coverage.
- T2WUSA9
- T2WVEC (13News Now)
- T2Capital Gazette
- T2WBAL (NBC 11)
- T2Baltimore Sun
- T2WMAR (ABC 2)
- T2WTVR (CBS6)
- T3Delaware County Daily Times
- T3Daily Local News (Chester County)
- T2New York Daily News
- T2GPB News
- T3Oakland Press
- T3Macomb Daily
- T2WDIV (Local 4 / NBC Detroit)
- T2WXYZ (ABC 7 Detroit)
- T2Sun Sentinel (South Florida)
- T2LAist (KPCC)
- T2Boston Herald
- T2Lowell Sun
- T2WLTX (CBS Columbia)
What this is
A national rollup is a story Executive Producer detected breaking in multiple US metros at once. Each contributing market has its own deduplicated cluster from local broadcast, print, government, and community sources — this page links them together so a journalist can see the full national footprint. We are a pointer, not a publisher.Every linked headline goes back to the local cluster and from there to the original outlet — that's the URL to cite. A lead, not the law.