The Minutemen, the National Guard and the Private Militia Movement: Will the Real Militia Please Stand Up, 28 J. Marshall L. Rev. 959 (1995)

is a law review article about the private militia movement. It was published in 1995 by the UIC John Marshall Law Review.

Private Militias [edit]

From page27 of the accompanying pdf:

Members of private militia organizations gain no Second Amendment rights by virtue of such membership. The debates surrounding the ratification of the Constitution make clear that the drafters’ definition of “militia” did not include private armies." The Federalists and Anti-Federalists disagreed over how militia control would be divided between the federal and state governments, but no one argued that the militia should be independent of all governmental control.

California Assault Weapon Ban [edit]

In June 2021, a U.S. District Court judge struck down California’s Assault Weapon ban, arguing in part that the Second Amendment applied to private militias [TxA] .

Reference [edit]

Dougherty, Chuck. 1995. “The Minutemen, the National Guard and the Private Militia Movement: Will the Real Militia Please Stand up, 28 J. Marshall L. Rev. 959 (1995).” UIC John Marshall Law Review 28 (4). https://repository.law.uic.edu/lawreview/vol28/iss4/9 .

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