Title: Norman v. State

State: florida

Issuer: Florida Supreme Court

Document:

Supreme Court of Florida 
 
 
____________ 
 
No. SC15-650 
____________ 
 
DALE LEE NORMAN,  
Petitioner, 
 
vs. 
 
STATE OF FLORIDA,  
Respondent. 
 
[March 2, 2017] 
 
PARIENTE, J. 
In this case, we determine the constitutionality of section 790.053, Florida 
Statutes (2012) (“Florida’s Open Carry Law”), first passed by the Legislature in 
1987 and challenged by Norman as a violation of his right to bear arms for self-
defense outside the home under both the United States and Florida Constitutions.  
The Fourth District Court of Appeal concluded that Florida’s Open Carry Law 
does not violate the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution or article 
I, section 8, of the Florida Constitution.  Norman v. State, 159 So. 3d 205 (Fla. 4th 
DCA 2015).  We accepted jurisdiction on the basis that the Fourth District 
 
 
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expressly construed the United States and Florida Constitutions and expressly 
declared valid a state statute.  See art. V, § 3(b)(3), Fla. Const.  
Florida’s Open Carry Law is a provision within Florida’s overall scheme 
regulating the use of firearms (codified in chapter 790, Florida Statutes), but still 
allowing the possession of firearms in most instances.  See § 790.06, Fla. Stat. 
(2012).  Chapter 790 permits individuals to carry firearms in public, so long as the 
firearm is carried in a concealed manner.  Pursuant to section 790.06, Florida 
employs a “shall issue” scheme for issuing licenses to carry concealed firearms in 
public.  See id.  Under this licensing scheme, which leaves no discretion to the 
licensing authority, the licensing authority must issue an applicant a concealed 
carry license, provided the applicant meets objective, statutory criteria.  Id.  
Accordingly, as the Fourth District observed in explaining the breadth of Florida’s 
“shall issue” licensing scheme, the right of Floridians to bear arms for self-defense 
outside of the home is not illusory:  
 
Florida’s licensing statute does not effectively act as an 
exclusionary bar to the right to bear arms in lawful self-defense 
outside the home. . . . [In] over two decades from 1987 to 2014, 
Florida issued concealed weapons permits to more than 2.7 million 
people.  As of December 2014 there were 1,535,030 active permits 
issued in a population of over 19 million.  No empirical evidence 
suggests in any way that Florida concealed carry permits are unduly 
restricted to only a few people, such that a citizen’s right to lawfully 
carry a firearm is illusory. 
 
 
 
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Norman, 159 So. 3d at 219 (footnotes omitted).1  Further, pursuant to chapter 790, 
Florida law provides sixteen exceptions to Florida’s Open Carry Law, including a 
broad exception that applies to persons “engaged in fishing, camping, or lawful 
hunting or going to or returning from a fishing, camping, or lawful hunting 
expedition.”  § 790.25(3)(h), Fla. Stat. (2012) (emphasis added); see also § 
790.25(3), Fla. Stat. (2012) (providing a list of sixteen statutory exceptions to the 
Open Carry Law).  Because of the comprehensive nature of Florida’s regulatory 
scheme of firearms, we review the constitutionality of Florida’s Open Carry Law 
within the context of chapter 790.    
As we explain more fully below, we agree with the Fourth District that the 
State has an important interest in regulating firearms as a matter of public safety, 
and that Florida’s Open Carry Law is substantially related to this interest.  Norman, 
159 So. 3d at 222-23.  We conclude that Florida’s Open Carry Law violates neither 
the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution, nor article I, section 8, 
                                          
 
 
1.  As of January 31, 2017, the State had issued 1,718,673 concealed weapon 
licenses.  Fla. Dep’t of Agric. & Consumer Servs., Division of Licensing, Number 
of Licensees by Type, 
https://www.freshfromflorida.com/content/download/7471/118627/Number_of_Li
censees_By_Type.pdf (last visited February 7, 2017). 
 
 
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of the Florida Constitution.2  Accordingly, we affirm the Fourth District’s well-
reasoned opinion upholding Florida’s Open Carry Law under intermediate 
scrutiny.  See id. at 209.   
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY 
On February 19, 2012, Dale Lee Norman received by mail a license issued 
by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services authorizing 
Norman to carry his firearm in public in a concealed manner.  He left his Fort 
Pierce home on foot with a .38 caliber handgun and his new concealed-carry 
license.  A few minutes after he left his home, a bystander observed Norman 
walking alongside U.S. Highway 1 with his handgun holstered on his hip and not 
covered by any article of clothing.  The bystander alerted the Fort Pierce Police 
Department, which dispatched officers.  Fort Pierce Police Department officers 
arrived on the scene approximately five minutes later and also “saw [Norman] 
carrying a firearm in ‘plain view’ in a holster on his hip.  The firearm was on the 
outside of [Norman’s] tight fitting tank top.”  Norman, 159 So. 3d at 227.  A 
dashboard camera from a responding officer’s patrol car that captured Norman’s 
                                          
 
 
2.  The National Rifle Association of America (“NRA”) filed an amicus 
curiae brief on behalf of Norman.  Everytown for Gun Safety filed an amicus 
curiae brief and attached an appendix of historical gun laws on behalf of the State.  
 
 
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arrest on video “showed that [Norman’s] gun was completely exposed to public 
view, in its holster, and not covered by [his] shirt.”  Id. at 209.   
Norman was charged with Open Carrying of a Weapon (firearm) in violation 
of section 790.053, Florida Statutes (2012), a second-degree misdemeanor carrying 
a maximum penalty of a $500 fine and a term of imprisonment not exceeding 60 
days.  See id.; see also §§ 775.082, 775.083, Fla. Stat (2012).  Prior to trial in the 
County Court of St. Lucie County, Norman filed five motions to dismiss and 
challenged the constitutionality of section 790.053 on various grounds.  See 
Norman, 159 So. 3d at 209.  The county court reserved ruling on Norman’s 
motions to dismiss until after the jury trial.   
After the jury found Norman guilty of the sole count of openly carrying a 
firearm in violation of section 790.053, the county court denied Norman’s motions 
to dismiss, but certified the following three questions of great public importance to 
the Fourth District:3 
I. 
Is Florida’s statutory scheme related to the open carry of 
firearms constitutional? 
II. 
Do the exceptions to the prohibition against open carry 
constitute affirmative defenses to a prosecution for a charge of 
open carry, or does the State need to prove beyond a reasonable 
doubt that a particular defendant is not conducting himself or 
                                          
 
 
3.  Norman, 159 So. 3d at 209.  Section 34.017(1), Florida Statutes (2012), 
permits a county court to certify questions of great public importance to the district 
court of appeal in a final judgment if the question “may have statewide 
application.” 
 
 
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herself in the manner allowed[, meaning that they are elements 
of the crime]? 
III. 
Does the recent “brief and open display” exception 
unconstitutionally infect the open carry law by its vagueness? 
 
Id.  Thereafter, the county court withheld adjudication and imposed a $300 fine, 
along with court costs.   
In answering the certified questions, the Fourth District concluded that it 
need not “address whether the ‘brief and open display’ exception 
unconstitutionally infects the open carry law by its vagueness because under the 
facts of the case this exception did not apply to [Norman.]”  Id. at 209-10.  Norman 
does not challenge this conclusion before this Court.  In analyzing the two other 
certified questions, which Norman does challenge, the Fourth District affirmed the 
trial court’s rulings “by holding that section 790.053, which generally prohibits the 
open carrying of firearms, is constitutional,” and that “exceptions to the prohibition 
against open carry constitute affirmative defenses to a prosecution for a charge of 
open carry.”  Id. at 209.   
Addressing the constitutionality of section 790.053, the Fourth District 
applied “a two-step analysis” that has “been employed by the majority of the 
federal circuit courts to consider Second Amendment challenges since the Supreme 
Court’s decision in [District of Columbia v. ]Heller, [554 U.S. 570 (2008)].”  
Norman, 159 So. 3d at 210 & n.2.   This two-step analysis requires first 
determining “whether the challenged law burdens conduct protected by the Second 
 
 
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Amendment based on a historical understanding of the scope of the [Second 
Amendment] right, or whether the challenged law falls within a well-defined and 
narrowly limited category of prohibitions that have been historically unprotected.”  
Id. at 210 (quoting Jackson v. City & Cty. of San Francisco, 746 F.3d 953, 960 
(9th Cir. 2014)) (alteration in original).  The second step determines the 
appropriate level of scrutiny to apply to the challenged law if the law burdens 
conduct falling under the scope of the Second Amendment right.  Id. at 210-11. 
The Fourth District concluded that under the first prong of its analysis, 
section 790.053 burdens the right, but “does not improperly infringe on Florida’s 
constitutional guarantee, nor does it infringe on ‘the central component’ of the 
Second Amendment—the right of self-defense” because a citizen may still carry a 
firearm under the concealed carry licensing scheme.  Id. at 219 (quoting Heller, 
554 U.S. at 599).  The Fourth District then interpreted Heller to establish “that 
Second Amendment challenges are no longer susceptible to a rational-basis 
review.”  Id. at 220 (citing Heller, 554 U.S. at 628 n.27).  After reviewing various 
federal circuit court decisions that have considered challenges to laws impacting 
the Second Amendment right, the Fourth District concluded that “intermediate 
scrutiny is the proper standard to apply to section 790.053.”  Id. at 222.  
 In applying the intermediate scrutiny test, the Fourth District concluded that 
the State’s interest of public safety was “compelling.”  Id.  As to the second prong, 
 
 
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whether a reasonable fit existed between the challenged law and the State’s 
asserted objectives, the Fourth District noted the difficulty of obtaining empirical 
proof of regulation efficacy, but nonetheless concluded that this second prong of 
the intermediate scrutiny test was met because “courts have traditionally been more 
deferential to the legislature in this area.”  Id. at 223.  Therefore, the Fourth District 
concluded that section 790.053 passed the intermediate scrutiny test.  Id. 
The Fourth District then considered Norman’s other constitutional 
challenges to section 790.053: that the law was unconstitutionally overbroad and 
that Florida’s shall-issue concealed-carry licensing scheme was not an alternative 
channel to exercise the Second Amendment right, making the open carrying of a 
firearm the only available avenue for exercising the right.  Id. at 223, 225.  The 
Fourth District declined “the invitation to consider [Norman’s] challenge to 
Florida’s open carry restriction using an overbreadth analysis.”  Id. at 225.  As to 
Norman’s other constitutional challenge to section 790.053, the Fourth District 
concluded that “open carry is not the only practical avenue by which [Norman] 
may lawfully carry a gun in public for self-defense.  Through its ‘shall-issue’ 
permitting scheme, Florida has provided a viable alternative outlet to open firearms 
carry which gives practical effect to its citizens’ exercise of their Second 
Amendment rights.”  Id. at 226.   
 
 
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Addressing the other two certified questions, the Fourth District concluded 
that under Hodge v. State, 866 So. 2d 1270 (Fla. 4th DCA 2004), since “the 
exceptions are not in the enacting clause of section 790.053, but are contained 
within a separate statute altogether,” the exceptions are affirmative defenses.  
Norman, 159 So. 3d at 226.  Finally, in addressing the last certified question, the 
Fourth District concluded that Norman lacked standing to challenge the “brief and 
open display” exception because the county court made a finding of fact that there 
was no credible evidence that Norman’s firearm could have been concealed before 
his arrest considering his manner of dress.  Id. at 227.  Norman petitioned this 
Court to review the Fourth District’s decision, and we accepted jurisdiction.  
ANALYSIS  
The issue we address is whether Florida’s Open Carry Law, which prohibits 
openly carrying a firearm subject to sixteen statutory exceptions, violates the 
Second Amendment to the United States Constitution or article I, section 8, of the 
Florida Constitution.  The constitutional validity of a law is a legal issue subject to 
de novo review.  See Crist v. Ervin, 56 So. 3d 745, 747 (Fla. 2010).   
 
In determining whether Florida’s Open Carry Law is constitutional under 
both the Florida and the United States Constitutions, we first describe Florida’s 
statutory scheme for possessing and carrying firearms (codified in chapter 790).  
We then discuss the history and scope of the rights guaranteed by the Second 
 
 
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Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 8, of the Florida 
Constitution.  After reviewing both federal and state case law addressing the 
constitutional validity of other firearm regulations, we then determine the 
appropriate level of review for this issue.  We conclude by analyzing whether the 
law violates the Second Amendment or Florida’s separate constitutional right to 
keep and bear arms for self-defense under article I, section 8 of the Florida 
Constitution, which is explicitly subject to the Legislature’s authority to regulate 
the manner of doing so.4   
                                          
 
 
4.  Norman also contends that Florida’s Open Carry Law amounts to a prior 
restraint on the constitutional right and violates his substantive due process rights.     
Norman, however, did not preserve these arguments on appeal and we, therefore, 
decline to discuss this claim.  See Sunset Harbour Condo. Ass’n v. Robbins, 914 
So. 2d 925, 928 (Fla. 2005) (“In order to be preserved for further review by a 
higher court, an issue must be presented to the lower court and the specific legal 
argument or ground to be argued on appeal or review must be part of that 
presentation if it is to be considered preserved.” (quoting Tillman v. State, 471 So. 
2d 32, 35 (Fla. 1985))).  Additionally, Norman contends that Florida’s Open Carry 
Law is unconstitutionally “overbroad.”  However, as the United States Supreme 
Court has explained, “outside the limited First Amendment context, a criminal 
statute may not be attacked as overbroad.”  Schall v. Martin, 467 U.S. 253, 268 
n.18 (1984); see also United States v. Chester, 514 Fed. Appx. 393, 395 (4th Cir. 
2013) (noting that “no circuit has accepted an overbreadth challenge in the Second 
Amendment context.”).  Accordingly, we do not address this claim.  We also do 
not discuss Norman’s claim that the exemptions under section 790.25(3) are 
elements of the crime of openly carrying a firearm under section 790.053 because 
we find this claim is devoid of merit.   See State v. Robarge, 450 So. 2d 855, 856-
57 (Fla. 1984) (holding that under rules of statutory construction, an exception 
contained in a clause subsequent to the enactment clause of a statute is an 
affirmative defense rather than an element of the offense).    
 
 
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I.  CHAPTER 790, FLORIDA STATUTES 
Florida’s statutory scheme for regulating the manner of carrying firearms 
has existed in its current state for almost three decades.  In 1987, the Florida 
Legislature passed the Jack Hagler Self-Defense Act, ch. 87-24, Laws of Fla. 
(1987) (“the Act”), amending section 790.06, Florida Statutes (1985).  The former 
section 790.06 authorized local governments to issue concealed-carry licenses to 
applicants based on the applicant’s “good moral character” and other varying 
criteria.  § 790.06, Fla. Stat. (1985).  The Act streamlined Florida’s licensing 
scheme for carrying concealed firearms by authorizing the State to issue 
concealed-carry licenses, instead of local governments.  At that time, Florida 
became one of the first states to allow the concealed carrying of firearms by a 
state-run licensing scheme.5  Notable for our purposes here, Florida’s “shall-issue” 
permitting scheme leaves no discretion to the State in issuing concealed-carry 
licenses, provided the applicant meets certain objective, statutory criteria.  See § 
790.06, Fla. Stat. (2012). 
                                          
 
 
5.  At the time of the Act, only four other states—Indiana, North Dakota, 
Rhode Island, and Utah—authorized the concealed carrying of firearms via a state-
run permitting scheme.  Richard Getchell, Carrying Concealed Weapons in Self-
Defense: Florida Adopts Uniform Regulations for the Issuance of Concealed 
Weapons Permits, 15 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. 751, 755-56 & n.23 (1987).   
 
 
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Shortly after the Act went into effect, the Legislature passed in a special 
session House Bill 28-B, which prohibited the open carrying of firearms.  See ch. 
87-537, Laws of Fla. (1987).  House Bill 28-B was later codified in section 
790.053, Florida Statutes (1987).  Representative Ronald C. Johnson, a member of 
the Florida House of Representatives and the sponsor of the Act, spoke on the floor 
of the House of Representatives and implored his colleagues to vote in favor of 
House Bill 28-B because “a problem ha[d] arisen in the minds of the public,” 
concerning Florida’s gun laws.  This problem was brought to light in a letter 
Florida’s then attorney general wrote to Florida’s then governor, and by 
contemporaneous news reports that claimed that, with the recent passage of the 
Act, Florida law now allowed the open carrying of firearms in public.  
Representative Johnson stated that House Bill 28-B would clarify that in Florida, 
“we did not then and we do not now allow for the open carry of firearms.”6  After 
House Bill 28-B passed unanimously, Representative Johnson thanked his 
colleagues for their vote, stating that the Legislature had reaffirmed in the eyes of 
the public that Florida was a “safe place for individuals to live, and an excellent 
place for people to visit.”  The Senate unanimously voted the following day to 
                                          
 
 
6.  Representative Johnson contended that because section 790.10 made it 
unlawful for an individual to “exhibit the [firearm] in a rude, careless, angry, or 
threatening manner, not in necessary self-defense,” the open carrying of firearms 
was already illegal.   
 
 
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approve the concurring bill.  Therefore, it is apparent that in enacting a uniform, 
objective firearm licensing scheme that would allow greater availability of firearms 
to the public, the Legislature considered it necessary to prohibit the open carrying 
of firearms, subject to certain enumerated exceptions. 
Florida’s Open Carry Law provides in its entirety:  
 
(1) Except as otherwise provided by law and in subsection (2), 
it is unlawful for any person to openly carry on or about his or her 
person any firearm or electric weapon or device.  It is not a violation 
of this section for a person licensed to carry a concealed firearm as 
provided in s. 790.06(1), and who is lawfully carrying a firearm in a 
concealed manner, to briefly and openly display the firearm to the 
ordinary sight of another person, unless the firearm is intentionally 
displayed in an angry or threatening manner, not in necessary self-
defense. 
(2) A person may openly carry, for purposes of lawful self-
defense: 
(a) A self-defense chemical spray. 
 
(b) A nonlethal stun gun or dart-firing stun gun or other 
nonlethal electric weapon or device that is designed solely for 
defensive purposes. 
(3) Any person violating this section commits a misdemeanor 
of the second degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 
775.083. 
 
§ 790.053, Fla. Stat. (2012).    
 In chapter 790, the Legislature enunciated a “Declaration of Policy” with 
regard to the “Lawful ownership, possession, and use of firearms and other 
weapons”: 
The Legislature finds as a matter of public policy and fact that it is 
necessary to promote firearms safety and to curb and prevent the use 
of firearms and other weapons in crime and by incompetent persons 
 
 
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without prohibiting the lawful use in defense of life, home, and 
property, and the use by United States or state military organizations, 
and as otherwise now authorized by law, including the right to use and 
own firearms for target practice and marksmanship on target practice 
ranges or other lawful places, and lawful hunting and other lawful 
purposes. 
 
§ 790.25(1), Fla. Stat. (2012).  
 
Further, section 790.25(4) addresses the construction to be given to chapter 
790, and provides in pertinent part: 
This act shall be liberally construed to carry out the declaration of 
policy herein and in favor of the constitutional right to keep and bear 
arms for lawful purposes.  This act is supplemental and additional to 
existing rights to bear arms now guaranteed by law and decisions of 
the courts of Florida, and nothing herein shall impair or diminish any 
of such rights. 
 
Id. § 790.25(4). 
 
Except for the “brief[] and open[] display” provision added to the law in 
2011, Florida’s Open Carry Law has remained substantively unchanged since its 
passage in 1987.  See ch. 2011-145, § 1, Laws of Fla. (2011).  Under Florida’s 
current statutory scheme, specifically Florida’s Open Carry Law, openly carrying a 
firearm is illegal outside of the enumerated exceptions.  See § 790.053.7   However, 
                                          
 
 
7.  The lengthy list of exceptions to section 790.053 and section 790.06 
includes: 
(a) Members of the Militia, National Guard, Florida State 
Defense Force, Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, 
organized reserves, and other armed forces of the state and of the 
 
 
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United States, when on duty, when training or preparing themselves 
for military duty, or while subject to recall or mobilization; 
(b) Citizens of this state subject to duty in the Armed Forces 
under s. 2, Art. X of the State Constitution, under chapters 250 and 
251, and under federal laws, when on duty or when training or 
preparing themselves for military duty; 
(c) Persons carrying out or training for emergency management 
duties under chapter 252; 
(d) Sheriffs, marshals, prison or jail wardens, police officers, 
Florida highway patrol officers, game wardens, revenue officers, 
forest officials, special officers appointed under the provisions of 
chapter 354, and other peace and law enforcement officers and their 
deputies and assistants and full-time paid peace officers of other states 
and of the Federal Government who are carrying out official duties 
while in this state; 
(e) Officers or employees of the state or United States duly 
authorized to carry a concealed weapon; 
(f) Guards or messengers of common carriers, express 
companies, armored car carriers, mail carriers, banks, and other 
financial institutions, while actually employed in and about the 
shipment, transportation, or delivery of any money, treasure, bullion, 
bonds, or other thing of value within this state; 
(g) Regularly enrolled members of any organization duly 
authorized to purchase or receive weapons from the United States or 
from this state, or regularly enrolled members of clubs organized for 
target, skeet, or trap shooting, while at or going to or from shooting 
practice; or regularly enrolled members of clubs organized for modern 
or antique firearms collecting, while such members are at or going to 
or from their collectors’ gun shows, conventions, or exhibits; 
(h) A person engaged in fishing, camping, or lawful hunting or 
going to or returning from a fishing, camping, or lawful hunting 
expedition; 
 
 
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(i) A person engaged in the business of manufacturing, 
repairing, or dealing in firearms, or the agent or representative of any 
such person while engaged in the lawful course of such business; 
(j) A person firing weapons for testing or target practice under 
safe conditions and in a safe place not prohibited by law or going to or 
from such place; 
(k) A person firing weapons in a safe and secure indoor range 
for testing and target practice; 
(l) A person traveling by private conveyance when the weapon 
is securely encased or in a public conveyance when the weapon is 
securely encased and not in the person’s manual possession; 
(m) A person while carrying a pistol unloaded and in a secure 
wrapper, concealed or otherwise, from the place of purchase to his or 
her home or place of business or to a place of repair or back to his or 
her home or place of business; 
(n) A person possessing arms at his or her home or place of 
business; 
(o) Investigators employed by the several public defenders of 
the state, while actually carrying out official duties, provided such 
investigators: 
1. Are employed full time; 
 
2. Meet the official training standards for firearms established 
by the Criminal Justice Standards and Training Commission as 
provided in s. 943.12(5) and the requirements of ss. 
493.6108(1)(a) and 943.13(1)-(4); and 
 
3. Are individually designated by an affidavit of consent signed 
by the employing public defender and filed with the clerk of the 
circuit court in the county in which the employing public defender 
resides. 
 
 
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Florida’s Open Carry Law does not diminish an individual’s ability to carry a 
firearm for self-defense, so long as the firearm is carried in a concealed manner 
and the individual has received a concealed-carry license.  Id. § 790.06(2).   
As explained above, Florida’s “shall-issue” licensing scheme provides 
almost every individual the ability to carry a concealed weapon.  The statute 
merely requires the applicant to provide a statement that he or she “[d]esires a legal 
means to carry a concealed weapon or firearm for lawful self-defense” and that the 
applicant meets certain objective requirements.  Id.  These objective requirements 
include that the applicant is not a convicted felon, has not been committed to a 
mental institution, and has demonstrated competence with handling a firearm.  Id.  
Thus, under Florida’s “shall-issue” licensing scheme, the State has no discretion in 
                                          
 
(p) Investigators employed by the capital collateral regional 
counsel, while actually carrying out official duties, provided such 
investigators: 
1. Are employed full time; 
 
2. Meet the official training standards for firearms as 
established by the Criminal Justice Standards and Training 
Commission as provided in s. 943.12(1) and the requirements of ss. 
493.6108(1)(a) and 943.13(1)-(4); and 
 
3. Are individually designated by an affidavit of consent signed 
by the capital collateral regional counsel and filed with the clerk of the 
circuit court in the county in which the investigator is headquartered. 
§ 790.25(3), Fla. Stat. (2012). 
 
 
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issuing licenses and may not withhold a license from an individual based on any 
subjective beliefs, provided the applicant meets the objective, statutory 
requirements.  See id. 
In short, chapter 790 allows anyone with a concealed-carry license, which 
are granted liberally, to carry a firearm in public, so long as the firearm is 
concealed.  Having explained Florida’s Open Carry Law, we next explain the 
history and scope of the constitutional rights, both federal and state, at issue in this 
case. 
II.  FEDERAL AND STATE CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS 
 
Norman challenges the constitutionality of Florida’s Open Carry Law under 
both the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 
8, of the Florida Constitution.  We explain below the history and scope of these 
rights, both through constitutional text and case law.  Put simply, Florida’s right 
provides explicitly to Floridians what the United States Supreme Court has 
interpreted the federal right to guarantee—an individual right to bear arms for self-
defense, subject to legislative regulation. 
A.  History and Scope of the Right Provided by the Second Amendment to the 
United States Constitution 
 
 
The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution states, in full: 
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a 
free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be 
infringed. 
 
 
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In 2008, in District of Columbia v. Heller, the United States Supreme Court 
thoroughly analyzed the history of this constitutional guarantee in reviewing the 
constitutionality of a District of Columbia law that entirely banned the possession 
of handguns in the home and required that firearms otherwise lawfully allowed to 
be kept in the home be rendered inoperable.  554 U.S. at 628.  In a 5-4 decision, 
the Court invalidated the District of Columbia law, id. at 592, 635,8 and concluded 
that the Second Amendment provides an individual right to bear arms that is 
grounded in self-defense.  Id. at 599 (noting that the “central component” of the 
Second Amendment was and remains self-defense).9  One basis for the Court’s 
                                          
 
 
8.  As the Court explained, this ban required “that firearms in the home be 
rendered and kept inoperable at all times” and prevented citizens using them “for 
the core lawful purpose of self-defense.”  Heller, 554 U.S. at 630. 
 
9.  Justice Stevens and Justice Breyer each wrote a dissenting opinion that 
the other joined.  Justices Souter and Ginsburg concurred with both dissents.  
Justice Stevens’s dissent argued that “[n]either the text of the Amendment nor the 
arguments advanced by its proponents evidenced the slightest interest in limiting 
any legislature’s authority to regulate private civilian uses of firearms.  
Specifically, there is no indication that the Framers of the Amendment intended to 
enshrine the common-law right of self-defense in the Constitution.”  554 U.S. at 
637 (Stevens, J., dissenting).   
 
Justice Breyer’s dissent agreed with Justice Stevens’s dissent “that the 
Second Amendment protects milita-related, not self-defense-related, interests.”  Id. 
at 681 (Breyer, J., dissenting).  Additionally, Justice Breyer argued “that the 
protection the Amendment provides is not absolute.”  Id.  Justice Breyer concluded 
that District of Columbia’s regulation, “which focuses upon the presence of 
handguns in high-crime urban areas, represents a permissible legislative response 
to a serious, indeed life-threatening, problem.”  Id. at 681-82.   
 
 
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conclusion that the Second Amendment guarantees an individual right, not 
connected to service in a militia, was a review of post-Civil War legislation that 
concerned “how to secure constitutional rights for newly freed slaves.”  Id. at 614.  
As the Heller Court explained, “[b]lacks were routinely disarmed by Southern 
States after the Civil War.”  Id.10   
After determining that the Second Amendment guarantees an individual 
right, in Heller the majority avoided explicitly “establish[ing] a level of scrutiny 
for evaluating Second Amendment restrictions.”  554 U.S. at 634.  Instead, the 
Court stated that the law at issue in Heller would fail under “any of the standards 
of scrutiny [the Court has] applied to enumerated constitutional rights.”  Id. at 628.  
However, the Court explicitly noted that the Second Amendment’s individual right 
is not unlimited, and, historically, the right has been subject to laws prohibiting 
how firearms are carried, including antebellum laws prohibiting the concealed 
                                          
 
 
10.  As one antebellum commentator noted of the slave-holding South:  
[I]t is considered essential to personal safety, to carry concealed 
weapons.  This single fact shows that personal security is at the lowest 
ebb.  When a man must protect himself, for what is he indebted to the 
laws?  These weapons are no doubt carried partly as a protection 
against the slaves; but they are chiefly used, in quarrels between 
freemen. 
 
Richard Hildreth, Despotism in America: An Inquiry into the Nature, Results, and 
Legal Basis of the Slave-Holding System in the United States 90 (1854) (emphasis 
added). 
 
 
- 21 - 
carrying of weapons.  Id. at 626-27.11  Indeed, as one scholar has explained, 
“[e]ven in Dodge City, that epitome of the Wild West, gun carrying was 
prohibited.”  Saul Cornell, The Right to Carry Firearms Outside of the Home: 
Separating Historical Myths from Historical Realities, 39 Fordham Urb. L.J. 1695, 
1724 (2012).12 
                                          
 
 
11.  Both Norman and the dissent argue that the Heller Court’s reference to 
the antebellum cases of Nunn v. State, 1 Ga. 243 (1846) and State v. Chandler, 5 
La. Ann. 489 (1850), confirm that the historical right protected by the Second 
Amendment was the right to openly carry in public.  See dissenting op. at 3-5 
(Canady, J., dissenting).  We reject the notion that the historical right protected by 
the Second Amendment is the right to openly carry.  See Heller, 554 U.S. at 626.  
As one constitutional scholar has noted, “[t]he notion of a strong tradition of a right 
to carry outside of the home rests on a set of historical myths and a highly selective 
reading of the evidence.  The only persuasive evidence for a strong tradition of 
permissive open carry is limited to the slave South.”  Saul Cornell, The Right to 
Carry Firearms Outside of the Home: Separating Historical Myths from Historical 
Realities, 39 Fordham Urb. L.J. 1695, 1723 (2012).  Put simply, we read the Heller 
Court’s reference to these antebellum cases not as supporting an interpretation of 
the Second Amendment as guaranteeing the right to openly bear arms in public, 
but supporting the Court’s interpretation of the right as “not unlimited.”  Heller, 
554 U.S. at 626.  
 
12.  Indeed, most states outside of the South in the mid-nineteenth century 
prohibited in most instances the carrying of firearms in public, whether carried 
concealed or openly:  
19 Del. Laws 733 (1852); D.C. Code § 16 (1857) (“If any person shall 
go armed with a dirk, dagger, sword, pistol, or other offensive and 
dangerous weapon, without reasonable cause to fear an assault or 
other injury or violence to his person . . . .”); Me. Rev. Stat. tit. 12 § 
16 (1840) (“Any person, going armed with any dirk, dagger, sword, 
pistol, or other offensive and dangerous weapon, without a reasonable 
cause to fear an assault on himself . . . .”); Wis. Stat. § 16 (1857) (“If 
any person shall go armed with a dirk, dagger, sword, pistol or pistols, 
 
 
- 22 - 
Two years after Heller, in McDonald v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S. 742 
(2010), the United States Supreme Court considered a broad-sweeping handgun 
ban in Chicago, which was “similar to the District of Columbia’s” that was at issue 
in Heller because it prevented possession of “any firearm unless such person is the 
holder of a valid registration certificate for such firearm.”  Id. at 750 (quoting 
Chicago, Ill., Municipal Code § 8-20-040(a) (2009)).13  Relying on Heller, the 
                                          
 
or other offensive and dangerous weapon, without reasonable cause to 
fear an assault or other injury or violence to his person . . . .”); John 
Purdon, A Digest of the Laws of Pennsylvania, From the Year One 
Thousand Seven Hundred to the Twenty-First Day of May, One 
Thousand Eight Hundred and Sixty-One 250 (9th ed., 1862) (“If any 
person, not being an officer on duty in the military or naval service of 
the state or of the United States, shall go armed with a dirk, dagger, 
sword or pistol, or other offensive or dangerous weapon, without 
reasonable cause to fear an assault or other injury or violence . . . .”); 
The Statutes of Oregon, Enacted, and Continued in Force, by the 
Legislative Assembly 243 (1855); George B. Young, The General 
Statutes of the State of Minnesota, as Amended by Subsequent 
Legislation, With Which are Incorporated All General Laws of the 
State in Force At the Close of the Legislative Session of 1878 629 (St. 
Paul, 1879) (“Whoever goes armed with a dirk, dagger, sword, pistol 
or pistols, or other offensive and dangerous weapons, without 
reasonable cause to fear an assault or other injury or violence to his 
person . . . . ”).  
Cornell, The Right to Carry Firearms Outside of the Home, 39 Fordham Urb. L.J. 
at 1722 n.141. 
 
13.  The Chicago ordinance at issue in McDonald “prohibit[ed] registration 
of most handguns, thus effectively banning handgun possession by almost all 
private citizens who reside in the City.”  561 U.S. at 750 (citing Chicago, Ill., 
Municipal Code § 8-20-050(c) (2009)).  A similar ordinance in the Chicago suburb 
of the Village of Oak Park was also at issue in McDonald.  Id. 
 
 
- 23 - 
McDonald Court struck down the handgun ban at issue.  Id. at 791.  In reviewing 
the handgun ban, the Court noted that its previous decision in Heller “protects the 
right to possess a handgun in the home for the purpose of self-defense,” id., and the 
plurality opinion “recognized that the right to keep and bear arms is not ‘a right to 
keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for 
whatever purpose.’ ”  Id. at 786 (quoting Heller, 554 U.S. at 626).  Significantly, 
after an exhaustive review of its selective incorporation jurisprudence, the Court 
applied the Second Amendment to the States via the Due Process Clause of the 
Fourteenth Amendment.  Id. at 791.    
 
Recently, the United States Supreme Court shed further light on the scope of 
the Second Amendment in Caetano v. Massachusetts, 136 S. Ct. 1027 (2016).  In 
Caetano, the Court reviewed a judgment of the Supreme Judicial Court of 
Massachusetts upholding a Massachusetts law prohibiting the possession of stun 
guns, reasoning “stun gun[s] [were not] the type of weapon contemplated by 
Congress in 1789 as being protected by the Second Amendment.”  136 S. Ct. at 
1027 (quoting Commonwealth v. Caetano, 26 N.E.3d 688, 691 (Mass. 2015)).  On 
review, the Supreme Court vacated the judgment, finding that this explanation 
contradicted Heller’s “statement that the Second Amendment ‘extends . . . to . . . 
arms . . . that were not in existence at the time of the founding.”  Id. at 1028 
 
 
- 24 - 
(quoting Heller, 554 U.S. at 582).  Thus, the Caetano Court confirmed that the 
Second Amendment is a right evolving with advances in technology.  See id.   
 
The Court also recently considered “whether a misdemeanor conviction for 
recklessly assaulting a domestic relation disqualifies an individual from possessing 
a gun under [a federal law prohibiting possession of firearms by persons previously 
convicted of a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence].”  Voisine v. United 
States, 136 S. Ct. 2272, 2277-78 (2016).  Importantly, in holding that the federal 
law applied to reckless assaults in addition to knowing or intentional ones, the 
Court chose not to address Voisine’s claim that the law violated the Second 
Amendment and, instead, resolved the issue on statutory interpretation grounds.  
See id. at 2278-80.  But see id. at 2290 (Thomas, J., dissenting) (noting that the 
majority’s statutory construction of the statute at issue improperly extended the 
“statute into . . .  constitutionally problematic territory”).     
 
While the Supreme Court in Heller and McDonald struck down laws that, by 
design and effect, totally prohibited the use of operable firearms in the home, the 
Court has not further defined the scope of the Second Amendment to preclude laws 
regulating the manner of how arms are borne.  Indeed, the Court acknowledged 
that its decision in Heller left “many applications of the right to keep and bear arms 
in doubt,” 554 U.S. at 635, and clarified in Caetano that the right evolves with 
advances in technology.  See 136 S. Ct. at 1028.   
 
 
- 25 - 
In the eight years since Heller, federal circuit courts have considered an 
array of Second Amendment challenges to laws regulating the manner and use of 
firearms.  For instance, the Second, Third, Fourth, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits have 
all considered and upheld state laws either prohibiting entirely the concealed 
carrying of firearms or requiring a demonstration of “good cause” or a “justifiable 
need” before a person is licensed to carry concealed firearms.  Some federal circuit 
courts have held that laws prohibiting the concealed carrying of firearms without 
first demonstrating a subjective “good cause,” did not even implicate the Second 
Amendment.  For instance, the Ninth Circuit in Peruta v. County of San Diego, 
824 F.3d 919 (9th Cir. 2016), conducted a historical examination of the Second 
Amendment and, based on this historical analysis, held “that the Second 
Amendment right to keep and bear arms does not include, in any degree, the right 
of a member of the general public to carry concealed firearms in public.”  Id. at 
939.  The Tenth Circuit has also held “that the concealed carrying of firearms falls 
outside the scope of the Second Amendment’s guarantee,” but did not conduct a 
historical examination of the Second Amendment right as the Ninth Circuit 
conducted in Peruta.  Peterson v. Martinez, 707 F.3d 1197, 1212 (10th Cir. 2013).  
In Peterson, the petitioner challenged a residency requirement of Colorado’s “shall 
issue” permitting scheme for the concealed carrying of firearms as violating the 
Second Amendment, even though Colorado law permitted nonresidents to openly 
 
 
- 26 - 
carry firearms in the state.  Id. at 1209.  Importantly, the Tenth Circuit did not 
premise its holding on the fact that residents and nonresidents of Colorado may 
openly carry.  See id. 
  Similarly, the Fourth Circuit considered a Maryland law requiring that 
handgun permits be issued only to individuals with “good-and-substantial-reason” 
to wear, carry (open or concealed), or transport a handgun.  Woollard v. Gallagher, 
712 F.3d 865, 868 (4th Cir. 2013).  Unlike the Ninth and Tenth Circuits, however, 
the Fourth Circuit “refrain[ed] from any assessment of whether Maryland’s good 
and substantial reason requirement for obtaining a handgun permit implicate[d] 
Second Amendment protections,” but concluded that the law nevertheless passed 
constitutional muster under intermediate scrutiny.  Id. at 876.   
In holding that the law passed intermediate scrutiny, the Fourth Circuit noted 
that “intermediate scrutiny applies to laws burdening any right to carry firearms 
outside the home, where ‘firearm rights have always been more limited, because 
public safety interests often outweigh individual interests in self-defense.’ ”  Id. at 
882 (quoting United States v. Masciandaro, 638 F.3d 458, 470 (4th Cir. 2011)).  
The Third Circuit considered a similar, subjective “justifiable need” restriction on 
carrying handguns in public (without distinguishing between open and concealed 
carrying) in Drake v. Filko, 724 F.3d 426 (3d Cir. 2013), and concluded that the 
law did “not burden conduct within the scope of the Second Amendment’s 
 
 
- 27 - 
guarantee.”  Id. at 429.  Regardless, the Third Circuit held that even if the 
“justifiable need” restriction was not presumptively lawful, it would still pass 
intermediate scrutiny.  Id. at 430.  The Third Circuit noted that the law “fits 
comfortably within the longstanding tradition of regulating the public carrying of 
weapons for self-defense.  In fact, it does not go as far as some of the historical 
bans on public carrying; rather, it limits the opportunity for public carrying to those 
who can demonstrate a justifiable need to do so.”  Id. at 433.   
In contrast, the Second Circuit concluded that New York’s “proper cause” 
restriction to obtain a license to carry a concealed firearm implicated the Second 
Amendment in Kachalsky v. County of Westchester, 701 F.3d 81, 93 (2d Cir. 
2012).  However, like its sister courts that have subjected laws regulating the 
carrying of firearms in public to some level of scrutiny, the Second Circuit held 
that the “proper cause” restriction passed intermediate scrutiny.  Id. at 96, 100.  
Explaining that the law passed intermediate scrutiny, the Second Circuit noted that 
“extensive state regulation of handguns has never been considered incompatible 
with the Second Amendment or, for that matter, the common-law right to self-
defense.  This includes significant restrictions on how handguns are carried, 
complete prohibitions on carrying the weapon in public, and even in some 
instances, prohibitions on purchasing handguns.”  Id. at 100.  Therefore, federal 
circuit courts have found restrictions on the public carrying of firearms as not only 
 
 
- 28 - 
surviving intermediate scrutiny, but, in some instances, not even implicating the 
Second Amendment right at all.  See Drake, 724 F.3d at 429-30.14   
B.  History and Scope of the Right Provided by Article I, Section 8, of the 
Florida Constitution 
 
 
Not only is the Federal right to bear arms applicable to the states under 
McDonald by selective incorporation through the Due Process Clause of the 
Fourteenth Amendment, but the Florida Constitution includes a separate 
constitutional right to bear arms in article I, section 8.  Specifically, the Florida 
Constitution provides:  
The right of the people to keep and bear arms in defense of 
themselves and of the lawful authority of the state shall not be 
infringed, except that the manner of bearing arms may be regulated by 
law.  
 
Art. I, § 8(a), Fla. Const. (emphasis added).  In contrast to the federal right, 
Florida’s Constitution explicitly states that the purpose of the constitutional right is 
                                          
 
14.  Consistent with Heller, federal circuit courts have also upheld federal 
laws prohibiting felons, domestic abusers, and specific misdemeanants from 
possessing firearms.  See Heller, 554 U.S. at 626 (“[N]othing in our opinion should 
be taken to cast doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms 
by felons and the mentally ill . . . .”).  Likewise, federal circuit courts have also 
upheld federal regulations restricting the possession of firearms in national parks 
and other sensitive, public places.  Id. (“[N]othing in our opinion should be taken 
to cast doubt on . . . laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places  . . . 
.”); Bonidy v. U.S. Postal Serv., 790 F.3d 1121 (10th Cir. 2015); Masciandaro, 638 
F.3d 458.  
 
 
 
- 29 - 
self-defense while simultaneously expressly limiting that right by providing the 
Legislature the authority to regulate the manner of bearing arms.   
This constitutional right has endured in Florida—with only a small gap—
since 1838 when Florida’s Constitution was adopted by the then Territory of 
Florida.  Fla. Carry v. Univ. of N. Fla., 133 So. 3d 966, 983-84 (Fla. 1st DCA 
2013) (Makar, J., concurring).15  When Florida’s current Constitution was adopted 
in 1968, the explicit right of the Legislature to regulate the manner in which arms 
are borne first announced in the 1885 Constitution remained.   
Near the turn of the twentieth century, in one of this Court’s earliest 
decisions interpreting Florida’s constitutional right to keep and bear arms for self-
defense, this Court recognized in Carlton v. State, 58 So. 486 (Fla. 1912), that 
article I, section 20, the precursor to today’s constitutional right, which was 
                                          
 
 
15.  The 1865 Constitution omitted the right, but the right was added back in 
the 1868 Constitution, which stated: “The people shall have the right to bear arms 
in defense of themselves and of the lawful authority of the State.”  Art. I, § 22, Fla. 
Const. (1868).  We note that the 1865 Constitution was never legally in effect.  
Congress rejected it when deciding whether to readmit Florida to the Union 
following the Civil War because the document did not provide sufficient protection 
for the newly freed slaves.  That language was similar to the original 1838 version, 
which stated that “the free white men of this State shall have the right to keep and 
bear arms, for their common defense,” but was later amended in the 1885 
Constitution to specifically reflect that the Legislature may regulate the manner in 
which arms are borne: “The right of the people to bear arms in defense of 
themselves and the lawful authority of the state shall not be infringed, but the 
Legislature may prescribe the manner in which they may be borne.”  Art. I, § 20, 
Fla. Const. (1885).   
 
 
- 30 - 
contained in the 1885 Constitution’s Declaration of Rights, was “intended to give 
the people the means of protecting themselves against oppression and public 
outrage, and was not designed as a shield for the individual man, who is prone to 
load his stomach with liquor and his pockets with revolvers or dynamite, and make 
of himself a dangerous nuisance to society.”  Id. at 488.   
A former member of this Court also echoed the Heller Court’s statement that 
some early gun laws were enacted with a racial motivation in mind.  As Justice 
Buford explained in Watson v. Stone, 4 So. 2d 700 (Fla. 1941), when concurring 
specially in a decision of this Court, which applied the rule of lenity to strictly 
construe the predecessor of section 790.05 in favor of the defendant: 
The original Act of 1893 was passed when there was a great influx of 
negro laborers in this State drawn here for the purpose of working in 
turpentine and lumber camps.  The same condition existed when the 
Act was amended in 1901 and the Act was passed for the purpose of 
disarming the negro laborers and to thereby reduce the unlawful 
homicides that were prevalent in turpentine and saw-mill camps and 
to give the white citizens in sparsely settled areas a better feeling of 
security.  The statute was never intended to be applied to the white 
population and in practice has never been so applied.  We have no 
statistics available, but it is a safe guess to assume that more than 80% 
of the white men living in the rural sections of Florida have violated 
this statute.  It is also a safe guess to say that not more than 5% of the 
men in Florida who own pistols and repeating rifles have ever applied 
to the Board of County Commissioners for a permit to have the same 
in their possession and there had never been, within my knowledge, 
any effort to enforce the provisions of this statute as to white people, 
because it has been generally conceded to be in contravention of the 
Constitution and non-enforceable if contested. 
Id. at 703 (Buford, J., concurring specially) (emphasis added).    
 
 
- 31 - 
Consistent with the plain language of article I, section 8, and its predecessor 
providing that the Legislature may regulate the manner and use of firearms, as well 
as the Heller Court’s interpretation of the federal right as not unlimited, the 
Legislature has enacted various laws regulating the manner in which arms are 
carried.  This Court has upheld these various regulations of this constitutional right 
upon challenge.  For instance, in Nelson v. State, 195 So. 2d 853 (Fla. 1967), this 
Court concluded that the “statutory prohibition of possession of a pistol by one 
convicted of a felony, civil rights not restored, [was] a reasonable public 
safeguard.”  Id. at 855-56.  Then, in Rinzler v. Carson, 262 So. 2d 661 (Fla. 1972), 
this Court upheld a statute that barred the usage of an entire class of firearms, 
explaining that “[a]lthough the Legislature may not entirely prohibit the right of 
the people to keep and bear arms,” pursuant to article I, section 8, “it can determine 
that certain arms or weapons may not be kept or borne by the citizen.”  Id. at 665.  
In doing so, the Court did not apply any level of scrutiny and noted that it had 
previously upheld other regulations enacted by the Legislature that regulated the 
use and manner of bearing specific weapons:  
In Nelson v. State, 195 So. 2d 853 (1967) we held constitutional 
Section 790.23, Florida Statutes, F.S.A., which makes it unlawful 
for a convicted felon to have in his possession a pistol, sawed-off 
rifle, or sawed-off shotgun.  In Davis v. State, 146 So. 2d 892 (1962) 
we held valid Section 790.05, Florida Statutes of 1961, which made 
it a criminal offense for any person to carry around with him or to 
have in his manual possession a pistol, Winchester rifle or other 
repeating rifle in a county without a license from the county 
 
 
- 32 - 
commissioners.  In Carlton v. State, 63 Fla. 1, 58 So. 486 (1912) we 
upheld as valid against the contention that it unlawfully infringed 
upon the right of the citizen to bear arms a statute of this State which 
made it unlawful to carry concealed weapons. 
 
Rinzler, 262 So. 2d at 665-66.   
As we recognized in Rinzler, inherent in the holdings of these cases is the 
acknowledgment that under the Florida Constitution, “the right to keep and bear 
arms is not an absolute right, but is one which is subject to the right of the people 
through their legislature to enact valid police regulations to promote the health, 
morals, safety and general welfare of the people.”  Id. at 666 (emphasis added).  In 
light of Heller’s clarification that the federal right under the Second Amendment is 
not unlimited, the Florida right is, thus, consistent with the federal right.   
III.  DETERMINING THE APPROPRIATE LEVEL OF SCRUTINY 
 
In reviewing Norman’s claim that section 790.053 violates the Second 
Amendment to the United States Constitution, we apply the two-step analysis that 
has been employed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit 
in GeorgiaCarry.Org, Inc. v. U.S. Army Corps of Eng’rs, 788 F.3d 1318, 1322 
(11th Cir. 2015), and nearly every other federal circuit court of appeal after Heller 
and McDonald to determine the appropriate the level of scrutiny.16  The Fourth 
                                          
 
 
16.  Ezell v. City of Chicago, 846 F.3d 888, 892 (7th Cir. 2017); N.Y. State 
Rifle & Pistol Ass’n, Inc. v. Cuomo, 804 F.3d 242, 260 (2d Cir. 2015); United 
States v. Chovan, 735 F.3d 1127, 1136 (9th Cir. 2013); Nat’l Rifle Ass’n of Am., 
Inc. v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives, 700 F.3d 185, 194 
 
 
- 33 - 
District expressly applied this two-step inquiry in Norman, 159 So. 3d at 210-11.  
As the Fourth District explained, under this two-step analysis: 
 
First, we determine “whether the challenged law burdens 
conduct protected by the Second Amendment based on a historical 
understanding of the scope of the [Second Amendment] right, or 
whether the challenged law falls within a well-defined and narrowly 
limited category of prohibitions that have been historically 
unprotected.”  Jackson, 746 F.3d at 960 (alteration in original) 
(citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).  To answer this 
question, “we ask whether the regulation is one of the presumptively 
lawful regulatory measures identified in Heller[], or whether the 
record includes persuasive historical evidence establishing that the 
regulation at issue imposes prohibitions that fall outside the historical 
scope of the Second Amendment.”  Id. (citations omitted) (internal 
quotation marks omitted).  If the provision is not “within the historical 
scope of the Second Amendment,” id., then it is constitutional.  See 
id.; see also Nat’l Rifle Ass’n, 700 F.3d at 195.  If it is within the 
scope, we must proceed to the second step of the analysis. 
 
At step two, we must “determine the appropriate level of 
scrutiny” to apply to the provision at issue.  Jackson, 746 F.3d at 960.  
 
Norman, 159 So. 3d at 210-11.  
In this case, the first prong is met.  Florida’s Open Carry Law, which 
regulates the manner of how arms are borne, imposes a burden on conduct falling 
within the scope of the Second Amendment.  The law prohibits, in most instances, 
one manner of carrying arms in public, thereby implicating the “central 
                                          
 
(5th Cir. 2012); United States v. Greeno, 679 F.3d 510, 518 (6th Cir. 2012); Heller 
v. Dist. of Columbia, 670 F.3d 1244, 1252 (D.C. Cir. 2011); United States v. 
Chester, 628 F.3d 673, 680 (4th Cir. 2010); United States v. Reese, 627 F.3d 792, 
800-01 (10th Cir. 2010); United States v. Marzzarella, 614 F.3d 85, 89 (3d Cir. 
2010).  Only the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has not yet relied on this analysis.  
 
 
- 34 - 
component” of the Second Amendment—the right of self-defense.  Thus, we turn 
to step two. 
We must next determine the appropriate level of scrutiny to apply in 
reviewing the validity of Florida’s Open Carry Law, codified in section 790.053.  
As the Heller Court explained, there are three “traditionally expressed levels” of 
scrutiny: rational basis, intermediate scrutiny, and strict scrutiny.  Heller, 554 U.S. 
at 634.  As this Court has clarified, “[e]ach level has a concomitant presumption of 
validity or invalidity and standard of proof.”  N. Fla. Women’s Health & 
Counseling Servs., Inc. v. State, 866 So. 2d 612, 625 (Fla. 2003).  Rational basis 
review is the most deferential to the State, as “a relatively relaxed standard 
reflecting the Court’s awareness that the drawing of lines that create distinctions is 
peculiarly a legislative task and an unavoidable one.”  Mass. Bd. of Retirement v. 
Murgia, 427 U.S. 307, 314 (1976).  Although Heller provided little guidance to 
courts reviewing constitutional challenges to gun regulations under the Second 
Amendment, it foreclosed subjecting the kind of regulation at issue here to rational 
basis review.  See Heller, 554 U.S. at 628 n.27 (“If all that was required to 
overcome the right to keep and bear arms was a rational basis, the Second 
Amendment would be redundant with the separate constitutional prohibitions on 
irrational laws, and would have no effect.”).  Therefore, we are left to choose 
between strict and intermediate scrutiny.   
 
 
 
- 35 - 
On the opposite end of the spectrum of constitutional analysis from rational 
basis review is strict scrutiny, the most rigorous level of review.  See Korematsu v. 
United States, 323 U.S. 214, 216 (1944); see also N. Fla. Women’s Health, 866 So. 
2d at 625.  If a law impairs the exercise of a fundamental right, it must pass strict 
scrutiny.  See, e.g., Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 720-21 (1997).  The 
law is presumptively unconstitutional.  See N. Fla. Women’s Health, 866 So. 2d at 
625 n.16.  Laws reviewed under strict scrutiny must “further[] a compelling 
interest” and be “narrowly tailored to achieve that interest.”  Citizens United v. 
Fed. Election Comm’n, 558 U.S. 310, 340 (2010) (quoting Federal Elections 
Comm’n v. Wis. Right to Life, Inc., 551 U.S. 449, 464 (2007)); see also D.M.T. v. 
T.M.H., 129 So. 3d 320, 339 (Fla. 2013) (“Strict scrutiny . . . requires the State to 
prove that the legislation furthers a compelling governmental interest through the 
least intrusive means.”).  When a law is reviewed under strict scrutiny, the State 
bears the burden of proving its validity.  Fisher v. Univ. of Tex. at Austin, 133 S. 
Ct. 2411, 2421 (2013). 
Somewhere between rational basis review and strict scrutiny is intermediate 
scrutiny.  Under this less rigorous standard, the challenged law “must be 
substantially related to an important governmental objective.”  Clark v. Jeter, 486 
U.S. 456, 461 (1988).  While the State still bears the burden under this standard, 
the relationship between the Legislature’s ends and means need only be a 
 
 
- 36 - 
“reasonable fit.”  Chester, 628 F.3d at 683 (citing Bd. of Trustees of State Univ. of 
N.Y. v. Fox, 492 U.S. 469, 480 (1989)).   
 As the Fourth District explained, in deciding whether strict or intermediate 
scrutiny is appropriate to apply to Second Amendment challenges, federal courts  
look at “(1) ‘how close the law comes to the core of the Second 
Amendment right [of self-defense]’ and (2) ‘the severity of the law’s 
burden on the right.’ ” [Jackson, 746 F.3d] at 960-61 (quoting 
Chovan, 735 F.3d at 1138).  Moreover, in applying step two, we 
remain mindful that “[a] law that imposes such a severe restriction on 
the core right of self-defense that it ‘amounts to a destruction of the 
[Second Amendment] right,’ is unconstitutional under any level of 
scrutiny.”  Id. at 961 (alteration in original) (quoting Heller[], 554 
U.S. at 629, 128 S. Ct. 2783). 
 
Norman, 159 So. 3d at 210-11.  This guide is informed by Heller’s emphasis on 
“the weight of the burden imposed by the D.C. gun laws.” United States v. 
Decastro, 682 F.3d 160, 166 (2d Cir. 2012).  The D.C. gun laws invalidated by 
Heller made “it impossible for citizens to use [handguns] for the core lawful 
purpose of self-defense.”  Heller, 554 U.S. at 630 (emphasis added).  Thus, if the 
law leaves open an alternative outlet to exercise the right—here, Florida’s shall-
issue concealed-carry licensing scheme—then the law is “less likely to place a 
severe burden on the Second Amendment right than those which do not.”  Jackson, 
746 F.3d at 961 (citing Marzzarella, 614 F.3d at 97). 
 
As to the first prong, Florida’s Open Carry Law is related to the core of the 
constitutional right to bear arms for self-defense because it prohibits the open 
 
 
- 37 - 
carrying of firearms in public where a need for self-defense exists.  See, e.g., 
Moore v. Madigan, 702 F.3d 933, 937 (7th Cir. 2012) (“To confine the right to be 
armed to the home is to divorce the Second Amendment from the right of self-
defense described in Heller and McDonald.”).  However, Florida’s Open Carry 
Law is not so close to the “core” of this right as to prevent people from defending 
themselves.  Indeed, under Florida’s permissive “shall-issue” licensing scheme, 
most individuals are not prevented from carrying a firearm in public for self-
defense.  
Turning to the second prong, which is the severity of the law’s burden on the 
right, as the Fourth District recited, “we remain mindful that ‘[a] law that imposes 
such a severe restriction on the core right of self-defense that it “amounts to a 
destruction of the [Second Amendment] right,” (quoting Jackson, 746 F.3d at 961) 
is unconstitutional under any level of scrutiny.’ ”  Norman, 159 So. 3d at 211.  
However, if the regulation leaves open an alternative outlet to exercise the right, 
then the regulation is “less likely to place a severe burden on the . . . right than 
those which do not.”  Jackson, 746 F.3d at 961 (citing Marzzarella, 614 F. 3d at 
97); Decastro, 682 F.3d 160, 166, 168 (2d Cir. 2012).  As we have explained, 
Florida’s permissive, shall-issue, concealed-carry licensing scheme clearly 
“leave[s] open alternative channels” to exercise the right.  Jackson, 746 F.3d at 961 
(citing Marzzarella, 614 F. 3d at 97). 
 
 
- 38 - 
Significantly, unlike the laws at issue in Heller and McDonald, which 
completely banned the possession of handguns in one’s home, Florida’s Open 
Carry Law regulates only how firearms are borne in public.  Because this law does 
not amount to an entire ban on a class of guns or completely prohibit the bearing of 
firearms in public and does not affect the right to keep arms in one’s home, “where 
the need for defense of self, family, and property is most acute,” Heller, 556 U.S. 
at 628, we conclude that Florida’s Open Carry Law does not severely burden the 
right.  As the Third Circuit Court of Appeals has explained, a law that “was neither 
designed to nor has the effect of prohibiting the possession of any class of firearms 
. . . is more accurately characterized as a regulation of the manner in which persons 
may lawfully exercise their Second Amendment rights.”  Marzzarella, 614 F.3d at 
97.   
 
Thus, like every federal circuit court that has reviewed a challenged law that 
closely relates to the Second Amendment but does not completely ban the 
possession or use of firearms, we conclude that intermediate scrutiny is 
appropriate.17  The Tenth Circuit cogently set forth the reason why intermediate 
                                          
 
 
17.  See Tyler v. Hillsdale Cty. Sheriff’s Dep’t., 837 F.3d 678, 692 (6th Cir. 
2016) (holding that intermediate scrutiny was the appropriate standard to apply 
when reviewing challenged law not burdening the core of the Second Amendment 
right but placing a substantial burden on conduct and persons protected by the 
Second Amendment); Jackson, 746 F.3d at 965 (applying intermediate scrutiny to 
San Francisco ordinance prohibiting handgun possession in one’s own home unless 
the handgun is stored or disabled with a trigger lock or is carried on the person of 
 
 
- 39 - 
scrutiny, rather than strict scrutiny, is more appropriate for reviewing laws 
regulating the use of firearms.  As the Tenth Circuit explained when it considered a 
Second Amendment challenge to a federal regulation prohibiting the storage and 
carriage of firearms on property owned by the United States Postal Service, 
“[i]ntermediate scrutiny makes sense in the Second Amendment context,” because 
[t]he right to carry weapons in public for self-defense poses inherent 
risks to others.  Firearms may create or exacerbate accidents or deadly 
encounters, as the longstanding bans on private firearms in airports 
and courthouses illustrate.  The risk inherent in firearms and other 
weapons distinguishes the Second Amendment right from other 
fundamental rights that have been held to be evaluated under a strict 
scrutiny test, such as the right to marry and the right to be free from 
viewpoint discrimination, which can be exercised without creating a 
direct risk to others.  Intermediate scrutiny appropriately places the 
burden on the government to justify its restrictions, while also giving 
governments considerable flexibility to regulate gun safety. 
 
                                          
 
someone over the age of 18); Chovan, 735 F.3d at 1137-38 (subjecting law 
prohibiting domestic violence misdemeanants from possessing firearms to 
intermediate scrutiny); Drake, 724 F.3d at 436 (applying intermediate scrutiny 
when reviewing New Jersey law limiting the issuance of handgun permits to those 
who can show a “justifiable need”); Nat’l Rifle Ass’n of America, Inc., 700 F.3d at 
205 (applying intermediate scrutiny to federal law prohibiting federally licensed 
firearm dealers from selling handguns to persons under the age of 21); United 
States v. Mahin, 668 F.3d 119, 124 (4th Cir. 2012) (subjecting federal law 
disallowing gun possession by individuals subject to domestic violence protective 
orders to intermediate scrutiny); United States v. Chapman, 666 F.3d 220, 226 (4th 
Cir. 2012) (same); United States v. Williams, 616 F.3d 685, 692 (7th Cir. 2010) 
(subjecting federal law banning felons from possessing firearms to intermediate 
scrutiny).  
 
 
- 40 - 
Bonidy v. U.S. Postal Serv., 790 F.3d 1121, 1126 (10th Cir. 2015) (emphasis 
added).   
 
In accordance with the federal courts that have considered the issue and in 
accordance with the analytical framework set forth by the Fourth District in 
Norman, we review section 790.053—Florida’s Open Carry Law—under 
intermediate scrutiny.  
IV.  REVIEWING SECTION 790.053 UNDER INTERMEDIATE 
SCRUTINY 
 
 
As we have explained, under intermediate scrutiny, the challenged law 
“must be substantially related to an important governmental objective.”  Clark, 486 
U.S. at 461; see also T.M v. State., 784 So. 2d 442, 443 n.1 (Fla. 2001).  While the 
terminology may at times differ, intermediate scrutiny requires “the asserted 
governmental end to be more than just legitimate, either ‘significant,’ ‘substantial,’ 
or important,” and requires that “the fit between the challenged regulation and the 
asserted objective be reasonable, not perfect.”  Marzzarella, 614 F.3d at 98. 
 
Regarding the first prong of the intermediate scrutiny test—whether the law 
has an “important governmental objective”—the governmental interests furthered 
by section 790.053 are undoubtedly important.  Clark, 486 U.S. at 461.  The 
Legislature, in its “Declaration of Policy” regarding the “Lawful ownership, 
possession, and use of firearms and other weapons,” under chapter 790 found: 
“[A]s a matter of public policy[,] . . . it is necessary to promote firearms safety and 
 
 
- 41 - 
to curb and prevent the use of firearms and other weapons in crime and by 
incompetent persons without prohibiting the lawful use in defense of life, home, 
and property . . . .” § 790.25(1), Fla. Stat. (2012).18  As section 790.25(4) states, the 
provisions of chapter 790 “shall be liberally construed to carry out the declaration 
of policy.”  Likewise, the United States Supreme Court has stated that the 
“‘legitimate and compelling state interest’ in protecting the community from crime 
cannot be doubted.”  Schall v. Martin, 467 U.S. 253, 264 (1984) (quoting DeVeau 
v. Braisted, 363 U.S. 144, 155 (1960)).  Thus, we conclude that the State has 
satisfied the first prong of intermediate scrutiny, as the government’s interest in 
ensuring public safety by reducing firearm-related crime is undoubtedly critically 
important.  
                                          
 
 
18.  Norman contends that because the Declaration of Policy for chapter 790 
was enacted prior to the enactment of section 790.053, based on this Court’s 
decision in Florida Virtual Sch. v. K12, Inc., 148 So. 3d 97, 101-02 (Fla. 2014), it 
cannot be cited as an articulation of the State’s important government interest.  
However, Florida Virtual School merely recited a principle of statutory 
construction that a “more recently enacted statute will control over older statutes.”  
Id. at 102.  That same decision states that, regarding this principle of statutory 
construction, “the more recently enacted provision may be viewed as the clearest 
and most recent expression of legislative intent.”  Id. (quoting Palm Bch Cty. 
Canvassing Bd. v. Harris, 772 So. 2d 1273, 1287 (Fla. 2000)).  The Legislature 
was aware of the Declaration of Policy contained in section 790.25 when section 
790.053 was first enacted in 1987.  It has further been aware of the Declaration of 
Policy in the five times the Legislature has amended or revised section 790.053.  
Put simply, the enactment of section 790.053 did not abrogate chapter 790’s 
Declaration of Policy. 
 
 
- 42 - 
As to the second prong of intermediate scrutiny, our task is to determine 
whether section 790.053 “reasonably fits” or “substantially relates” to the stated 
government purpose of public safety and reducing gun violence.  We conclude that 
it does.  The State, in briefing before this Court, contends that by restricting open 
carry, but permitting concealed carry:  
[T]he Legislature has reasonably concluded that concealed carry 
serves the State’s interests, while open carry does not.  An armed 
attacker engaged in the commission of a crime, for example, might be 
more likely to target an open carrier than a concealed carrier for the 
simple reason that a visibly armed citizen poses a more obvious 
danger to the attacker than a citizen with a hidden firearm.  
 
Before the Fourth District, the State argued that by restricting how firearms are 
carried in public so that they may only be carried in a concealed manner under a 
shall-issue licensing scheme, deranged persons and criminals would be less likely 
to gain control of firearms in public because concealed firearms—as opposed to 
openly carried firearms—could not be viewed by ordinary sight.   
 
Norman contends that the State has not produced evidence that Florida’s 
Open Carry Law reasonably fits the State’s important government interest.   
However, under intermediate scrutiny review, the State is not required to produce 
evidence in a manner akin to strict scrutiny review.   
Consistent with the government’s “considerable flexibility to regulate gun 
safety,” Bonidy, 790 F.3d at 1126, when reviewing challenged gun regulations 
under intermediate scrutiny, federal courts have upheld gun regulations by the 
 
 
- 43 - 
government if they reasonably comport with important governmental interests, 
even if the government did not justify the restriction with data or statistical studies.   
 
Indeed, in Masciandaro, the Fourth Circuit upheld under intermediate 
scrutiny a federal regulation prohibiting the carrying or possessing of a loaded 
handgun in a motor vehicle in a national park because the Secretary of the Interior 
“could have reasonably concluded” that the regulation was reasonably adapted to 
the substantial government interest of public safety.  638 F.3d at 473.  Similarly, in 
Williams, the Seventh Circuit upheld under intermediate scrutiny a federal law 
dispossessing felons of firearms, concluding that the government had proven that 
the law was substantially related to the important governmental interest of 
preventing felons access to guns by merely “pointing to [the challenger’s] own 
violent past.”  616 F.3d at 693.  
And as the United States District Court for the District of Columbia 
explained upon the Supreme Court’s remand in Heller, the Supreme Court has  
“permitted litigants to justify . . . restrictions [under intermediate 
scrutiny] by reference to studies and anecdotes pertaining to different 
locales altogether, or even, in a case applying strict scrutiny, to justify 
restrictions based solely on history, consensus, and simple common 
sense.”  Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Reilly, 533 U.S. 525, 555 (2001) 
(emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also City of 
Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, 535 U.S. 425, 439-40 (2002) (“A 
municipality considering an innovative solution may not have data 
that could demonstrate the efficacy of its proposal because the 
solution would, by definition, not have been implemented 
previously.”); National Ass’n of Mfrs. v. Taylor, 582 F.3d 1, 15 (D.C. 
Cir. 2009) (“[Plaintiff] maintains that the congressional findings . . .  
 
 
- 44 - 
are insufficient to support [the government’s asserted interest] and 
thus to satisfy strict scrutiny.  Rather, there must be ‘studies, statistics, 
or empirical evidence . . . .’ We disagree.”); National Cable & 
Telecommunications Ass’n v. FCC, 555 F.3d 996, 1000 (D.C. Cir. 
2009) (“The Supreme Court has found ‘various unprovable 
assumptions’ sufficient to support the constitutionality of state and 
federal laws.”) (quoting Paris Adult Theatre I v. Slaton, 413 U.S. 49, 
61 (1973)). 
Heller v. District of Columbia, 45 F. Supp. 3d 35, 47-48 (D.D.C. 2014) (alterations 
in original), aff’d in part, rev’d in part on other grounds, 801 F.3d 264 (D.C. Cir. 
2015).   
 
Thus, our review of the post-Heller jurisprudence leads us to conclude that 
when reviewing under intermediate scrutiny Second Amendment challenges to 
laws regulating the manner of how firearms are borne, “courts have traditionally 
been more deferential to the legislature in this area.”  Norman, 159 So. 3d at 223.  
This is especially so when considering that “[r]eliable scientific proof regarding the 
efficacy of prohibiting open carry is difficult to obtain.”  Id. n.14.  Therefore, we 
agree with the Fourth District and are satisfied that the State’s prohibition on 
openly carrying firearms in public with specified exceptions—such as authorizing 
the open carrying of guns to and from and during lawful recreational activities—
while still permitting those guns to be carried, albeit in a concealed manner, 
reasonably fits the State’s important government interests of public safety and 
reducing gun-related violence.   
 
 
- 45 - 
 
Accordingly, we hold that section 790.053 survives intermediate scrutiny 
review and is not unconstitutional under the Second Amendment.  Our review of 
section 790.053 does not end here, though, as we must also analyze whether 
section 790.053 is unconstitutional under Florida’s freestanding constitutional right 
to keep and bear arms for self-defense.  
V.  FLORIDA CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGE TO SECTION 790.053 
 
We have already determined that Florida’s Open Carry Law survives 
intermediate scrutiny when considering whether the law violates the Second 
Amendment.  We next consider whether Florida’s freestanding constitutional right 
to keep and bear arms for self-defense, subject to the explicit grant of legislative 
authority to regulate how those arms are kept and borne, provides more 
constitutional rights than provided by the Second Amendment.  Norman contends 
that it does because article I, section 8, is part of the Florida Constitution’s 
Declaration of Rights, “a series of rights so basic that the framers of our 
Constitution accorded them a place of special privilege.”  Traylor v. State, 596 So. 
2d 957, 963 (Fla. 1992).    
 
Significantly unlike other rights contained in Florida’s declaration of rights, 
however, the plain language of article I, section 8, of the Florida Constitution 
explicitly authorizes the Legislature to regulate the manner of exercising the right 
to keep and bear arms for self-defense.  Because we have already determined that 
 
 
- 46 - 
the Open Carry Law merely regulates one manner of carrying firearms in public, 
we reject Norman’s argument that this law regulating how firearms are carried in 
public warrants strict scrutiny review under Florida’s constitutional right.  
Accepting such an argument would render every law regulating the use and 
manner of firearms presumptively unconstitutional, thereby rendering meaningless 
the text of article I, section 8, authorizing the Legislature to regulate firearms. 
  
Indeed, our conclusion that laws regulating the manner and use of firearms 
do not actually implicate Florida’s freestanding constitutional right, triggering 
strict scrutiny review, is borne out by this Court’s precedent upholding against 
constitutional challenges laws on the keeping and bearing of arms without 
subjecting the laws to any form of heightened scrutiny.  See Rinzler, 262 So. 2d at 
664 (upholding constitutionality of statute making it unlawful for any person to 
“possess[] or control any short-barreled rifle, short-barreled shotgun, or machine 
gun which is, or may readily be made, operable”) (quoting § 790.0221, Fla. Stat. 
(Supp. 1970)); Nelson, 195 So. 2d at 856 (upholding constitutionality of statute 
making it unlawful for convicted felons to possess a pistol, sawed-off rifle, or 
sawed-off shotgun); Davis, 146 So. 2d at 895 (holding valid law making it a 
criminal offense to carry in one’s manual possession a pistol, Winchester rifle or 
other repeating rifle in county without a license from county commissioners).  
Therefore, we conclude that section 790.053, which regulates one manner of 
 
 
- 47 - 
carrying arms in public, is not subject to strict scrutiny review.  Accordingly, 
consistent with our conclusion that section 790.053 passes constitutional muster 
under intermediate scrutiny, and therefore does not violate the Second 
Amendment, we hold that section 790.053 does not violate article I, section 8, of 
the Florida Constitution under the same standard.  
CONCLUSION 
We hold that section 790.053 does not unconstitutionally infringe on the 
Second Amendment right to bear arms, as interpreted by the United States 
Supreme Court in Heller and McDonald, or the Florida Constitution’s freestanding 
right to bear arms subject to the Legislature’s authority to regulate the use and 
manner of doing so.  Because section 790.053 regulates only one manner of 
bearing arms and does not impair the exercise of the fundamental right to bear 
arms, we approve the Fourth District’s well-reasoned decision in Norman 
upholding the constitutionality of section 790.053 under intermediate scrutiny.   
 
It is so ordered.  
 
LABARGA, C.J., and QUINCE, J., concur. 
LEWIS, J., concurs in result. 
CANADY, J., dissents with an opinion, in which POLSTON, J., concurs.  
LAWSON, J., did not participate. 
 
NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION, AND 
IF FILED, DETERMINED. 
 
 
 
 
- 48 - 
CANADY, J., dissenting. 
Because Florida’s generally applicable ban on the open carrying of firearms 
is unjustified on any ground that can withstand even intermediate scrutiny, I 
dissent.  I agree with the majority that “Florida’s Open Carry Law is related to the 
core of the constitutional right to bear arms for self-defense,” majority op. at 37, 
but I disagree with the majority’s view that the statute “ ‘substantially relates’ to 
the stated government purpose of public safety and reducing gun violence,” id. at 
42.  I therefore would answer the first certified question in the negative.  And I 
would decline to answer the remaining certified questions, which are rendered 
moot by a negative answer to the first question. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I. 
Three elements of the Supreme Court’s reasoning in District of Columbia v. 
Heller, 554 U.S. 570 (2008), illuminate the constitutional question here.  The third 
element establishes that the Second Amendment right is a right to openly carry 
firearms. 
  
As the underpinning for its decision invalidating a law prohibiting the 
possession of handguns in the home, the Court recognized that “[b]y the time of 
the founding, the right to have arms had become fundamental for English 
subjects,” id. at 593, and that the text of the Second Amendment—properly 
understood in historical context—“guarantee[s] the individual right to possess and 
 
 
- 49 - 
carry weapons in case of confrontation,” id. at 592.  The Second Amendment right 
thus encompasses “being armed and ready for offensive or defensive action in a 
case of conflict with another person.”  Id. at 584 (quoting Muscarello v. United 
States, 524 U.S. 125, 143 (1998) (Ginsburg, J., dissenting) (quoting Black’s Law 
Dictionary 214 (6th ed. 1990))).  This is reinforced by the statement in McDonald 
v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 749-50 (2010), that Heller “held that the Second 
Amendment protects the right to keep and bear arms for the purpose of self-
defense.”  The “individual right to possess and carry weapons in case of 
confrontation,” Heller, 554 U.S. at 592, to “be[] armed and ready for offensive or 
defensive action in a case of conflict with another person,” id. at 584 (citation 
omitted), “for the purpose of self-defense,” McDonald, 561 U.S. at 750, 
necessarily encompasses the right to carry arms in public.  On this point, of course, 
the majority here does not disagree. 
Second, in explaining the historical context bearing on the interpretation of 
the Second Amendment, Heller observed that “the majority of the 19th-century 
courts to consider the question held that prohibitions on carrying concealed 
weapons were lawful under the Second Amendment or state analogues.”  Heller, 
554 U.S. at 626.  Heller used this point to illustrate the broader point that “[f]rom 
Blackstone through the 19th-century cases, commentators and courts routinely 
 
 
- 50 - 
explained that the right [to keep and bear arms] was not a right to keep and carry 
any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose.”  Id. 
Third, in conjunction with the point regarding the carrying of concealed 
weapons, Heller recognized that the pre-Civil War case law, which demonstrated 
“the public understanding of” the constitutional right to keep and bear arms “in the 
period after its enactment or ratification,” id. at 605 (emphasis omitted), interpreted 
the right as a right to openly carry firearms.  The Court characterized the 
examination of such case law as “a critical tool of constitutional interpretation.”  
Id.  In particular, Heller’s analysis relied on two state supreme court decisions that 
address the right to open carry—Nunn v. State, 1 Ga. 243 (1846), and State v. 
Chandler, 5 La. Ann. 489 (1850). 
Heller explained that in Nunn “the Georgia Supreme Court construed the 
Second Amendment as protecting the ‘natural right of self-defence’ and therefore 
struck down a ban on carrying pistols openly.”  Heller, 554 U.S. at 612 (emphasis 
omitted) (quoting Nunn, 1 Ga. at 251).  Nunn stated that the state statute at issue 
“is valid” to the extent that it “seeks to suppress the practice of carrying certain 
weapons secretly . . . inasmuch as it does not deprive the citizen of his natural right 
of self-defence, or of his constitutional right to keep and bear arms.”  Nunn, 1 Ga. 
at 251 (emphasis omitted).  But Nunn goes on to state “that so much of [the 
 
 
- 51 - 
statute], as contains a prohibition against bearing arms openly, is in conflict with 
the Constitution, and void.”  Id. (emphasis omitted). 
Similarly, Heller relied on Chandler in which 
the Louisiana Supreme Court held that citizens had a right to carry 
arms openly: “This is the right guaranteed by the Constitution of the 
United States, and which is calculated to incite men to a manly and 
noble defence of themselves, if necessary, and of their country, 
without any tendency to secret advantages and unmanly 
assassinations.” 
 
Heller, 554 U.S. at 613 (quoting Chandler, 5 La. Ann. at 490).  Chandler 
vindicated a state law prohibiting carrying concealed deadly weapons—that is, a 
deadly weapon “that does not appear in full open view.”  Chandler, 5 La. Ann. at 
489.  The court observed that the prohibition “became absolutely necessary to 
counteract a vicious state of society, growing out of the habit of carrying concealed 
weapons, and to prevent bloodshed and assassinations committed upon 
unsuspecting persons.”  Id. at 489-90. 
The Supreme Court’s examination of Nunn and Chandler constituted a 
“critical,” Heller, 554 U.S. at 605, element in Heller’s interpretation of the 
meaning of the Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms.  And both cases 
point strongly to the conclusion that the constitutional right is best understood 
historically as a specific right to carry arms openly.  The Court’s broad 
characterization of the Second Amendment right as “the right to keep and bear 
arms for the purpose of self-defense,” McDonald, 561 U.S. at 749-50, cannot be 
 
 
- 52 - 
detached from this historical context.  For example, the right cannot be reduced to 
a right to carry long-guns based on the supposition that a broad prohibition of 
carrying handguns would not prevent the carrying of arms “for self-defense.”  
Heller, 554 U.S. at 629.  Given the history-centered reasoning employed by Heller, 
it is sensible to “refer to the most specific level at which a relevant tradition 
protecting, or denying protection to, the asserted right can be identified.”  Michael 
H. v. Gerald D., 491 U.S. 110, 127 n.6 (1989).  “[A]dopt[ing] the most specific 
tradition as the point of reference” helps avoid “arbitrary decisionmaking” by 
judges.  Id.  And, of course, the “most specific tradition,” id., in this context is the 
tradition—exemplified in Nunn and Chandler—vindicating the right to openly 
carry firearms.19 
II. 
The Florida statute challenged here collides with the Second Amendment 
right as understood in Heller.  And the majority’s attempt to justify the law’s 
interference with Second Amendment rights rests on a very slender reed.  The 
                                          
 
19.  This does not mean that an ossified understanding of what constitutes 
“arms” should be adopted.  The characteristics of particular firearms were not a 
focus of the tradition.  Heller thus recognized that “the Second Amendment 
extends, prima facie, to all instruments that constitute bearable arms, even those 
that were not in existence at the time of the founding.”  Heller, 554 U.S. at 582; see 
also Caetano v. Massachusetts, 136 S. Ct. 1027, 1027 (2016) (vacating decision 
that “upheld a Massachusetts law prohibiting the possession of stun guns”). 
 
 
- 53 - 
justification cannot pass muster even under the intermediate scrutiny standard of 
review that the majority purports to apply. 
In reviewing any law that impinges on Second Amendment rights it must be 
borne in mind that Heller rejected a “judge-empowering ‘interest-balancing 
inquiry’ that ‘asks whether the statute burdens a protected interest in a way or to an 
extent that is out of proportion to the statute’s salutary effects upon other important 
governmental interests.’ ”  Heller, 554 U.S. at 634 (quoting id. at 689-90 (Breyer, 
J., dissenting)).  Heller observed: 
We know of no other enumerated constitutional right whose 
core protection has been subjected to a freestanding “interest-
balancing” approach.  The very enumeration of the right takes out of 
the hands of government—even the Third Branch of Government—
the power to decide on a case-by-case basis whether the right is really 
worth insisting upon.  A constitutional guarantee subject to future 
judges’ assessments of its usefulness is no constitutional guarantee at 
all.  Constitutional rights are enshrined with the scope they were 
understood to have when the people adopted them, whether or not 
future legislatures or (yes) even future judges think that scope too 
broad. 
 
Id. at 634-35 (emphasis omitted).  Heller therefore also makes clear that rational-
basis review “[can]not be used to evaluate the extent to which a legislature may 
regulate a specific, enumerated right, be it the freedom of speech, the guarantee 
against double jeopardy, the right to counsel, or the right to keep and bear arms.”  
Id. at 628 n.27.  “If all that was required to overcome the right to keep and bear 
arms was a rational basis, the Second Amendment would be redundant with the 
 
 
- 54 - 
separate constitutional prohibitions on irrational laws, and would have no effect.”  
Id.  But the majority here, while purporting to apply intermediate scrutiny, 
evaluates the challenged law in a manner that is not materially different from 
rational-basis review. 
The justification relied on by the majority is ostensibly related to public 
safety concerns.  There are two elements to the justification.  Both are feeble.  
First, this reason is offered: “An armed attacker engaged in the commission of a 
crime, for example, might be more likely to target an open carrier than a concealed 
carrier for the simple reason that a visibly armed citizen poses a more obvious 
danger to the attacker than a citizen with a hidden firearm.”  Majority op. at 42 
(quoting State’s Answer Brief at 22).  Second, it is suggested that the State is 
justified in displacing open carrying in favor of concealed carrying because 
“deranged persons and criminals would be less likely to gain control of firearms in 
public because concealed firearms—as opposed to openly carried firearms—could 
not be viewed by ordinary sight.”  Id.  
These reasons may not be totally irrational, but they do not provide any 
substantial justification for the ban on open carrying.  Such “speculative claims of 
harm to public health and safety” are “not nearly enough to survive the heightened 
scrutiny that applies to burdens on Second Amendment rights.”  Ezell v. City of 
Chicago, 846 F.3d 888, 890 (7th Cir. 2017).  There is no substantial link between 
 
 
- 55 - 
the ban and public safety, and the State’s speculation is no substitute for such a 
link. 
The suggestion that someone committing a crime “might be more likely to 
target an open carrier than a concealed carrier,” majority op. at 42 (citation 
omitted), is subject to the rejoinder that a criminal confronted with the presence of 
an open carrier may be more likely to leave the scene rather than face the uncertain 
outcome of exchanging gunfire with an armed citizen.  In hostile encounters 
between armed individuals, the outcome is seldom certain, and even criminals can 
understand that fact.  Many—admittedly not all—armed criminals will give a wide 
berth to someone they know to be armed.  Likewise, speculating about the 
disarming of individuals who are openly carrying firearms by “deranged persons 
and criminals,” id., is a grasping-at-straws justification. 
The reality is that it is highly unlikely that these feeble proffered 
justifications had anything to do with the adoption of the statute banning open 
carrying.  As the history recounted by the majority indicates, the ban was adopted 
in the aftermath of the Legislature’s passage of the Jack Hagler Self-Defense Act, 
which broadly required the issuance of concealed-carry permits subject to narrow 
exclusions.  See id. at 11-18.  The ban on open carrying is best understood as the 
Legislature’s response to the public concerns swirling around adoption of the 
concealed-carry law.  To properly understand this legislative response, two 
 
 
- 56 - 
circumstances must be remembered.  First, the Legislature acted long before Heller 
was decided and thus at a time when the individual right to keep and bear arms was 
a hotly contested issue of constitutional law.  Second, then—as now—most 
individuals desiring to bear arms in public likely preferred concealed carrying to 
open carrying. 
The Legislature therefore acted to address the issue of public carrying, 
considered constituent preferences regarding concealed carrying, and weighed 
competing concerns in a context in which the contours of the Second Amendment 
right were wholly unsettled.  Given this context, the Legislature opted for 
concealed carrying over open carrying.  More to the point, the Legislature decided 
that the sacrifice of open carrying was a necessary and appropriate response to the 
public opposition generated by the passage of the concealed-carry law.  But the 
legal landscape has now dramatically shifted.  Heller has settled that the Second 
Amendment protects the right of individuals to keep and bear arms.  And Heller’s 
historical analysis points strongly to the conclusion that the individual right 
includes the right to carry arms openly in public. 
This truth should be acknowledged: opposition to open carrying stems not 
from concrete public safety concerns but from the fact that many people “are 
(sensibly or not) made uncomfortable by the visible presence of a deadly weapon.”  
Eugene Volokh, Implementing the Right to Keep and Bear Arms for Self-Defense: 
 
 
- 57 - 
An Analytical Framework and a Research Agenda, 56 UCLA L. Rev. 1443, 1523 
(2009).  Of course, many people are made uncomfortable by the fact that others are 
permitted to keep and bear arms at all.  But contemporary sensibilities cannot be 
the test.  Such sensibilities are no more a basis for defeating the historic right to 
open carrying than for defeating the understanding that the Second Amendment 
recognizes the right of individuals to keep and bear arms.  “[T]he enshrinement of 
constitutional rights necessarily takes certain policy choices off the table.”  Heller, 
554 U.S. at 636.  And “[c]onstitutional rights are enshrined with the scope they 
were understood to have when the people adopted them, whether or not future 
legislatures or (yes) even future judges think that scope too broad.”  Id. at 634-35. 
III. 
Florida’s ban on the open carrying of firearms fails to satisfy the command 
of the Second Amendment, which is applicable to the States under the Fourteenth 
Amendment.  The decision of the Fourth District therefore should be quashed.20 
POLSTON, J., concurs. 
 
Application for Review of the Decision of the District Court of Appeal – Statutory 
Validity  
 
 
Fourth District - Case No. 4D12-3525 
 
 
(St. Lucie County) 
                                          
 
 
20.  Because the challenged statute is unconstitutional under the Federal 
Constitution, it is unnecessary to address the state constitutional claim. 
 
 
- 58 - 
Eric J. Friday of Fletcher & Phillips, Jacksonville, Florida, 
 
 
for Petitioner 
 
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, Florida; and Consiglia Terenzio, 
Bureau Chief, and Heidi Lynn Bettendorf, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm 
Beach, Florida,  
 
 
for Respondent 
 
Glenn Thomas Burhans, Jr. of Stearns Weaver Miller Weissler Alhadeff & 
Sitterson, P.A., Tallahassee, Florida; and Deepak Gupta and Jonathan E. Taylor of 
Gupta Wessler PLLC, Washington, District of Columbia, 
 
 
for Amicus Curiae Everytown for Gun Safety 
 
Jason Brent Gonzalez of Shutts & Bowen LLP, Tallahassee, Florida; and Robert 
Dowlut, Bethesda, Maryland, 
 
 
for Amicus Curiae National Rifle Association of America