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A February 2026 court move just reshuffled the gun-law chessboard—and most gun owners will miss it completely. If you don't understand these changes, you could follow "old rules" and still face felony charges. This video breaks down 5 major gun law shifts that affect where you can carry, private property rules, prohibited persons, rights restoration, and age restrictions—in plain English you can actually use. Why This Matters: When courts rule, the impact spreads nationwide because other courts copy the logic, agencies adjust policies, and lawmakers rewrite bills to survive new rules. February 2026 moved five major legal pressure points that change what cops enforce, what prosecutors charge, and what states can get away with next. The 5 Major Gun Law Changes: 1. WHERE YOU CAN CARRY – "Sensitive Places" Fight Redefined New Jersey's sweeping "sensitive places" gun law faced en banc review at the Third Circuit in February. The state banned carry in parks, zoos, libraries, transit hubs, hospitals, concerts, and more—making carrying almost impossible despite having a permit. The Critical Question: What time period counts as "history" for gun laws? Founding era only? Or later periods like Reconstruction? This determines whether modern bans can survive Bruen's historical test. Why You Care: After Bruen killed "may-issue" permits, states adopted a new strategy: keep permits but ban carry in so many places that the right becomes meaningless. If the Third Circuit approves broad "sensitive places" lists, other states will copy it. If they strike it down, gun owners nationwide get a weapon to challenge similar bans. The Nightmare Scenario: You walk into a coffee shop. No sign posted. You're carrying concealed, not causing trouble, just living life. Under a "default no carry" rule, you might be committing a crime the moment you step inside—even if nobody knows, even if you're the safest person in the room. National Impact: If SCOTUS says governments can't flip the default, states copying that model have a big problem. If SCOTUS allows it, expect a wave of laws turning normal daily life into a minefield for carry. 3. PROHIBITED PERSONS – Courts Drawing Harder Lines In February, the Fourth Circuit revived firearm charges in a case where a district court had dismissed them based on Bruen. The appeals court blocked big, sweeping Second Amendment attacks on the felon-in-possession law and the domestic-violence misdemeanor gun ban. The Legal Shift: Courts are rejecting "facial challenges" (claiming a law is invalid for everyone) and requiring "as-applied challenges" (proving it's unconstitutional for your specific situation). This requires detailed, fact-heavy cases that take time and money most people don't have. The Danger: If you or someone you love has ANY prior conviction or past domestic-violence situation, you cannot rely on "I saw a headline saying courts are striking these laws down." Some are. Some aren't. Some only in narrow situations. Critical Warning: If your status is even slightly unclear, don't guess. "I thought I was good" is not armor in court. Possession cases are brutal, and the mismatch between what you think and what the government thinks can turn into a felony fast. 4. RIGHTS RESTORATION – Quietly Coming Back The Third Circuit is examining whether people who lost gun rights must go through a federal restoration process (18 U.S.C. 925(c)) before they can sue. This process was basically inactive for decades but is being revived with an online application system anticipated. The Pathway Change: If courts decide you must apply through this process first, you can't run straight to federal court to challenge your prohibition. You'll go through an executive branch process first, then maybe get judicial review later. Why This Matters: This changes the entire roadmap for people trying to restore gun rights after disqualifying events. The process, timeline, and legal strategy all shift depending on how this requirement develops. Critical Understanding: Gun law is not about what feels reasonable. It's about what the law says and what courts allow the law to say. Lower courts change enforcement reality all the time—long before the Supreme Court ever speaks. States often enforce aggressively while cases are pending, then adjust later if they lose. The risk is front-loaded on YOU, the person carrying today. CRITICAL LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This video provides general educational information only and is NOT legal advice. I am not your attorney and this does not create an attorney-client relationship. Gun laws vary significantly by state and can change rapidly through legislation and court rulings. The legal landscape described reflects February 2026 developments but may have changed since publication. #GunLaws #SecondAmendment #ConcealedCarry #GunRights #CourtRulings #BruenDecision #2A #CCW #FirearmLaws #LegalUpdate #GunOwners #SensitivePlaces #CarryLaws #2026GunLaws