Reaffirming Felon-in-Possession Prohibitions Post-Rahimi: The Eleventh Circuit’s Decision in United States v. Whitaker

Reaffirming Felon-in-Possession Prohibitions Post-Rahimi: The Eleventh Circuit’s Decision in United States v. Whitaker

1. Introduction

The Eleventh Circuit’s per curiam opinion in United States v. Torrence Denard Whitaker revisits the constitutionality of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1)—the federal “felon-in-possession” statute—after the Supreme Court’s landmark Second Amendment decisions in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen (2022) and United States v. Rahimi (2024). Whitaker, convicted in the Southern District of Florida for possessing a firearm and ammunition after a felony conviction, challenged § 922(g)(1) on both Second Amendment and Commerce Clause grounds.

The Eleventh Circuit had initially affirmed his conviction summarily, but the Supreme Court vacated and remanded in light of Rahimi. On remand, and following its own intervening decision in United States v. Dubois (Dubois II), the court again summarily affirmed, holding that Whitaker’s arguments were foreclosed by binding precedent.

The decision solidifies the continued vitality of § 922(g)(1) within the circuit, clarifying that neither Bruen nor Rahimi disturbs earlier Eleventh Circuit precedents upholding felon-disarmament laws.

2. Summary of the Judgment

Second Amendment claim: The panel held that Rozier (2010) remains binding authority that § 922(g)(1) does not violate the Second Amendment, and that Dubois II expressly determined that Bruen and Rahimi did not abrogate Rozier. Therefore, Whitaker’s claim failed.
Commerce Clause claim: Relying on McAllister (1996), Scott (2001), and Wright (2010), the panel reaffirmed that § 922(g)(1)’s jurisdictional element (“in or affecting commerce”) satisfies constitutional requirements both facially and as applied because Whitaker’s firearm and ammunition travelled interstate.
Outcome: The government’s motion for summary affirmance was granted; Whitaker’s conviction stands.

3. Detailed Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence

  • District of Columbia v. Heller (2008) – Recognized an individual right to keep and bear arms but described felon-in-possession bans as “presumptively lawful.”
  • United States v. Rozier (11th Cir. 2010) – Applied Heller to uphold § 922(g)(1) because the Second Amendment protects only “law-abiding, responsible” citizens.
  • Bruen (2022) – Adopted a text-and-history test, sparking a wave of challenges to longstanding firearm regulations.
  • Rahimi (2024) – Clarified that regulations disarming persons adjudged dangerous fit the historical tradition, limiting the reach of Bruen.
  • Dubois II (11th Cir. 2025) – Held that Rahimi did not abrogate Rozier; reinstated the panel’s earlier opinion upholding § 922(g)(1).
  • United States v. Lopez (1995) & United States v. Morrison (2000) – Limited Congress’s Commerce Clause power but recognized that jurisdictional elements can preserve constitutionality.
  • McAllister (1996), Scott (2001), Wright (2010) – Confirmed that the interstate nexus language in § 922(g)(1) is sufficient.

3.2 Legal Reasoning of the Eleventh Circuit

  1. Prior-panel-precedent rule. Under Eleventh Circuit law, a later panel is bound by an earlier published decision unless overruled en banc or by the Supreme Court. Because Rozier has not been so overruled, the panel was compelled to follow it.
  2. Interaction with Bruen & Rahimi. The panel observed that Dubois II already engaged in the heavy lifting of reconciling Bruen/Rahimi with Rozier, concluding that:
    • Heller's “law-abiding, responsible citizens” language remains good law.
    • Historical tradition distinguishes restrictions aimed at disarming dangerous or non-law-abiding persons, a category encompassing felons.
  3. Commerce Clause analysis. The court reiterated that the statute’s jurisdictional phrase (“in or affecting commerce”) narrows the reach of § 922(g)(1) to conduct that implicates interstate commerce, satisfying Lopez and Morrison. Because Whitaker’s gun and ammunition were manufactured outside Florida, the “minimal nexus” test was easily met.
  4. Summary disposition standard. Citing Groendyke Transportation, Inc. v. Davis (1969), the panel explained that summary affirmance is proper where the outcome is “clearly right” under existing law, conserving judicial resources.

3.3 Potential Impact

  • Stabilization of § 922(g)(1) within the Eleventh Circuit. Whitaker cements Dubois II as controlling authority; future Second-Amendment challenges by felons are now functionally foreclosed at the panel level.
  • Narrowing the scope of post-Bruen litigation. By clarifying that Rahimi does not unsettle felon-disarmament laws, the case pares down viable avenues for defendants to challenge federal firearms statutes.
  • Guidance on the prior-panel-precedent rule. The decision illustrates how lower courts maintain doctrinal stability amid rapid Supreme Court developments.
  • Implications for Supreme Court review. The Court’s grant-vacate-remand (GVR) order signaled interest in how circuits apply Rahimi. If circuit splits emerge, the Court may eventually address § 922(g)(1) directly.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

  • Facial vs. As-Applied Challenge: A facial challenge attacks a statute’s validity in all applications; an as-applied challenge attacks it only as applied to a specific defendant.
  • Prior-Panel-Precedent Rule: In the Eleventh Circuit, earlier published panel opinions bind later panels unless overruled en banc or by the Supreme Court.
  • Summary Affirmance: A procedural device allowing the appellate court to affirm without full briefing or oral argument when the outcome is indisputable under controlling law.
  • Minimal Nexus Test: In Commerce Clause cases, the government need only show a minimal connection between the regulated activity (here, firearm possession) and interstate commerce—e.g., that the firearm crossed state lines.
  • Text-and-History Test (from Bruen): Courts first ask whether the regulated conduct is covered by the plain text of the Second Amendment; if so, the government must show a historical analogue for the regulation.

5. Conclusion

United States v. Whitaker offers a decisive reaffirmation of the constitutionality of the federal felon-in-possession statute in the Eleventh Circuit. By tethering its analysis to the prior-panel-precedent rule and drawing a clear line between dangerousness-based restrictions upheld in Rahimi and the long-standing disarmament of felons recognized in Heller and Rozier, the court leaves little doubt that § 922(g)(1) remains intact—at least unless and until the Supreme Court rules otherwise. The opinion also reaffirms the sufficiency of the statute’s interstate-commerce element, signaling continuity in Commerce Clause jurisprudence. For litigants and practitioners within the Eleventh Circuit, Whitaker closes the door on most constitutional attacks against § 922(g)(1), providing certainty in an area of law that has been in flux since Bruen.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit

Comments