On Jan. 20 the Supreme Court will hear whether Hawaii can treat every openly accessible store, restaurant and beach bar as a gun-free zone unless the owner posts a welcome sign—an appeals-court-endorsed scheme challengers call a “Vampire Rule” that quietly guts the right to carry.
The case, Wolford v. Lopez, arrives just three years after the Court’s 6-3 ruling in Bruen forced New York to drop its “proper-cause” handgun-licensing scheme. Rather than tighten who may carry, Hawaii flipped the default: every place open to the public—grocery aisles, surf shops, plate-lunch counters—presumes guns forbidden unless the owner verbally OKs them or hangs a pro-gun sign.
Three Maui residents and the Hawaii Firearms Coalition say that turns the Constitution on its head by making the Second Amendment contingent on a stranger’s permission, while the Biden Justice Department warns the approach is an “end-run” around Bruen that effectively revives the old New York regime state-by-state.
Why Hawaii says it needs the rule
Enacted in 2023, the law cites colonial-era weapon bans and 19th-century plantation codes. State lawyers told the Court that merchants “do not want people to carry guns onto their property without express consent,” noting an 1833 Hawaiian royal edict that barred knives in public. They argue the rule simply codifies ordinary trespass law: if a shopkeeper can expel a dog, he can expel a Glock.
Yet Hawaii simultaneously bans concealed firearms from beaches, parks, bars and restaurants serving alcohol—zones the Court is not reviewing—leaving challengers to contend the permission-only overlay on remaining private property creates a “near-total ban on public carry.”
How the 9th Circuit blessed the scheme
A Honolulu district judge initially blocked the statute, ruling it failed Bruen’s history test. The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, citing two Reconstruction-era laws: an 1865 Louisiana ordinance requiring freedmen to secure landowner consent before carrying guns and a 1771 New Jersey poaching statute. Those measures, the panel said, are “dead ringers” for Hawaii’s rule.
Challengers counter that Louisiana’s law was a race-control provision and New Jersey’s applied only to closed estates, not bustling bazaars. They also note the Court’s 2024 decision in Rahimi clarified that historical analogues need not be identical; states must show a comparable “principle” rather than a carbon copy.
What the Court must decide
The narrow question is whether a default “no guns” rule on publicly open private property is historically consistent with the nation’s tradition of firearm regulation. A broader subtext is how aggressively the Court will police states that, in the view of the federal government, chip away at Bruen through location-based restrictions.
Amicus briefs from Giffords and Brady urge the justices to let property owners set the terms of entry, framing the dispute as a clash between two founding-era values: self-defense and private dominion. Gun-rights groups reply that treating permit holders like “monsters” who must be invited inverts the constitutional order and forces merchants into a political Hobson’s choice—publicly pick a side on guns or silently lose customers who carry.
What happens if each side wins
- A ruling for Hawaii would entrench permission-first regimes in several blue states and embolden others to experiment with default gun bans inside stadiums, ride-share vehicles or apartment lobbies.
- A ruling for the challengers would wipe those laws off the books overnight and tighten the screws on states that rely on Bruen work-arounds, signaling that only explicit, historically grounded prohibitions—such as courthouses or schools—can block licensed carry.
Why the timing matters
The Court’s decision will drop in late June, just as the 2026 election cycle heats up and as lawmakers in California, New Jersey and Maryland weigh copy-cat bills. A broad opinion could also influence pending litigation over assault-weapon and magazine bans the justices have been holding in their private conference room, waiting for clearer guidance on how much history is enough.
Meanwhile, everyday gun owners in Honolulu face the practical question of whether asking a barista for latte and loaded-glock consent becomes the new normal—or whether the Constitution, like Dracula, can enter any open door without an invitation.
Stay ahead of the gavel: read every Supreme Court ruling first, fastest and with unmatched context, only at onlytrustedinfo.com.