My last post discussed how the Second Circuit in Antonyuk v. James (2024) relied on a fake North Carolina citation to a non-existent law as the supposed Founding-era analogue to uphold New York's "sensitive place" restrictions where firearms may not be possessed. (It also cited a 1786 Virginia law as an analogue, but admitted that it had a "terror" element.) On September 10, in Koons v. Attorney General New Jersey, the Third Circuit followed the Second Circuit off the cliff by making the same error. The fake "law" cited was the "N.C. Statute of Northampton (1792)," which was actually nothing but a privately published Collection of English statutes that one François-Xavier Martin thought applied in North Carolina.
In contrast, the Ninth Circuit, in Wolford v. Lopez (2024), wasn't willing t