Appeals court overturns conviction of Billings man who 'patrolled' near elementary campus with gun
A man who was convicted in federal court of firearms violations after menacing neighbors and an elementary school in Billings by carrying guns and patrolling the neighborhood has had his conviction overturned in a split decision by the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
In a ruling earlier this week, the panel of three appellate judges said that Gabriel Metcalfs conviction should be overturned because he offered a plausible interpretation and understanding of federal gun law, even while acknowledging that federal district court judge Susan Watters had a more straightforward and traditional definition of the law.
The majority opinion, written by Circuit Judge Lawrence VanDyke, a former Montana Solicitor General, noted that Metcalf appears to be the only person to test whether Montanas open carry gun law complied with the federal Gun-Free School Zones Act. In his appeal, Metcalf also raised concerns that his conviction also violated his Second Amendment rights, but the appellate court stopped short of deciding that issue, ruling instead that Metcalfs interpretation of the law was plausible, and therefore he could not have known he was violating federal law.
Judge Mary M. Schroeder issued a dissenting opinion in the case, saying that VanDyke and Judge John B. Owens had reached their conclusion by means of a tortured application of judicial principles, even while acknowledging that Watters had the better and more traditional interpretation of state and federal law.
https://dailymontanan.com/2025/09/26/appeals-court-overturns-conviction-of-billings-man-who-patrolled-near-elementary-campus-with-gun/