No. 25-872

Kimberly LaFave, et al. v. Fairfax County, Virginia, et al.

Lower Court: Fourth Circuit
Docketed: 2026-01-21
Status: Pending
Type: Paid
Response Waived
Tags: constitutional-challenge firearm-restriction public-parks second-amendment self-defense sensitive-places
Key Terms:
AdministrativeLaw SecondAmendment DueProcess Trademark JusticiabilityDoctri
Latest Conference: N/A
Question Presented (AI Summary)

Whether the Fourth Circuit correctly upheld Fairfax County's public park firearm ban based on the presence of four preschool programs across 420 parks

Question Presented (from Petition)

Fairfax County, Virginia, prohibits possession of firearm s in its public parks, which consist of almost 24,000 acres of mostly wooded land across 420 parks . Petitioners , who have permits to carry handguns, are thereby prohibited from carrying firearms for self -defense in Fairfax County parks . The Fourth Circuit held the restriction was facially constitutional under the Second Amendment on the basis that four preschool programs operate on a tiny portion of the total parkland, making the prohibition valid at least in those few locations . In District of Columbia v. Heller , 554 U.S. 570 (2008) , this Court held that D.C.’s handgun ban was facially invalid even though firearms could be banned in “sensitive places” like certain government build-ings. This Court repeated those statements in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen , 597 U.S. 1, 31 (2022), adding that sensitive places do not include “ all places of public congregation that are not isolated from law enforcemen t,” even as it declared New York’s may -issue licen sing scheme unconstitutional. The question presented is whether the Fourth Circuit properly rejected Petitioners’ challenge to Fairfax County’s ban on carrying firearms in the hundreds of public parks operated by the County because four of those parks host preschool programs.

Docket Entries

2026-02-13
Waiver of right of respondent County of Fairfax, Virginia, et al. to respond filed.
2026-01-16
Petition for a writ of certiorari filed. (Response due February 20, 2026)
2025-12-23
Application (25A504) granted by The Chief Justice extending the time to file until January 19, 2026.
2025-12-18
Application (25A504) to extend further the time from December 26, 2025 to January 24, 2026, submitted to The Chief Justice.
2025-11-05
Application (25A504) granted by The Chief Justice extending the time to file until December 26, 2025.
2025-10-30
Application (25A504) to extend the time to file a petition for a writ of certiorari from November 25, 2025 to December 26, 2025, submitted to The Chief Justice.

Attorneys

County of Fairfax, Virginia, et al.
Janet Rhiannon CarterEverytown Law, Respondent
Janet Rhiannon CarterEverytown Law, Respondent