Supreme Court weighs state limits on carrying guns on private property

Supreme Court weighs state limits on carrying guns on private property
Supreme Court weighs state limits on carrying guns on private property
The Supreme Court of the United States SCOTUS in Washington D.C. (Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) — Three years after affirming a constitutional right of Americans to carry a gun for self-defense, the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday will consider whether states can limit the carry of firearms on private property open to the public without first receiving the property owner’s consent.

The case involves a Hawaiian law and similar measures in four other states –- California, Maryland, New York and New Jersey –- where lawmakers set a strict “default rule” prohibiting the possession of handguns in privately-owned places where other members of the public might congregate, unless the owner affirmatively gives permission.

The laws govern locations such as stores, shopping malls, bars, restaurants, theaters, arenas, farms, and private beaches. It does not involve public property, which is subject to different rules.

“This law is extremely restrictive. It bans public carry in 96.4% of the publicly available land in the County of Maui,” said Alan Beck, an attorney for three Maui residents and members of the Hawaii Firearms Coalition who are challenging the law.

“They’d like to carry dropping off money at the ATM late at night or just going to have lunch at a restaurant,” Beck said. “They are unable to carry in any private business that is open to the public that is unwilling to put up a sign saying ‘guns allowed.'”

While property owners have the inherent right to exclude guns from their premises, Beck says the onus should be on them to make their wishes clear, otherwise expect that members of the public can freely exercise their Second Amendment rights as a matter of standard practice.

Unlike Hawaii, 45 states permit licensed handgun owners to presume they can legally carry their weapons onto private property open to the public, unless the owner explicitly bans guns by issuing verbal instructions or posting a sign.

“The express purpose of this law is to make it so that less people exercise their constitutional rights,” Beck said.

Hawaii officials argue in court documents that never in the nation’s history has there been a “right to armed entry onto private property without consent” and that its law is meant to protect a property-owner’s right to exclude guns without having to take extra steps.

“The basic principle is that private property owners are empowered to set the rules for their property, and the state can make it easier for private property owners to do so,” said Douglas Letter, chief legal officer at Brady, a gun safety group.

“Hawaii’s law is obviously eminently reasonable,” Letter added. “Visitors simply must get a private property owner’s permission to bring a firearm onto that property.”

The Supreme Court will evaluate the Hawaii law using a test laid out in a landmark 2022 decision in which Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the conservative majority, said only gun regulations consistent with “the Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation” can stand.

Hawaii points to an 1865 Louisiana law and 1771 New Jersey law as imposing nearly identical property restrictions as its current measure. The plaintiffs say they are “outlier” examples and not the historic norm. The Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals upheld Hawaii’s law, holding that “a national tradition likely exists of prohibiting the carrying of firearms on private property without the owner’s oral or written consent.”

Beck and co-counsel Kevin O’Grady said they expect the justices will likely reverse that ruling in their favor. “Just because Hawaii is giving lip service to the Second Amendment when they’re doing the kind of things they’re doing — and doing these mental gymnastics to try to justify this law,” O’Grady said, “it will not be tolerated by the U.S. Supreme Court.”

A decision in the case is expected by the end of June.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Supreme Court weighs state limits on carrying guns on private property

Supreme Court weighs state limits on carrying guns on private property
Supreme Court weighs state limits on carrying guns on private property
The Supreme Court of the United States SCOTUS in Washington D.C. (Nicolas Economou/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) — Three years after affirming a constitutional right of Americans to carry a gun for self-defense, the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday will consider whether states can limit the carry of firearms on private property open to the public without first receiving the property owner’s consent.

The case involves a Hawaiian law and similar measures in four other states –- California, Maryland, New York and New Jersey –- where lawmakers set a strict “default rule” prohibiting the possession of handguns in privately-owned places where other members of the public might congregate, unless the owner affirmatively gives permission.

The laws govern locations such as stores, shopping malls, bars, restaurants, theaters, arenas, farms, and private beaches. It does not involve public property, which is subject to different rules.

“This law is extremely restrictive. It bans public carry in 96.4% of the publicly available land in the County of Maui,” said Alan Beck, an attorney for three Maui residents and members of the Hawaii Firearms Coalition who are challenging the law.

“They’d like to carry dropping off money at the ATM late at night or just going to have lunch at a restaurant,” Beck said. “They are unable to carry in any private business that is open to the public that is unwilling to put up a sign saying ‘guns allowed.'”

While property owners have the inherent right to exclude guns from their premises, Beck says the onus should be on them to make their wishes clear, otherwise expect that members of the public can freely exercise their Second Amendment rights as a matter of standard practice.

Unlike Hawaii, 45 states permit licensed handgun owners to presume they can legally carry their weapons onto private property open to the public, unless the owner explicitly bans guns by issuing verbal instructions or posting a sign.

“The express purpose of this law is to make it so that less people exercise their constitutional rights,” Beck said.

Hawaii officials argue in court documents that never in the nation’s history has there been a “right to armed entry onto private property without consent” and that its law is meant to protect a property-owner’s right to exclude guns without having to take extra steps.

“The basic principle is that private property owners are empowered to set the rules for their property, and the state can make it easier for private property owners to do so,” said Douglas Letter, chief legal officer at Brady, a gun safety group.

“Hawaii’s law is obviously eminently reasonable,” Letter added. “Visitors simply must get a private property owner’s permission to bring a firearm onto that property.”

The Supreme Court will evaluate the Hawaii law using a test laid out in a landmark 2022 decision in which Justice Clarence Thomas, writing for the conservative majority, said only gun regulations consistent with “the Nation’s historical tradition of firearm regulation” can stand.

Hawaii points to an 1865 Louisiana law and 1771 New Jersey law as imposing nearly identical property restrictions as its current measure. The plaintiffs say they are “outlier” examples and not the historic norm. The Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals upheld Hawaii’s law, holding that “a national tradition likely exists of prohibiting the carrying of firearms on private property without the owner’s oral or written consent.”

Beck and co-counsel Kevin O’Grady said they expect the justices will likely reverse that ruling in their favor. “Just because Hawaii is giving lip service to the Second Amendment when they’re doing the kind of things they’re doing — and doing these mental gymnastics to try to justify this law,” O’Grady said, “it will not be tolerated by the U.S. Supreme Court.”

A decision in the case is expected by the end of June.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

EU leaders talk coordination over Greenland as Trump readies for Davos meetings

EU leaders talk coordination over Greenland as Trump readies for Davos meetings
EU leaders talk coordination over Greenland as Trump readies for Davos meetings
NATO headquarters in Haren, Brussels, Belgium. (Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

(LONDON) — The escalating showdown between the U.S. and its NATO allies over the fate of Greenland looks set to be a dominant topic of conversation as leaders gather at this week’s World Economic Forum event in Davos, with U.S. President Donald Trump again declaring on Monday that American ownership of the Arctic island is “imperative.”

Trump said in a post to social media that, following a phone call with NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, “I agreed to a meeting of the various parties in Davos, Switzerland. As I expressed to everyone, very plainly, Greenland is imperative for National and World Security. There can be no going back — On that, everyone agrees!”

Greenland is a self-governing territory of the Kingdom of Denmark. Trump first raised the prospect of acquiring the minerals-rich island in his first term. Danish and Greenlandic politicians have repeatedly rebuffed such proposals.

European leaders, meanwhile, continued to push back on Trump’s ambitions and publicize their coordination efforts on the issue.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a post to X that she met with a bipartisan congressional delegation to discuss both Russia’s war in Ukraine and recent tensions around Greenland.

Von der Leyen said she “addressed the need to unequivocally respect the sovereignty of Greenland and of the Kingdom of Denmark. This is of utmost importance to our transatlantic relationship.”

The European Union, she said, “remains ready to continue working closely with the United States, NATO, and other allies, in close cooperation with Denmark, to advance our shared security interests.”

“We also discussed transatlantic trade and investment. They are a major asset for both the EU and US economies. Tariffs run counter to these shared interests,” von der Leyen wrote.

Danish and Greenlandic ministers traveled on Monday to Brussels to meet with NATO chief Rutte.

Danish Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen said afterward that the Greenland issue poses challenges “fundamentally to Europe and, for that matter, also the future of NATO.” Poulsen said Rutte is “very aware of the difficult situation.”

Greenlandic Foreign Minister Vivian Motzfeldt said the meeting “achieved some important things with regard to security in the Arctic.” She added, “It is important to know how to work with security in the Arctic. That is why we are now carrying out various exercises.”

Denmark’s Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen, meanwhile, was in the U.K. on Monday to meet with his counterpart in London. “In turbulent times, close allies are crucial — Denmark and the UK stand close together,” Rasmussen wrote on X. “We agree on the need for stronger NATO engagement in the Arctic and closer security cooperation.”

Trump has suggested that U.S. sovereignty over Greenland is necessary to ensure American security and blunt Chinese and Russian influence in the Arctic region. A 1951 defense agreement already grants the U.S. military access to Greenland, but Trump has suggested the deal is inadequate.

Denmark and its European allies have sought to ease concerns about the supposed vulnerability of the Arctic through more military spending and by sending small contingents of troops to Greenland last week.

But Trump interpreted the deployments as a provocation, and announced new 10% tariffs on all goods from the eight nations — Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the U.K., the Netherlands and Finland — that sent troops.

European leaders hit back at Trump’s decision and said the move threatened a new transatlantic trade war.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

The outlook that guides Jordan Davis & Thomas Rhett when it comes to career & family

The outlook that guides Jordan Davis & Thomas Rhett when it comes to career & family
The outlook that guides Jordan Davis & Thomas Rhett when it comes to career & family
Thomas Rhett & Jordan Davis’ “Ain’t a Bad Life” (Big Machine)

Jordan Davis has joked that his “Ain’t a Bad Life” collaborator Thomas Rhett is also his therapist. 

“We try to go get breakfast whenever we can,” he reveals. “So it’s a good way for us to kinda not talk about music, just talk about life, talk about family. It’s been a cool friendship.”

Seriously, Jordan says Thomas has helped him balance the demands of a music career and a large family with lots of little kids. 

“I think the best thing with TR is he’s kind of been where I’m at with the family,” Jordan tells ABC Audio. “You know, [when] things are rocking and rolling, you want to play shows and you want to kinda feed the business side of it. And sometimes when you do that — you know, you can’t have both of them. One of ’em’s gotta rise, the other one’s gotta sink.”

“And Thomas is always a good one in that he always reminds me, like, ‘Man, hey, first and foremost, we’re dads and husbands. And then after that, we write songs and we go out and we sing them.’ He’s always the guy that can kind of bring me back to level ground on that,” he says.  

Jordan has four kids, ages 6 and under, while TR has four that are 10 and under, with another on the way. 

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Jermelle Simon says role in ‘The Upshaws’ gave him the courage to come out

Jermelle Simon says role in ‘The Upshaws’ gave him the courage to come out
Jermelle Simon says role in ‘The Upshaws’ gave him the courage to come out
Jermelle Simon attends the 2025 Out100 Celebration at Nya Studios on November 21, 2025, in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Out.com)

Jermelle Simon says playing a closeted character on The Upshaws helped to shape his career and ultimately changed his life.

Jermelle, who stars as Bernard in the Netflix show, said he was drawn to character because Bernard was closeted and struggling with his sexuality, something he was experiencing at the time.

“They just told me that he was closeted, he was fighting his sexuality, and so was I at the time. I felt very connected to it, but very afraid of it,” he told The Hollywood Reporter. “I cried in my car because I [knew] this was going to be a thing that pushes me.”

He said the first three years of portraying Bernard forced him to face some of his real-life fears, including saying things like “I’m gay” or “I like a man.”

As Bernard’s storyline expanded and he eventually came out, Jermelle told THR it challenged him to grow.

“Year after year, Bernard just kept growing,” he explained. “It felt like in the beginning we were on the same playing field. We were both struggling. And then he came out, and I’m like, ‘Bro, whoa, whoa, I’m not [ready], hold on,’ and he just kept going.”

“Parts of me felt like I had to catch up with Bernard’s expansion because Bernard is also me,” he continued. “I can’t do him justice if I’m not free myself because he deserves to be able to express himself.”

Jermelle came out on National Coming Out Day in 2024 —  a moment he described as liberating.

He said, “That was the first moment where I realized, this is really freeing, and there’s no limit to how far I can go.”

Jermelle married content creator Obio Jones in October.

The Upshaws’ final season is available on Netflix.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

The Pretty Reckless selling personal gear with newly launched Reverb shop

The Pretty Reckless selling personal gear with newly launched Reverb shop
The Pretty Reckless selling personal gear with newly launched Reverb shop
The Pretty Reckless on ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’ (Disney/Randy Holmes)

The Pretty Reckless has launched their own shop on Reverb, the online gear marketplace.

Available items include various guitars and amps personally used by Taylor Momsen and company.

“Every item sold is something that was either used in the studio or live by members of the band and comes with a certificate of authenticity signed by Taylor herself,” reads a post to the Pretty Reckless Facebook. “These instruments are hard to part with but it’s time to put them in some new hands to enjoy.”

The band adds, “We will be adding more items often so keep checking back to see what new goodies we’ve put up.”

Visit Reverb.com for more info.

Meanwhile, The Pretty Reckless has been working on more new music to follow their last album, 2021’s Death By Rock and Roll. They put out a new single, “For I Am Death,” in 2025, along with a holiday EP, Taylor Momsen’s Pretty Reckless Christmas.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Rock out with rowdy moms on Jonah Kagen’s tour

Rock out with rowdy moms on Jonah Kagen’s tour
Rock out with rowdy moms on Jonah Kagen’s tour
Jonah Kagen performs at The Chapel on March 29, 2022 in San Francisco, California. (Steve Jennings/Getty Images)

Jonah Kagen will launch a U.S. tour Tuesday in Indianapolis in support of his new album, Sunflowers and Leather. The record follows Kagen’s breakout single, “God Needs the Devil,” which hit #1 on the Billboard Alternative Airplay chart in 2025.

As “God Needs the Devil” was making its chart ascent, Kagen tells ABC Audio he started to notice people getting more and more into the song in real time as he was playing shows.

“It’s been so, so weird,” Kagen says. “And it keeps happening, too, ’cause it’s still going.”

Kagen recalls being particularly struck while playing a show in Australia and seeing some 2,000 people all sing along to “God Needs the Devil.”

“It was like, ‘When did that happen? What are we talking about?'” Kagen says. “It feels like every show that I do there’s a new chunk of people that know it.”

Kagen’s also noticed a demographic change in his crowds since “God Needs the Devil” took off, particularly an increase in families coming to his shows.

“I was getting a lot of moms at the shows,” Kagen says. “Which, honestly, great. They’ve been very rowdy and wonderful.”

“Now they’re getting their kids into my music, and then their kids are like, ‘I already knew about him, god!'” he adds. “You know, they’re doing that whole thing.” 

Sunflowers and Leather is out now.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Billy Idol guitarist Steve Stevens reveals secret to Idol’s lasting appeal

Billy Idol guitarist Steve Stevens reveals secret to Idol’s lasting appeal
Billy Idol guitarist Steve Stevens reveals secret to Idol’s lasting appeal
Steve Stevens, Billy Idol and The Warning Rock Band with Alejandra Villarreal, Daniela Villarreal and Paulina Villarreal perform during the GRAMMY celebration of Latin Music on October 19, 2025 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by John Parra/Getty Images)

Billy Idol‘s longtime guitarist and collaborator Steve Stevens has worked with him since the early ’80s and has a good idea as to why Idol’s popularity has lasted as long as it has.

“I think it’s always been cool to like Billy Idol, and our records were never something you could pigeonhole,” he says in a new interview with Guitar World.

“I came from the rock side with guitar heroes like Jeff Beck and Jimi Hendrix, a little prog, some new wave and New York punk,” he says. “Then you have Billy with the punk-rock/Elvis thing, and our early producer Keith Forsey came from working with [Italian composer] Giorgio Moroder on dance records like Donna Summer. So, because we’ve always had this gumbo of different styles, we were never pigeonholed when it came to writing music.”

Stevens notes that while Idol’s biggest hits, like “Rebel Yell,” “White Wedding” and “Eyes Without a Face,” came in the ’80s, “Billy’s roots go back to 1977 London.”

“I think that’s served us really well. He’s got a timeless image and people appreciate that,” Stevens adds. “He’s a real-deal rock ’n’ roll star. Honestly, we sound better now than we did back then.”

Idol released his last album, Dream Into It, in 2025. A documentary on his life, Billy Idol Should Be Dead, directed by Jonas Åkerlund, was recently acquired by Evan Saxon Productions and is expected to have a theatrical release in early 2026.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Woody Harrelson wanted to punch Matthew McConaughey in the face for his ‘True Detective’ method acting

Woody Harrelson wanted to punch Matthew McConaughey in the face for his ‘True Detective’ method acting
Woody Harrelson wanted to punch Matthew McConaughey in the face for his ‘True Detective’ method acting
Woody Harrelson and Matthew McConaughey speak at the 66th annual Primetime Emmy Awards held at Nokia Theatre L.A. Live on Aug. 25, 2014, in Los Angeles, California. (Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

Woody Harrelson is sharing some of the frustrations he had for his True Detective co-star Matthew McConaughey while they were filming the critically acclaimed show.

McConaughey recently guested on Harrelson and Ted Danson‘s podcast Where Everybody Knows Your Name, where Harrelson said there were “so many times” that he wanted to “punch” McConaughey for his method acting in season 1 of True Detective.

“He’s method,” Harrelson said. “When we were shooting, he was Rust Cohle. There [were] so many times I wanted to punch this m*********** in the face. I’m so pissed at him cause he’s in his character.”

Harrelson and McConaughey played investigators hunting a serial killer in Louisiana on the show. McConaughey said on the podcast that he had to stay stoic between takes in order to stay in the headspace of his character.

“We’re sitting there. We’re about to start shooting, and we were rehearsing,” McConaughey said. “I’m just kind of being stoic Rust Cohle. Woody goes, like, ‘Hey man, I need to talk to you about something.’ He goes, ‘The way you and I work, McConaughey, I hit you the ball, you hit it back, I hit it back to you. We volley, we play. … Man, that’s us. It’s dramatic, and it’s also comedy.'”

Harrelson said he suggested the show was too dark and that they should add in some moments of levity.

“I remember saying to [McConaughey] before we started filming, I’m like, ‘Dude, people are gonna expect to laugh with us. We gotta throw some jokes in here.’ He’s just like, ‘Mhm.’ … I’m waiting for him to say, ‘Yeah, you’re totally’ — no, none of that. He just, ‘Mhm, yeah.’”

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Brooklyn Beckham says he does not want to reconcile with parents amid family drama

Brooklyn Beckham says he does not want to reconcile with parents amid family drama
Brooklyn Beckham says he does not want to reconcile with parents amid family drama
Brooklyn Peltz Beckham and Nicola Peltz Beckham attend Vogue World: Hollywood 2025 at Paramount Studios, Oct. 26, 2025, in Los Angeles. (Stefanie Keenan/Getty Images)

Brooklyn Beckham is opening up on his ongoing feud with his parents, saying he is not interested in reconciling with his family, including his world-famous parents, soccer star David Beckham and singer and designer Victoria Beckham.

Brooklyn Beckham came forward with a lengthy statement on social media on Monday detailing what he sees as instances that have driven a wedge between him and his family, primarily concerning his wife, Nicola Peltz, whom he married in 2022.

“I have been silent for years and made every effort to keep these matters private,” Beckham wrote. “Unfortunately, my parents and their team have continued to go to the press, leaving me with no choice but to speak for myself and tell the truth about only some of the lies that have been printed.”

He continued, “I do not want to reconcile with my family. I’m not being controlled, I’m standing up for myself for the first time in my life.”

Brooklyn Beckham claimed in his message that throughout his life, his parents have “controlled narratives in the press” and “place countless lies in the media, mostly at the expense of innocent people, to preserve their own facade.”

Beckham accused his parents of mistreatment and attempting to sabotage his relationship with Peltz, starting before the couple’s marriage.

Beckham cited several alleged examples of what he considers missteps from his family, including his mother opting out of making Peltz’s dress at the “eleventh hour,” pressuring him to sign away the rights to his name, and calling him “evil” based on a disagreement over wedding seating arrangements.

Beckham said it was after he “started standing up for myself” that he became the victim of “endless attacks from my parents, both privately and publicly, that were sent to the press on their orders.”

The 26-year-old also shared more alleged details about his wedding day, saying his mom “hijacked my first dance with my wife” and “danced very inappropriately on me in front of everyone.”

“I’ve never felt more uncomfortable or humiliated in my entire life. We wanted to renew our vows so we could create new memories of our wedding day that bring us joy and happiness, not anxiety and embarrassment,” Beckham said.

He also described an attempt to see his father in London, who he said would only see him at his birthday party. “When he finally agreed to see me, it was under the condition that Nicola wasn’t invited. It was a slap in the face. Later, when my family travelled to LA, they refused to see me at all.”

“My family values public promotion and endorsements above all else. Brand Beckham comes first. Family ‘love’ is decided by how much you post on social media, or how quickly you drop everything to show up and pose for a family photo opp, even if it’s at the expense of our professional obligations,” he wrote.

He finished by writing that he had been “controlled” by his parents and had grown up with anxiety.

“For the first time in my life, since stepping away from my family, that anxiety has disappeared,” he wrote.

ABC News has reached out to Brooklyn, Victoria and David Beckham, as well as Nicola Peltz.

Copyright © 2026, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.