Criminal defense and civil rights lawyers should be thinking about this question, especially in state courts:
If possessing firearms is a constitutional right, then when, exactly, can the police stop and frisk people based on the suspicion that they possess firearms?
Matthew Segal
After Bruen established 2nd Amendment limits on criminal laws on gun possession, police observing a person in possession of a gun do not automatically have reasonable suspicion to stop them for illegal gun possession, Appellate Court of Maryland rules.
mdcourts.gov/data/opinion...