Tag Archives: #TFA

Bill Lee and Jonathan Skrmetti’s Appellate Brief in Hughes v. Lee Reveals Disdain for Unanimous Trial Court Ruling

Bill Lee and Jonathan Skrmetti’s Appellate Brief in Hughes v. Lee Reveals Disdain for Unanimous Trial Court Ruling

On January 6, 2026, Bill Lee and Jonathan Skrmetti, in their respective official capacities, filed their brief with the Tennessee Court of Appeals in their appeal of the unanimous three-judge trial court ruling in Hughes et al. v. Lee, et al. The state’s brief shows the state cannot defend Tennessee’s gun-carry statutes as written.

Rather than engage the unanimous three-judge ruling, the state accuses the trial court panel of “ignoring precedent” (p. 43) and claims the court was “slaying a straw man” (pp. 39, 50). That rhetoric substitutes ridicule for constitutional analysis.

The state’s core argument appears to rely on an imaginary statute where it asserts that Tennessee’s “going armed” statute targets only “offensive” or “terrorizing” conduct (pp. 17–19, 44–52, 54). But Tennessee courts have long held that “intent to go armed” includes defensive readiness, that is the law expressly criminalizes ordinary self-defense carry. In essence, the state asks the appellate court to judge a statute that Tennessee never enacted.

The state’s brief also concedes that prosecutors “should hesitate” before applying the statute to peaceful self-defense carry (p. 13), while still insisting the law is constitutional. But, constitutional rights do not depend on prosecutorial restraint and unconstitutional laws cannot be salvaged by claiming that some prosecutors may refuse to enforce them.

Unable to meet its burden under Supreme Court precedent, the state also cherry-picks history and labels broad public spaces like parks and forests as “sensitive places” (pp. 44–52), a theory that would erase the right to bear arms almost everywhere in at least East Tennessee. Most tellingly, the state admits the guns-in-parks statute is “long overdue for a legislative tune-up” (p. 66). But, courts do not “tune up” unconstitutional laws; they invalidate them as the three-judge panel did.

Bottom line: The state’s own brief confirms the trial court was right. Tennessee’s gun-carry statutes criminalize ordinary self-defense and for that reason the trial court was right.

What can you do and, perhaps more importantly, what must Legislators do to honor their oaths of office?

What Legislators Must Do This Session?

  • Repeal the “going armed” statute and thereby remove the unconstitutional criminalization of ordinary self-defense carry.
  • Eliminate overbroad location bans that label vast public spaces as “sensitive places” with no historical basis.
  • Codify clear, constitutional standards to restrict and prohibit government officials from exercising any authority to stop, detain, question or even arrest citizens for exercising a fundamental, constitutionally protected right.

Your Action Matters — Right Now

  • Call your State Senator and Representative and demand immediate repeals and reforms of state law. If you do not know who your legislators are you can use the Legislature’s “find my legislator” tool.
  • Ask candidates where they stand on repealing unconstitutional carry restrictions. Get specific responses to the “intent to go armed” statute, the parks statute and other statutes that create gun-free zones. It is critical to document these promises in writing and/or with video recordings.
  • Tell Legislative Leadership including Speaker Cameron Sexton and Lt. Governor Randy McNally to stop defending broken laws and start fixing them.
  • Tell Bill Lee and Jonathan Skrmetti to drop the appeal. Each of them took an oath of office to defend your constitutional rights so why are they openly attacking them.
  • Make sure Tennessee’s next governor is someone who has a history of and will commit in writing as a candidate to specific actions that they will take to repeal the intent to go armed law, the parks statute and all other statutes that even minimally impair the rights protected by the Second Amendment. If a candidate cannot affirmatively commit to protect your constitutional rights they are simply unfit for office.


Remember – this is an election year. Legislators and candidates must choose: Defend the Constitution—or defend laws everyone knows are broken.

Legislative Update – January 28, 2022 new bills filed

A number of new bills have been filed this week. The ones we have identified so far for tracking are attached in the PDF that is available below. This is a quick summary of some but not all of the bills in the report. Also, we believe some of the bills may be “caption bills”…

TFA’s analysis of Governor Bill Lee’s permitless carry law – and why to avoid it

The Tennessee Firearms Association recommends that people get or keep the Tennessee enhanced handgun permit rather than relying on the Governor’s new permitless carry bill that goes into effect on July 1, 2021. Here are the details underlying that advice. On February 27, 2020, Governor Bill Lee took the podium at the Tennessee capitol and…

Tennessee House passes Governor’s crime package including permitless carry exception but rejects pro Second Amendment efforts to improve bill

On March 29, 2021, the Tennessee House took up House Bill 786 which is the Governor’s crime package.  The bill includes a permitless carry exception for some individuals.  It also imposed new conditions on your rights which are not part of existing law.  The bill passed the House largely on party lines.  It had previously…

Legislative Report and Calendar – March 19, 2021 – call to action to support REAL constitutional carry

The Legislature is moving rapidly with a variety of bills. The bill status report through March 19 and the report for bills calendared to be heard starting March 22 are included below. In the bill status and calendar reports, several specific bills are highlighted. Most of these should receive calls of support or opposition. There…

Legislative Update and Calendar – February 26, 2021

The Tennessee Legislature has started working this week on many 2nd Amendment related bills including several that address constitutional carry or permitless carry. The weekly bill activity report is posted below. A few specific bills to watch: SB227 and HB103, as filed, would require firearms safety instruction in public schools. This can be a good…

Tennessee Sheriffs’ Association exposed as anti-2nd Amendment

Tennessee is not a constitutional carry state. Tennessee Firearms Association has been trying to change that for more than a decade. Constitutional Carry, in its simplest form, means that any person who can legally possess a firearm can carry that firearm and that gun free zones are eliminated. That terminology is based on the Second…

Tennessee should not aspire to be a “Sanctuary State”

You likely keep hearing the phrase that Tennessee should become a “sanctuary state” particularly now that Biden-Harris are President and the Democrats control Congress.  There is a strong argument that Tennessee should not aspire to be a “sanctuary state” but that it should have higher aspirations and purposes. First, the 2nd Amendment and 10th Amendment…

New Bill and Calendar Reports for February 12, 2021

The Tennessee Legislature has clearly been working to address 2nd Amendment issues this year. Many Tennessee Legislators are focused on these issues because they are hearing from their constituents that their constituents have these issues are priorities on their minds – particularly with the federal government now under the control of the Biden-Harris administration and…