The U.S. Supreme Court declined Wednesday to issue an injunction against Illinois鈥 assault-weapons ban, meaning it will now likely remain in effect while the federal appeals court in Chicago takes time to hear further arguments against it.
The court declined to enter an injunction sought by Robert Bevis, a Naperville gunshop owner, and the National Association for Gun Rights, who are among those seeking to block the law. They sought similar rulings from in Chicago and from the .
They turned to Justice Amy Coney Barrett after being denied in both courts. On Wednesday, Barrett referred the matter to the full court, which denied the petition.
Though enforcement of the assault-weapons ban was , the 7th Circuit and allowed enforcement of the ban to continue. It has since consolidated challenges to the law and .
It ruled that its order allowing enforcement to continue 鈥渨ill remain in effect until these appeals have been resolved.鈥
Opponents have pointed to a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last summer that found gun regulations must be 鈥渃onsistent with the nation鈥檚 historical tradition of firearm regulation.鈥
Illinois鈥 law bans the sale of assault weapons and caps the purchase of magazines at 10 rounds for long guns and 15 for handguns. It also makes rapid-fire devices known as switches illegal because they turn firearms into fully automatic weapons.
Under the law, anyone who already owns the banned guns is allowed to keep them but required to register them with the Illinois State Police by Jan. 1.
The law was enacted in January in response to the mass shooting at Highland Park鈥檚 Fourth of July parade that left seven people dead.