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Judge extends hold on New York’s gun ban in houses of worship

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A federal judge extended an order blocking a part of New York’s new gun law that makes it a crime for people to carry firearms in places of worship.

U.S. District Judge John Sinatra Jr. sided with two Buffalo-area clerics and gun rights organizations who had sued and sought a hold on enforcement of the law until the judge decides the case on it merits.

The preliminary injunction issued late Thursday extends a temporary hold Sinatra ordered last month.

“(T)he nation’s history does not countenance such an incursion into the right to keep and bear arms across all places of worship across the state,” Sinatra wrote.

New York lawmakers rewrote the state’s gun laws this summer after the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated the state’s old system of granting permits to carry handguns outside the home. Among the provisions of the new law was a ban on guns in places of worship and other locations deemed “sensitive.”

New York faces multiple federal challenges to its new gun law.

In a separate lawsuit, the state is appealing a federal judge’s order to put a hold on several of the state’s new licensing rules for carrying handguns in public. That judge’s order is being stayed on appeal.