When the U.S. Supreme Court docket dominated unanimously Thursday to toss out Mexico’s lawsuit towards Smith & Wesson and different American gun makers, it handed a “vital and extreme setback” to the gun prohibition foyer, which had been “supporting and rooting for Mexico.”
(See the associated report from AmmoLand correspondent John Crump.)
That was the evaluation from Alan Gottlieb, chairman of the Residents Committee for the Proper to Maintain and Bear Arms (CCRKBA), and he had numerous firm.
Montana Legal professional Common Austin Knudsen, who led an amicus temporary in help of the firearms producers in December, issued a press release declaring, “It is a win for gun producers and gun house owners throughout the nation.
“The Safety of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act makes it clear,” Knudsen stated. “American firearms producers shouldn’t and do not need to reply for the actions of criminals. At present, the Supreme Court docket unanimously agreed. Mexico’s harmful gun insurance policies are accountable for their very own gun violence disaster, not American gun producers following the legislation.”
Lawrence G. Keane, senior vice chairman and normal counsel for the Nationwide Capturing Sports activities Basis, referred to as it a “large victory for the firearm business and the rule of legislation.”
“For too lengthy, gun management activists have tried to twist fundamental tort legislation to malign the highly-regulated U.S. firearm business with the legal actions of violent organized crime, each right here in the USA and overseas,” Keane stated in a ready assertion. “The firearm business is sympathetic to plight of these in Mexico who’re victims of rampant and uncontrolled violence by the hands of narco-terrorist drug cartels. The firearm business works carefully with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) to stop the unlawful straw buying of firearms and the unlawful transnational smuggling of firearms. This unequivocal resolution by the Supreme Court docket that PLCAA applies and there’s no proof in anyway that U.S. producers are in any manner accountable is verification of dedication to accountable firearm possession.”
Adam Kraut, govt director of the Second Modification Basis, and a practising lawyer, put it bluntly: “The last word aim of this lawsuit was easy – bankrupt the firearms business, on the final peril of the American individuals. Fortunately, the Supreme Court docket noticed by way of this thinly veiled try and wield the authorized system as a cudgel towards lawful commerce.”
The 15-page opinion, authored by liberal Justice Elena Kagan, was diplomatically brutal.
“Mexico’s grievance doesn’t plausibly allege that the defendant producers aided and abetted gun sellers’ illegal gross sales of firearms to Mexican traffickers,” Kagan wrote.
However maybe much more devastating to the Mexican case, and the U.S.-based gun prohibition teams which supported it and had been hoping for a victory, got here from Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, one other of the courtroom’s liberals, in a concurring opinion.
“I write individually,” Jackson acknowledged, “to elucidate that, for my part, the grievance’s core flaw is its failure to allege any nonconclusory statutory violations within the first place. Tellingly, that failure exposes Mexico’s lawsuit as exactly what Congress handed PLCAA to stop. PLCAA was Congress’s response to a flood of civil lawsuits that sought to carry the firearms business chargeable for downstream lawbreaking by third events. Activists had deployed litigation in an effort to compel firearms producers and related entities to undertake security measures and practices that exceeded what state or federal statutes required.”
NBC Information famous that the lawsuit, initially filed in 2021, accused S&W, Colt and different gun firms of “intentionally promoting weapons to sellers who promote merchandise which might be incessantly recovered at Mexican crime scenes.” It’s basically the identical argument anti-gunners have been making for a number of years because the first municipal lawsuits towards the gun business began cropping up greater than twenty years in the past. These authorized actions, which price the business hundreds of thousands of {dollars} to battle, had been the catalyst for passage of the PLCAA, which the Biden -Harris administration had vowed to repeal, however Congress wouldn’t move a invoice. Anti-gunners need PLCAA gone to allow them to renew their efforts to bankrupt the firearms business.
Thursday’s ruling may additionally be one thing of a rebuff of lawyer Jonathan Lowy, founder and president of International Motion on Gun Violence and particular litigation advisor to Everytown Regulation, an adjunct to anti-gun billionaire Michael Bloomberg’s Everytown for Gun Security. In accordance with CBS Information, Lowy had been requested by Mexico “to assist devise its technique to chop off the gun pipeline.”
As CCRKBA’s Gottlieb summed it up, “We all know the gun ban bunch has been attempting for years to cease gun gross sales and erase the Second Modification, both by way of passage of extremist gun management laws or by bankrupting the firearms business. As soon as once more, individuals who would blame firearms producers and law-abiding Americans for crimes they didn’t commit, have failed. Nevertheless, the larger failure right here is within the Mexican authorities’s incapacity to convey their very own criminals to justice. Earlier than attacking our home, Mexico must get their very own home so as.”
The case has been reversed and remanded again to the first U.S. District Court docket of Appeals in Boston, which had revived the lawsuit final 12 months after a trial decide initially threw it out.
Supreme Court docket Rejects Mexico’s Lawsuit In opposition to Smith & Wesson
About Dave Workman
Dave Workman is a senior editor at TheGunMag.com and Liberty Park Press, creator of a number of books on the Proper to Maintain & Bear Arms, and previously an NRA-certified firearms teacher.




















