• Supreme Court blocks Mexico's lawsuit against US gun makers over cartel

    From P. Coonan@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jun 6 00:41:48 2025
    XPost: law.court.federal, alt.mexico, alt.business
    XPost: sac.politics, talk.politics.misc

    The Supreme Court ruled unanimously Thursday in favor of U.S. gun
    manufacturers and blocked a liability lawsuit brought by the government of Mexico, which sought to hold the companies accountable for the trafficking
    of their weapons south of the border to fuel violence by the cartels.

    The government argued in its historic lawsuit that American firearms manufacturers, including Smith & Wesson, Glock, Beretta and Colt, were
    "aiding and abetting" the illicit flow of weapons across the border.

    Mexico sought $10 billion in damages, court-mandated safety mechanisms and sales restrictions for U.S.-made guns.

    Justice Elena Kagan said in her opinion that federal law grants broad
    immunity to U.S. gun companies and unquestionably protects them from
    Mexico's claims.

    "Mexico alleges that the companies aided and abetted unlawful sales
    routing guns to Mexican drug cartels. The question presented is whether Mexico's complaint plausibly pleads that conduct. We conclude it does
    not," Kagan wrote.

    The Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act of 2005 bars lawsuits
    against any gun manufacturer over the illegal acts of a person using one
    of a manufacturer's guns. But it does create an exception for claims
    involving a gun company's alleged knowing violation of rules governing the
    sale and marketing of firearms.

    Mexico argues that its lawsuit fell under the exception and was seeking
    $10 billion in damages and court-mandated safety mechanisms and sales restrictions for U.S.-made guns.

    "Mexico has not met that bar," Kagan wrote for the court. "Its complaint
    does not plausibly allege the kind of 'conscious . . . and culpable participation in another's wrongdoing' needed to make out an aiding-and- abetting charge."

    "When a company merely knows that some bad actors are taking advantage of
    its products for criminal purposes, it does not aid and abet. And that is
    so even if the company could adopt measures to reduce their users'
    downstream crimes," Kagan concluded.

    The decision is the first time the high court has weighed in on the
    sweeping gunmaker immunity that Congress enacted aimed at protecting the industry.

    Mexico has only one gun store, but is awash in millions of American-made weapons, most funneled into the country by straw purchasers in the U.S. By
    one estimate, at least 200,000 guns flow south of the border each year.

    "Today's decision will end Mexico's lawsuit against the gun industry, but
    it does not affect our ability and resolve to hold those who break the law accountable," said David Pucino, the legal director and deputy chief
    counsel at GIFFORDS Law Center. "All survivors, in the United States, in Mexico, and anywhere else, deserve their day in court, and we will
    continue to support them in their fight for justice."

    Pablo Arrocha Olabuenaga, the legal adviser for Mexico's Foreign Ministry,
    said that they are "disappointed" with the Supreme Court's decision.

    "The Mexican Government will continue to do everything in its power to
    protect Mexicans and to stop the crime gun pipeline," Olabuenaga said in a statement.

    Jonathan Lowey, president of Global Action on Gun Violence and backer of
    the Mexico case, said the decision is "the clearest evidence yet that the
    gun industry's special interest get-out-court-free card must be revoked."

    "The Court made clear that the door to accountability for the gun industry
    is not shut, and we look forward to working with Mexico further to stop
    the crime gun pipeline that makes Mexicans and Americans less safe," Lowey
    said in a statement.

    https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/supreme-court-blocks-lawsuit-gun- manufacturer-filed-mexican/story?id=120902600

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