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Supreme Court throws out Mexico's suit against US gun makers in a unanimous decision

Supreme Court throws out Mexico's suit against US gun makers in a unanimous decision

Mexico has a severe problem with gun violence, which originates north of the border, the Supreme Court acknowledged Thursday.
'The country has only a single gun store, and issues fewer than 50 gun permits each year. But gun traffickers can purchase firearms in the United States—often in illegal transactions—and deliver them to drug cartels in Mexico,' the court said. These weapons are used to 'commit serious crimes — drug dealing, kidnapping, murder, and others.'
Nonetheless, the justices in an unanimous decision threw out Mexico's lawsuit against the U.S. gun industry, ruling that federal law shields gun makers from nearly all liability.
Justice Elena Kagan said Congress enacted the law in 2005 to prevent gun companies from being held sued for harms 'caused by the misuse of firearms by third parties, including criminals,' she said.
The law has one narrow exception, she said, that would allow suits if the gun companies had knowingly and deliberately helped criminals buy guns to be sent into Mexico.
But she said the Mexico's lawsuit did not cite evidence for claim.
'Mexico's complaint does not plausibly allege that the defendant manufacturers aided and abetted gun dealers' unlawful sales of firearms to Mexican traffickers,' she wrote. 'We have little doubt that, as the complaint asserts, some such sales take place.— and that the manufacturers know they do. But still, Mexico has not adequately pleaded what it needs to: that the manufacturers 'participate in' those sales 'as in something that [they] wish[] to bring about.'
___
© 2025 Los Angeles Times.
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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Here's what to know about American Samoans in Alaska who are being prosecuted after trying to vote
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Here's what to know about American Samoans in Alaska who are being prosecuted after trying to vote

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Whether you find Mountainhead successful satire may depend on your priors. However, in the wake of DOGE, Elon's takeover and remaking of Twitter and the enthusiasm with which our major AI companies are cheerleading a new cold war with China, it's hardly a work of speculative fiction. In Jon Stewart's farewell speech from the Daily Show in 2015, he claimed that the bullshitters were getting lazy and that vigilance was our best defense. But his framing assumed a continued dichotomy between the bullshitters and the bullshited. He didn't offer any advice on what to do when there's no longer a difference. — Derick Dirmaier

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