Mexico Aims To Reshape the U.S. Firearm Industry by Suing Gun Makers
The Supreme Court will decide whether this threat to the Second Amendment is legally viable.

President Donald Trump, who imposed punitive tariffs on Mexico this week, complains that our southern neighbor is not doing enough to stop illegal drugs from crossing the border. Mexico has a similar complaint about the United States, as reflected in a case the Supreme Court heard the same day the tariffs took effect.
Officially, the Mexican government sued American gun manufacturers, blaming them for "aiding and abetting" the trafficking of firearms to drug cartels. But its real beef is with the Second Amendment, which prohibits the sort of sweeping gun restrictions that Mexican officials think public safety requires.
Although the Mexican Constitution notionally protects "the right to keep arms at home," it gives the government wide latitude to decide which firearms civilians may own. Mexicans can legally buy authorized weapons from only a single outlet in Mexico City, all firearms must be registered with the government, and permission to carry guns in public for self-defense is nearly impossible to obtain.
In the United States, by contrast, the Constitution guarantees "the right of the people to keep and bear arms," which the Supreme Court has said rules out policies such as banning handguns or requiring that people demonstrate a "special need" to carry them outside the home. The Court also has said the Second Amendment covers weapons "in common use" for "lawful purposes like self-defense."
Smith & Wesson, one of the gun makers sued by the Mexican government, says that contrast is the subtext of this case. The lawsuit, it notes, seeks not only $10 billion in damages but also "extensive injunctive relief imposing new gun-control measures in the United States," including "universal background checks," bans on "assault weapons" and magazines that hold more than 10 rounds, and "strict limits on 'multiple sales' of firearms."
Mexico "makes no secret that it abhors this country's approach to firearms," Smith & Wesson says. "In essence, Mexico seeks to use Mexican tort laws to regulate how firearms are made and sold in the United States."
The main barrier to that strategy is a 2005 federal law that generally bars tort claims against gun manufacturers, distributors, or dealers based on "the criminal or unlawful misuse" of their products. Last year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit nevertheless allowed Mexico's lawsuit to proceed based on an exception to that rule.
The exception applies when a business "knowingly" violates a state or federal gun law and that violation "was a proximate cause of the harm for which relief is sought." Yet Mexico does not allege that gun manufacturers failed to comply with any relevant state or federal regulations.
Instead, Mexico objects to longstanding, perfectly legal business practices that it says have encouraged and enabled drug cartels to obtain American-made firearms. Those practices, Smith & Wesson notes, include manufacturing and promoting "America's most popular rifle, the AR-15"; producing "large-capacity" magazines, "which are in fact standard-capacity magazines"; and participating in the federally authorized three-tier gun distribution system, in which manufacturers sell firearms to wholesalers that supply them to retailers.
According to the lawsuit, manufacturers should have foreseen that some portion of those guns—about 2 percent, Smith & Wesson estimates—would end up in Mexico, and they should have done more to prevent that outcome. That theory of liability, Smith & Wesson says, amounts to "an eight-step Rube Goldberg" contraption that stretches the meaning of "proximate cause" and "aiding and abetting" beyond recognition.
Mexico maintains that U.S. gun manufacturers have been openly and knowingly breaking the law for decades. If so, it is a mystery why no law enforcement agency has ever held them to account.
This lawsuit aims to reshape the U.S. gun industry directly, through a court order forbidding the practices that offend Mexico. It also aims to do so indirectly by reviving a liability threat that Congress rightly recognized as a danger to the constitutional rights that firearm manufacturers enable Americans to exercise.
© Copyright 2025 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Considering we were invaded by Mexican bandits a little more than a 100 years ago, it seems like Mexico should not have a say in US citizens defending themselves.
Then again, Trump apparently expects Ukrainians to stop defending themselves from Russians and just let themselves get raped, tortured, and murdered
They are perfectly welcome to defend themselves.
I don’t want to pay for it.
That seems to be lost on all of the Ukraine Flag profile pic holders.
They’re all retarded.
Then again, Trump apparently expects Ukrainians to stop defending themselves from Russians and just let themselves get raped, tortured, and murdered
Britain has vowed to fight Russia down to the last Ukrainian.
'A sacrifice I am willing to make.'
The same with Israel. They vowed to fight their enemies to the last American soldier.
Say what Goyim?
Israel has never said anything remotely like that. They have always said that they will defend themselves and are quite willing to buy the arms to do it unlike Zelinskyy who wants endless free money and gear. What weird type of anti semite are you to make up something easily debunked.
What weird type of anti semite are you to make up something easily debunked.
I've never met any of the alleged Neo-Nazis from the Azov Division, but if I had, the juxtaposition of Israel's obviously inferior and morally unjustified ability to defend its own national sovereignty relative to their own obviously superior and morally justified (in)ability to defend theirs is exactly the "two half-lies and a half-truth" juxtaposition I would expect them to make.
Trump has not said they may not defend themselves.
He has commented on us not funding it in perpetuity.
Feel free to go to the Ukraine front lines
Funny how these internet warriors never volunteer, but are more than happy to send my sons and my money to defend a real dictator cuz CNN said so.
Chickenhawks never change.
It's easy to support war when your kids are not fighting it.
"Considering we were invaded by Mexican bandits a little more than a 100 years ago..."
I know it feels like it's been that long, but Biden was actually still president a couple of months ago. Maybe you meant 100 days ago.
Trump doesn't expect Ukrainians to do any such thing. They are perfectly free to keep fighting.
We're just not paying for it anymore.
Now, *you*? Pick up a rifle of GTFO.
Mexico "makes no secret that it abhors this country's approach to firearms," Smith & Wesson says. "In essence, Mexico seeks to use Mexican tort laws to regulate how firearms are made and sold in the United States."
The main barrier to that strategy is a 2005 federal law that generally bars tort claims against gun manufacturers, distributors, or dealers based on "the criminal or unlawful misuse" of their products.
Really? This is the "main barrier"? The "main barrier" to a foreign nation who's sending millions of its citizens into our country illegally suing American companies is a law which Congress stumbled backwards into passing in 2005?
Really.
This is the kind of sharp-eyed legal analysis that makes me realize that maybe I should have become a lawyer.
But ok, a 2005 law is the "main barrier". Thank God for the Bush Era federal government, I guess.
Does suing an entire industry on "their" "own" side of the imaginary social construct count as a tariff or a tax?
I'm convinced the one thing allowing them to sue will be that pesky Jones Act.
So, for lots of years now I have seen images of the guns seized from drug lords paraded after some brave government decides to prove he's fighting the cartel.
Almost invariably they are NOT the sort of shit you buy off the shelf at a gun store in Texas or Arizona. Everything from machine guns to fully automatic military-grade rifles to ... like gold plated kalashnikov's and uzis and shit.
The crazy bling bling is... well, it's not normal factory made at Smith and Wesson to distribute at a wal mart in Muskogee, I'm betting.
The others very obviously walked off of Mexican military bases and out of Mexican police stations. My whole life the only time I've ever see anyone carrying an Uzi in public it has been Federales.
The only place I've ever reliably heard of American firearms walking across the border, it was the fault of Eric Holder's justice department. I'm not saying it doesn't happen, but it is definitely the smallest part of what's arming the cartels.
If I were to make a bet, I'd say most of the "normal" guns heading south are the people with family members wanting to have form of self-defense. The low-level criminals aren't just robbing and killing Americans.
I'd believe there's some of the cartel members who want nice pistols resorting to the international black market, rather than just walking into the local Mexican Army base.
But even if the connection weren't so attenuated as to be a joke, the premise of the lawsuit was specifically prohibited by the Lawful Commerce act.
And the 1st circuit knew that, some harsh words for them from the Supreme court are in order.
Or were delivered by Obama Administration operatives in executing Operation Fast and Furious as part of Project Gunrunner.
"The main barrier to that strategy is a 2005 federal law that generally bars tort claims against gun manufacturers, distributors, or dealers based on "the criminal or unlawful misuse" of their products."
No the main barrier is that there is no way to stop millions of products going across the border. If there were then Mexico owes the US for the damage from products that go the other way. If alcohol ends up in Saudi Arabia do we sue Jack Daniels?
Perhaps we need a 2025 law that protects Jack Daniels from lawsuits to provide a new barrier to American domestic commerce. I mean, without a Section 230 for Jack Daniels, how can they even continue to function?
I hope people take your point about Jack Daniels. Allowing foreign countries to sue American companies for production of a legal product they don't like has severe ramifications for our economy and country as a whole.
Can I sue Sheinbaum for when I was robbed by federalis between San Felipe and Mexicali? Or was that Smith and Wessons fault too?
Corruption starts at the top, puta
Yeah, I don't think Mexico wants to get into a "who's the bad neighbor" fight. Hey muchacho, how about you deal with the car on blocks in your front yard, your shitty music and fireworks blasting all night, your fucking pitbulls that maul the neighborhood kids, the meth lab out back, and the sex slave dungeon in your basement before you complain about my tree branch hanging over the sidewalk?
I think I've had just about enough of Mexico.
It would not be hard to conquer that country. I'm just saying.
Do you want it?
Not really. But I'd rather they be a subordinated puppet state under our rule than left to their own devices.
You weren't the brightest kid in your special ed class were you
It may be time for "regime change and nation building" for Mehico.
We don't need anything that fancy. Just exterminate the cartels.
Maybe. They have quite a large agricultural export industry.
How about Mexico use their courts to sue us? We can then wipe our ass with the decision and not just laugh at them.
Maybe we can build a wall and Mexico can pay for it. Brand it as the anti-gun/ cartel wall. Just sayin'.
I mean, they could just build a wall. Fuck, I'll help pay for it.
Someone explain to me how this liability shift hurts the population in aggregate. Someone is paying the costs of crimes now. Does it matter much who the insurance costs are shifted to?
GFY
So you're okay if I offload the entirety of my personal insurance costs onto you personally? You should pay my insurance premiums and pay for my kid's car accident just because?
That would be manifestly unfair and create obvious moral hazards. What you are suggesting is no different - just bigger dollars and bigger populations.
What moral hazard?
Cartels aren't using semi-auto guns 'smuggled' into Mexico from the US. Or, rather, if they are, those guns were smuggled *by our government*.
You're confusing issues. The moral hazard of offloading my insurance risk onto you is that I have no incentive (even the weak incentive of increased premiums) to learn to drive more safely.
The moral hazard of letting Mexico sues over their own crime rate is that it reduces the incentive for them to actually solve local crime.
The last two Mexican presidents have said explicitly that they had no intention of opposing the cartels.
Yes.
Its not fair that the victim of a crime is harmed. Harming a third party that wasn't part of the crime doesn't help the victim and just harms a second person.
Why not make the police pay?
The precedent gets set; you [the manufacturer] are liable for the improper use of your, otherwise perfectly legal, product by people you [the manufacturer] have no control over.
Next Step: Random Dickhead runs his Ford F150 through a public gathering. Ford gets sued into oblivion for the medical bills of the surviving injured and wrongful death suits because Random Dickhead, not Ford, turned an F150 into a high-capacity assault vehicle.
Why has no one brought up the issue of standing? What process of law allows a foreign government to sue a U.S. company in American courts? Could the U.S. government turn the tables on the Mexican government and sue them for the hundreds of thousands of fentanyl deaths caused by cartels based in Mexico? To me that's a much better case of failure by a government to prevent harm.
They have standing. They are alleging harms by a US company for actions taken in the US. There is no plausible standing argument that would keep them out of court.
Mexico is notably not suing the US government (and we would be on equally bad footing if we tried to sue their government) so it's a good thing that nobody is doing that. But, yes, the US could sue Mexican companies (if they could identify any) or individuals (which we do all the time) who facilitated the fentanyl trade.
Right, the problem isn't standing, it's the total and complete lack of merit, and the fact that this sort of lawsuit is literally illegal for our courts to entertain in the first place.
Which is unfortunate given that Operation Fast and Furious was, exactly, a government Op to smuggle arms to cartels.
Isn't part of their remedy for the US to change gun laws? That's not something you can demand from a company.
No, the "remedy" is to pull an end around the 2nd Amendment by bogging down gun manufacturers and retailers with expensive Federal injury lawsuits (deposing every manager, board of directors, and CEO's, forcing costly document discovery) all with the hope of bankrupting the industry. Using the onerous process itself to achieve what they can't pull off legislatively, and extorting payoff's to make the process of the claim go away.
Once again, Americans either disregard or are totally ignorant concerning the circumstances behind this needless war.
The blame for it goes directly to Washington, D.C. the chickenhawks, the Trotskyite Zionist neo-cons who pushed the Maiden along and of course NATO right behind. Facts you will never see being exposed on the MSM.
There was no reason for this to happen except for the Zionist neo-cons who loath and despise Russia. Barry Soetoro's decisions to send in neocons like Samantha Power and Victoria Nudelman with her cookies to provide support and other players who were involved.
This was a calculated action taken to destabilize Ukraine, allow for a neo-nazi regime to form and then attack and kill more than 12,000 ethnic Russians in the Donbass.
All of it just one more disastrous foreign policy decision in a long line of foreign policy disasters put into action by Washington.
The results of Washington's foreign interventionist policies have caused the deaths of millions of innocent people around the world and gained nothing for the American people except more taxes and watching their sons and daughters being sacrificed in the name of military adventurism and foreign intervention.
This must come to an end or America will join the list of failed states.
"Mexico Aims To Reshape the U.S. Firearm Industry by Suing Gun Makers."
Who the fuck is Mexico to sue any US manufacturer, and why is the SCOTUS even entertaining this asinine lawsuit?
With the "only barrier" being a 2005 law that protects the gun manufacturers from lawsuits, I suspect that the question will be does that 2005 law only apply to Americans trying to sue the manufacturers?
SCOTUS has to entertain this nonsense because the 1st Circuit ignored law, precedent and logic by overturning the trial court who, as you think should have happened, threw out the asinine lawsuit.
Sure. What a novel strategy. It's sure to reshape the industry.
Trump should sue the government of Mexico for allowing millions of people some of them dangerous criminals into the U.S. causing massive crime waves, bankrupting cities keeping them housed and costing American taxpayers billions.
The suit should also include damages to the families who children were brutally raped and murdered by these animals. Not to mention the drug trafficking that has killed two hundred thousand Americans.
We don't owe Messico shit.
The proper body to address such international aggression is the armed forces, not the courts.
Is any given industry liable for any bad actions its products are used for down the line? So if a Chevrolet is used to transport narcotics from Mexico into the U.S., can Chevy be sued for producing the vehicle? Any bets that anti-gun activists in the U.S. might be encouraging or supporting Mexico's efforts to use our court system for this purpose?
Suddenly, I support 1000% tariffs against Mexico...
Why don't they just sue Eric Holder?