Gun industry blanket would leave citizens in the cold
February 25, 2004
The gun shop that was the source for the assault rifle used by the Washington, D.C., snipers can't account for 238 guns listed in its inventory. Yet, Bull's Eye Shooter Supply in Tacoma, Wash., is still in business. Chuck's Gun Shop in Riverdale was found to be the nation's largest supplier of crime guns, but its owner has never been charged with a crime. Is it any wonder that outraged citizens are turning to lawsuits to stem the illicit trade in firearms?
Clearly our lawmakers, law enforcement authorities, prosecutors and government regulators charged with licensing gun shops are letting us down. A survey of gun shops by Americans for Gun Safety found the three federal laws aimed at corrupt gun shops were "enforced so rarely they might as well not exist."
Into that vacuum flowed litigation. Now the gun industry has responded with legislation pending in the Senate this week to grant it immunity against lawsuits unless criminal wrongdoing is committed. Civil litigation usually focuses on negligence, as in, say, a gun shop managing to lose 238 weapons, one of them used in that killing rampage around the nation's capital. If lawsuits are the only way to shut down irresponsible gun shops, then shame on our legislators and law enforcement, but let the suits be filed.
Lawsuits against manufacturers of firearms are a different matter. Why should they suffer litigation every time some miscreant commits murder or a corrupt gun shop sells to gang bangers? Suing them sounds, understandably to honest gun owners, like a stealth assault on their Second Amendment rights.
Still, granting blanket immunity is not the answer, and the Senate bill should be rejected. It's true that many legitimate businesses are hounded and harassed by the trial lawyers' bar. But let's have more general tort reform, perhaps such as having the losers in lawsuits bear the costs of frivolously dragging companies producing legal products into court.
The Senate would be egregiously wrong to deny Americans frustrated over the illicit gun traffic the one weapon that seems to hold out promise for combatting it. Only a handful of gun dealers nationwide are responsible for this ugly business, and no U.S. senator should be in their corner.