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A New Push to Grant Gun Industry Immunity From Suits

April 4, 2003
By JOHN TIERNEY






WASHINGTON, April 3 - Last fall, when Americans were
fixated by the serial sniper killings in the suburbs here,
Congress postponed voting on legislation protecting the gun
industry against lawsuits. Now that most of the guns in the
news are being fired by soldiers, not criminals, the
industry's defenders seem more ready to be counted.

Beginning a new drive to shield the industry, the House
Judiciary Committee today approved a bill giving gun
manufacturers and dealers immunity against many suits,
including ones already in court brought by shooting victims
and municipalities. The suits fault the makers for not
adding safety features and for distribution practices that
make it easy for criminals to get guns.

With the House and Senate in Republican control and with
majorities in both chambers sponsoring the bill, its
prospects look strong and could well depend on how a
handful of swing senators vote in the event of a
filibuster.

In the House Judiciary Committee today, one Democrat,
Representative Rick Boucher of Virginia, joined 20
Republicans to approve the bill while 11 Democrats voted
against it.

Granting immunity would be a serious setback for advocates
of gun control, who have turned to state courts
increasingly in recent years after meeting resistance in
legislatures. They have denounced the proposed legislation
as an unfair favor to an industry and a federal usurpation
of states' rights. They say Congress would be denying
injured citizens and violence-ridden cities the right to
sue companies supplying an illegal underground market in
guns.

The other side depicts the suits as an attack on
beleaguered small companies by a coalition of wealthy trial
lawyers and Democrats with access to municipal treasuries
and grants from liberal foundations. Supporters of gun
rights say the suits are intended to cripple the industry
with legal bills and to impose gun controls outside the
democratic process.

"We're trying to stop making public policy through the
courts with these nuisance suits," said Representative
Cliff Stearns, Republican of Florida, who introduced the
bill along with 247 co-sponsors.

The Senate version is sponsored by 52 members, enough to
pass it unless there is a filibuster by Democrats.

"A filibuster is absolutely an option," said Senator Jack
Reed, Democrat of Rhode Island. "I can't imagine giving an
exemption like this to one industry, especially this one.
Toys are more heavily regulated than guns, and there's no
immunity for the toy industry against litigation."

Senator Larry E. Craig, the Idaho Republican who is the
lead sponsor in the Senate, noted that nine Democrats are
sponsoring the bill and predicted that enough more might
join Republicans to provide the 60 votes to stop a
filibuster.

"I think we'll be successful this session," Mr. Craig said.
"The Democrats have found that being aggressive advocates
of gun control hasn't worked for them."

Gun control has indeed been a risky issue for Democrats
with rural constituencies, and legislatures in more than 30
states have passed laws protecting the gun industry against
lawsuits.

Gun control plays well in urban areas, on the other hand,
and two dozen cities and counties have filed suits seeking
damages for the costs of gun violence. Other suits have
been filed by individual victims and by the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which
sued 165 gun makers and distributors. So far none of the
suits have succeeded, and eight have been dismissed.

But advocates of gun control have been heartened by some
favorable rulings and by the start of a trial in federal
court in Brooklyn for the N.A.A.C.P.'s suit. The president
of the N.A.A.C.P., Kweisi Mfume, reacted to the proposed
legislation by saying, "Some in Congress, goaded by the gun
lobby, are determined to slam the courthouse door in the
face of current and future victims of gun violence."

Lawrence Keane, the general counsel for the National
Shooting Sports Foundation, the firearms industry trade
association, estimated that the suits had so far cost the
industry more than $100 million in legal fees, which he
said was an unfair burden on a relatively small industry
with many family-owned businesses.

"These suits are an attempt to blame law-abiding
manufacturers for the wrongdoing of criminals," Mr. Keane
said. "It's like blaming a drunk-driving accident on
General Motors or a brewery."

He noted that the bills in the House and Senate would still
allow suits against gun makers and distributors who
"knowingly and willfully" violate a law or negligently
provide a gun to someone they should know would probably
misuse it to injure others.

But the bills would eliminate most of the suits now filed
against gun makers and dealers, said Dennis Henigan, legal
director of the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, a gun
control advocacy group representing many of the
municipalities and individuals suing the industry.

Mr. Henigan said that it would be difficult to prove that a
dealer knowingly violated the law, and that it would become
impossible to collect damages from manufacturers selling
guns to licensed dealers who later supplied the underground
market.

"This is an egregious form of special-interest legislation
that would bring progress toward safer guns to a screaming
halt and make it more difficult for gun violence victims to
recover damages," he said. "It would prevent cities from
collecting damages against gun manufacturers who maintain a
distribution system which they know ensures the continual
supply of guns to the illegal market."

Mr. Henigan called the proposed law "a rather radical
intrusion by the Congress into the workings of state
courts" and said it was hypocritical for conservatives to
support the bills while professing to believe in states'
rights.

But Walter Olson, a senior fellow at the Manhattan
Institute, a conservative research group, said the
legislation would defend the rights of state legislatures
against policies imposed by mayors and judges in other
states.

"The municipal gun litigation is an utter travesty, and I
think the supporters of Second Amendment liberty have every
right to seek federal legislation," said Mr. Olson, who
analyzes the gun lawsuits in his new book, "The Rule of
Lawyers," a critique of trial lawyers. "There is no
violation of proper federalism for Congress to pre-empt
litigation by which New York intends to forcibly curtail
the relatively open gun-selling regimes of states like
South Carolina and Virginia."

The proposed legislation is not scheduled yet for a floor
vote in either house, but its sponsors said they hoped to
see action possibly this spring.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/04/politics/04GUNS.html?ex=1050463120&ei=1&en=9f411d1bd57c711c



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