Gulf Today

Sandy Hook victims’ families to argue case in court

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HARTFORD: Connecticu­t’s highest court is set to hear arguments on Tuesday in a closely watched case brought by the families of the victims of the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting against the maker of the assault rile used by the killer.

The families of nine of the victims and one survivor have said manufactur­er Remington Arms Company Inc, along with a gun wholesaler and local retailer, should be held responsibl­e for the carnage at the Newtown, Connecticu­t, school because they marketed the weapon based on its militarist­ic appeal.

It is a somewhat novel legal argument the families hope will help them overcome a federal law enacted by US Congress in 2005 to shield gun manufactur­ers from liability for how their products are used.

Remington did not respond to requests for comment. In court ilings, the company has said the families’ claims, irst iled in 2014, are barred by the 2005 law.

A lower court judge agreed with the gun maker and dismissed the families’ lawsuit in 2016. But the Connecticu­t Supreme Court agreed to hear the case a week after the families iled their irst appeal.

Adam Lanza, 20, used a Remington Ar-15bushmast­errile,asemi-automatic civilian version of the US military’s M-16, to kill 20 schoolchil­dren between the ages of 6 and 7, as well as six adult staff members.

The families claim Remington and the other defendants “extolled the militarist­ic and assaultive qualities” of the AR-15, advertisin­g the rile as “mission-adaptable” and “the ultimate combat weapons system” in a deliberate pitch to a demographi­c of young men fascinated by the military.

The families said Lanza was part of that demographi­c and cited media reports saying he previously expressed a desire to join the army. The rile was bought by Lanza’s mother, whom he also killed, as a gift for him or for the two of them to share, the lawsuit claims.

The families’ argument is based on the legal doctrine of negligent entrustmen­t, in which a product is carelessly sold or given to a person at high risk of using it in a harmful way. Negligent entrustmen­t is speciicall­y excepted from the 2005 gun maker shield laws.

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