Bangkok Post

Judge bans AG from suing gun makers

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SAN DIEGO: A f ederal j udge on Wednesday blocked California’s attorney general from enforcing a new law that allows residents, the state and local government­s to sue members of the firearms industry that manufactur­e or sell “abnormally dangerous” guns.

US District Judge Andrew Schopler in San Diego sided with a firearms industry trade associatio­n in finding that part of a gun control measure signed into law by Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom in 2022 was likely unconstitu­tional.

It is the first ruling in a case challengin­g the constituti­onality of California’s Firearm Industry Responsibi­lity Act.

The law was enacted shortly after the conservati­ve-majority US Supreme Court issued a landmark ruling in June 2022 concerning the US Constituti­on’s Second Amendment that significan­tly expanded gun rights.

Mr Newsom, in signing the new state firearms restrictio­ns into law in July 2022, called them necessary to ensure makers of deadly firearms could be held accountabl­e in court and could “no longer hide from the mass destructio­n that they have caused.”

But in a lawsuit filed in May, the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) argued California’s restrictio­ns violated several provisions of the US Constituti­on including the Second Amendment, which protects the right to keep and bear arms.

Judge Schopler, an appointee of Democratic President Joe Biden, did not address the Second Amendment issue in Wednesday’s ruling and instead found the law likely violated the Constituti­on’s so-called dormant Commerce Clause, which restricts states from interferin­g with interstate commerce.

For example, he said, a Tennessee company that manufactur­ers guns that are legal in its state but that meet California’s definition of “abnormally dangerous” could still face liability under the law even its products were shipped to nearby Arizona and used later to commit a crime in California.

“Because t he ‘ abnormally dangerous’ firearm rule reaches beyond California’s borders and directly regulates out-of-state commercial transactio­ns, it likely runs afoul of the dormant Commerce Clause,” Judge Schopler wrote.

He issued a preliminar­y injunction barring California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a Democrat, from suing NSSF’s members while the lawsuit moves forward.

Lawrence Keane, the NSSF’s general counsel, welcomed the ruling. The law “attempts to use the real threat of liability on commerce beyond California’s border and impose its policy choices on other states,” he said.

Daniel Villasenor, a spokesman for Mr Newsom, said the governor was conferring with Bonta regarding next steps. He noted the judge also dismissed part of NSSF’s lawsuit challengin­g a requiremen­t that industry participan­ts including gun stores work to prevent unlawful transactio­ns and other violations of law. “This means bad actors can still be held accountabl­e,” he said.

 ?? ?? Newsom: Signed ‘unconstitu­tional’ law
Newsom: Signed ‘unconstitu­tional’ law

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