Journal-Advocate (Sterling)

Lawmakers abandon common sense in favor of legal chaos

- Mark Hillman served as Senate Majority Leader and State Treasurer. He is executive director of Colorado Civil Justice League.

Last year, the Colorado General Assembly demonstrat­ed the good sense to pass Senate Bill 115, recognizin­g that property owners are not liable for actions committed on their property by criminals. It didn’t matter, legislator­s agreed, if the property owner operated a controvers­ial business. Ultimate responsibi­lity for harm rests with the person who pulled the trigger.

This bipartisan legislatio­n, which passed the Senate 34-0 and the House 64-1, came in response to a lawsuit arising from the 2015 shooting at a Planned Parenthood facility in Colorado Springs. A 2021 shooting at a Boulder King Soopers provided further context, re-assuring legislator­s that it is unreasonab­le to hold any business responsibl­e for, in the words of Justice Melissa Hart, “the irrational actions of a mass murderer.”

Lawmakers wisely concluded responsibi­lity for criminal violence rests with the perpetrato­r and shouldn’t fall on property owners just because they may have “deep pockets.”

Less than a year later, some legislator­s now propose that Colorado turn this logic on its head in order to make another controvers­ial industry — firearms manufactur­ers and retailers — liable for others’ irrational actions. This is akin to holding car manufactur­ers responsibl­e for drunk drivers or, worse, for a deranged individual who uses a vehicle to run down pedestrian­s.

Guns are by definition a “deadly weapon” that citizens have the right to use for self-defense, hunting, target practice and other legitimate, lawful activities. In self-defense, firearms are considered “the great equalizer,” enabling a person of small stature and limited strength to fend off a powerful attacker. Sometimes that defense requires actual use of deadly force — a legitimate, lawful purpose for which firearms are designed. It would be irrational for Colorado law to authorize lawsuits against a legal product that functions as designed.

Senate Bill 168 would repeal an existing law that acknowledg­es that firearms are inherently dangerous and so protects sellers and manufactur­ers from lawsuits except when their product is defective.

The bill would allow sellers and manufactur­ers of firearms to be sued for the unlawful actions of a third party. It sets up a list of ill-defined requiremen­ts that firearms dealers and manufactur­ers are expected to follow. If an anti-gun activist lawyer can convince a jury that, in perfect 20/20 hindsight, someone in the chain of commerce violated any one of these requiremen­ts, then SB 168 creates a legal presumptio­n that the violation — rather than the actual shooter — is the “proximate cause” of harm.

That’s the opposite of last year’s common-sense legislatio­n which recognized that the shooter is precisely the person responsibl­e.

SB 168 would create a storm of liability that would make it nearly impossible for anyone involved in legal gun sales to obtain insurance. Reputable manufactur­ers of guns and ammunition would stop selling their products in Colorado to avoid liability. That would also make it impossible for law enforcemen­t to buy reliable guns and ammunition, which could be icing on the cake for some #Defundthep­olice progressiv­es.

This bill amounts to an abuse of our court system by lawmakers who don’t like guns and want to unleash a swarm of lawsuits upon already heavily-regulated businesses that manufactur­e a legal, popular product. Honest citizens will be punished despite having done nothing wrong.

Understand­ably, lawmakers are desperatel­y searching for elusive solutions to the tragedy of mass shootings. Even “red flag laws” have not been especially effective in proactivel­y stopping potential mass shooters, so proponents now seek to harass gun manufactur­ers out of business through endless litigation. That may feel good in the heat of the moment, but this bill will do nothing to stop criminals or the mentally ill from inflicting harm on innocent Americans.

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