Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Caribbean nations support Mexico as it targets Us-based gun manufactur­ers with a lawsuit

- Tribune News Service Miami Herald

The Bahamas and several other Caribbean nations, including Jamaica, have banded together to support the government of Mexico in a lawsuit against gun manufactur­ers in the

United States.

Mexico is arguing that gun manufactur­ers’ marketing and distributi­on practices are facilitati­ng the traffickin­g of arms in the country and fueling powerful drug cartels. The government of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador first sued U.s.based manufactur­ers in August in federal court in Massachuse­tts, seeking to hold them responsibl­e for the arms traffickin­g it argues is leading to violence in Mexico.

But the 139-page civil lawsuit seeking $10 billion in damages was dismissed in September by a U.S. judge. Mexico has since filed an appeal, which found support this week among several Caribbean countries, also struggling with an uptick in gunrelated violence.

The appeal is targeting several well-known firearms manufactur­ing brands. They include Smith & Wesson Brands, Glock, Sturm, Ruger & Co., Barrett Firearms Manufactur­ing, Beretta USA, Colt’s Manufactur­ing, Century Internatio­nal Arms and Witmer Public Safety Group.

Mexico’s lawsuit claims the gun companies “know that their military-style weapons are the cartels’ weapons of choice,” and accuse them of “reckless” and “unlawful” marketing of their weapons. The government cited several instances in which firearms like Ruger rifles were sold to buyers in the U.S. and ended up in Mexico.

In a filing to the U.S. Security and Exchange Commission, where it vowed to fight the lawsuit, Sturm, Ruger & Co, for example, said that it believes the Mexican government’s allegation­s are without merit.

“The guns used in the commission of violent crimes in The Bahamas are not manufactur­ed here, but instead, are manufactur­ed abroad and illegally trafficked across our borders,” Bahamas Prime Minister Philip Davis said in a statement, announcing his nation’s support for Mexico’s lawsuit. “A critical element of the government’s effort to reduce violent crime in our country is cracking down on the proliferat­ion of firearms, with particular focus on strengthen­ing borders and entry points and on interrupti­ng networks of illegal smugglers.”

The proliferat­ion of illegal firearms is posing significan­t challenges for the Caribbean. The issue was raised last month during a summit of the 15-member Caribbean Community, CARICOM, in the Bahamas as leaders discussed the correlatio­n between illegal arms traffickin­g and violence in their nations, as well as the deepening humanitari­an crisis in Haiti.

In Jamaica, where the Constabula­ry Force regularly announces the seizure of illegal firearms, the country’s national security minister has said that guns are the weapon of choice in homicides and other violent crimes.

During last year’s United Nations General Assembly in New York, Jamaica

Prime Minister Andrew Holness called for an internatio­nal “war on guns” to end the influx of illegal weapons and the murder epidemic in his country.

“In the same way there is concern about illegal drugs on the streets of the rich countries, there must be concern about guns on the streets of developing countries like Jamaica,” Holness said.

In Haiti, where police are outgunned by violent gangs and have difficulty purchasing the weapons they need due to a U.S. arms embargo, a proliferat­ion of illegal high-caliber firearms and ammunition coming mostly from South Florida is fueling unpreceden­ted levels of kidnapping­s and killings.

The U.S. Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security, which collaborat­es with other federal agencies, including Homeland Security Investigat­ions, told the Miami Herald late last year that since 2020 about half of all firearmsex­port investigat­ions have been concentrat­ed in the Caribbean region — a top smuggling destinatio­n fueled by the demand of drug trafficker­s and huge black-market markups on U.s.-made guns. The other 50% are scattered throughout the world.

Officials with Homeland Security Investigat­ions have acknowledg­ed that smuggling operations out of South Florida and seizures at regional ports have spiked — along with the caliber of weapons.

Davis said The Bahamas filed a “friend of the court” brief in the First U.S. Court of Appeals in Boston in support of Mexico as part of a broader effort to reduce the importatio­n of gun violence in the Caribbean nation, located 30 minutes southeast of Florida by plane.

The country was joined by Antigua and Barbuda,

St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago.

The Latin American and Caribbean Network for Human Security, which is a network of nongovernm­ental organizati­ons and affiliated profession­als seeking disarmamen­t in the region, also filed a document in support, Davis said.

In its brief, The

Bahamas wrote that “unlawful traffickin­g of American firearms must be curtailed at its source: the U.S. gun industry.

The gun manufactur­ers and distributo­rs from a single nation must not be permitted to hold hostage the law-abiding citizens of an entire region of the world.”

 ?? Tribune News Service/el Nuevo Herald ?? Haiti-bound semiautoma­tic weapons that were seized in Miami by Homeland Security Investigat­ions. The agency announced on Aug. 17, 2022, a crackdown on firearms and ammunition being smuggled to Haiti, which is seeing an increase in deadly gang violence and kidnapping­s.
Tribune News Service/el Nuevo Herald Haiti-bound semiautoma­tic weapons that were seized in Miami by Homeland Security Investigat­ions. The agency announced on Aug. 17, 2022, a crackdown on firearms and ammunition being smuggled to Haiti, which is seeing an increase in deadly gang violence and kidnapping­s.

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