The Boston Globe

Smith & Wesson sued over link to parade mass shooting

- By Kathleen Foody

CHICAGO — The gun maker Smith & Wesson illegally targeted young men at risk of violence with ads for firearms — including the 22-year-old gunman accused of opening fire on an Independen­ce Day parade in suburban Chicago and killing seven people, according to several lawsuits filed Wednesday in Illinois.

The lawsuits filed by people wounded while attending the Highland Park parade and the estates of several victims are the latest bid by victims of mass shootings to hold gun manufactur­ers accountabl­e, despite broad protection­s for the industry in federal law.

Liz Turnipseed is among those filing lawsuits in Lake County on Wednesday against the gun manufactur­er, the accused shooter, and his father, along with two gun sellers.

In an interview with the Associated Press, Turnipseed said she had recently arrived at the parade with her husband and 3-year-old daughter, pointing out to the girl instrument­s in the high school band. She fell to the ground after being shot in the pelvis and remembers seeing her daughter’s stroller on its side and asking her husband to get their daughter to safety.

Turnipseed said she required weeks of intense wound care, expects to need a cane for some time, and is in therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder. She also was forced to delay an embryo transfer scheduled for July 12; her doctors now fear it’s dangerous for her to become pregnant.

Despite her physical and emotional burdens, the Highland Park resident said she became determined to speak for those who did not survive mass shootings in the United States, particular­ly the 19 children and two teachers killed at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, in late May.

“I had a unique opportunit­y to help put a real face on what these guns do to people and … give it a first-person perspectiv­e,” Turnipseed said. “Because there aren’t that many of us that survive. Because they’re that deadly.”

Prosecutor­s have said Robert E. Crimo III admitted to the parade killings once police arrested him hours after the attack.

Turnipseed’s lawsuit largely focused on the company that produced the M&P 15 semiautoma­tic rifle that authoritie­s identified as Crimo’s weapon.

Smith & Wesson officials should have known that its advertisin­g campaigns would appeal to a dangerous group of customers — “namely impulsive young men with hero complexes and/or militarist­ic delusions attracted to using the particular­ly high lethality of AR-15 style weapons … to effectivel­y execute their fantasies,” her attorneys argue.

Representa­tives for Smith & Wesson, based in Springfiel­d, Mass., did not immediatel­y respond to messages seeking comment Wednesday.

In the suit, Turnipseed alleges that Smith & Wesson ads mimic the shooter’s-eye view popularize­d by video games, use imagery of apparent military or law enforcemen­t personnel, and emphasize the M&P 15’s combat features.

Advertisin­g text bills the rifle as “capable of handling as many rounds as you are” and providing “pure adrenaline.” One ad shows the M&P 15 on a dark background above the phrase “kick brass” in a bold red font and capital letters.

“The advertisem­ents and marketing tactics described above demonstrat­e that Smith & Wesson knowingly marketed, advertised, and promoted the Rifle to civilians for illegal purposes, including to carry out offensive, military style combat missions against their perceived enemies,” her attorneys argue.

Turnipseed is also suing the accused gunman for assault and battery and intentiona­l infliction of emotional distress and his father, Robert Crimo Jr., for negligence, particular­ly for sponsoring his son’s applicatio­n for a state firearms license in 2019 within months of the 19-year-old attempting to kill himself and threatenin­g family members.

 ?? JIM VONDRUSKA/GETTY IMAGES/FILE ?? FBI agents were seen working on July 5 at the scene of the mass shooting at a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park, Ill.
JIM VONDRUSKA/GETTY IMAGES/FILE FBI agents were seen working on July 5 at the scene of the mass shooting at a Fourth of July parade in Highland Park, Ill.

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