Chicago Sun-Times

Biden calls for scrutiny of gun makers marketing weapons to minors

- BY LYNN SWEET, WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEF lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

WASHINGTON — Marketing from gun makers aimed at young men inclined to violence may have influenced the accused Highland Park July 4 parade shooter. And it’s that kind of marketing that President Joe Biden said needs to be studied by the Federal Trade Commission.

Biden traveled to Southern California on Tuesday to address the families and victims of the Jan. 21 slaughter inside the Star Ballroom Dance Studio in Monterey Park, where a shooter killed 11 and injured nine.

At the event, Biden announced a package of measures in a new executive order aimed at reducing gun violence.

One of the provisions Biden unveiled encourages the Federal Trade Commission “to issue a public report analyzing how gun manufactur­ers market firearms to minors and how such manufactur­ers market firearms to civilians, including through the use of military imagery.”

In his speech Biden said he is asking the independen­t FTC to study and expose “how gun manufactur­ers aggressive­ly market firearms to civilians, especially minors.”

Seven people were killed at the Highland Park parade and at least 48 others injured. The accused killer, Robert Crimo III, 22, is being held in the Lake County jail in Waukegan awaiting trial on criminal charges.

Last September, civil suits filed by victims and their families against gun manufactur­er Smith & Wesson alleged the company “markets its assault rifles to young, impulsive men by appealing to their propensity for risk and excitement.”

Smith & Wesson did it by maintainin­g an active presence on social media using violent video games, the lawsuit said. The Sun-Times has reported on violent videos Crimo produced and posted on social media.

The lawsuits also assert that Smith & Wesson fraudulent­ly markets its M&P line as “used or endorsed” by the military, suggesting that the weapon “will allow civilians to act like service members and engage in combat.”

Earlier this year, Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., and other senators called on the FTC to probe marketing to children the “JR-15” rifle by the Illinois-based company Wee 1 Tactical.

Duckworth said then that although children under age 18 cannot buy firearms themselves under federal law, the JR-15 is marketed to appeal to children to help familiariz­e them with this type of tactical weapon. When the gun was initially released by Wee 1 Tactical, its marketing materials featured cartoons of skulls with pacifiers and said that the rifle “looks, feels, and operates just like Mom and Dad’s gun.”

The attorney representi­ng many victims in the civil cases, Antonio Romanucci, said he welcomed Biden “directing the Federal Trade Commission to issue a public report analyzing how gun manufactur­ers market firearms to minors.”

Update on civil case: Venue moved from Lake County to Chicago

The Highland Park cases handled by Romanucci & Blandin and other attorneys were filed in a state court based in Lake County. The defendants were able to move the cases to the federal court based in Chicago.

Lawyers for the Highland Park victims are trying to get the cases back into state court. Among other reasons, a civil trial in a Lake County courthouse — not far from Highland Park— will draw a jury made up of local residents.

“The Highland Park mass shooting litigation was moved by the defendants from state to federal court, as our legal team anticipate­d, said Romanucci. Lawyers for the Highland Park victims are trying to get the cases back into state court.

Crimo’s father, Robert E. Crimo Jr., is facing charges in Lake County for signing his then-underage son’s state gun ownership applicatio­n even though the elder Crimo allegedly knew his son had threatened to kill his family and himself.

 ?? MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Joe Biden hugs an audience member after delivering remarks at the Boys and Girls Club of West San Gabriel Valley on Tuesday in Monterey Park, California.
MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES President Joe Biden hugs an audience member after delivering remarks at the Boys and Girls Club of West San Gabriel Valley on Tuesday in Monterey Park, California.

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