part 4:
2. It doesn't take much for a gun to slip from being legal to illegal. So if say these gun manufacturers only end up selling to legit dealers, but then these legit dealers legitimately sell to people (in Jamaica for instance) who then remove the serial numbers on guns and modify them and then sell them on to folks like Dudus, how would lawsuits against the US manufacturers and dealers achieve anything if everything they have done has been legit? No court of law is going to say that the manufacturer and US dealer are going to be responsible for the actions of the third person who proceeded to remove identifying numbers in secret and then loaned/sold the weapons to a fourth person (such as a Don). That would be like saying you can sue Hyundai for a drunk driving accident. You can't because Hyundai makes the car, not the driver and in the end the person who owns the car has ultimate responsibility. Now which court is going to say that the American dealers should refrain from carrying out legitimate transactions? If it was that the American dealers then became aware of their customers making the guns illegal then there would be grounds for criminal negligence at the very least in court and maybe criminal conspiracy, but if a company like Manatt can be led to believe that it was being paid by the "Government of Jamaica" and that there wasn't anything particularly fishy about the money at the start, then what of a dealer selling a gun to person who has no known criminal record and who seems to be a legitimate businessman? And what good would it do to sue a legitimate Jamaican businessman in an American court? How would such a lawsuit even work in a Jamaican court if said businessman has so tampered the weapon that one cannot definitively trace it back to him? Sure he may not have the weapon he purchased (maybe it went missing and he wasn't aware of its disappearance until the police questioned him), but that isn't enough to have a lawsuit (much less criminal charges) stick, since the legal system rests on proven truth.
2. It doesn't take much for a gun to slip from being legal to illegal. So if say these gun manufacturers only end up selling to legit dealers, but then these legit dealers legitimately sell to people (in Jamaica for instance) who then remove the serial numbers on guns and modify them and then sell them on to folks like Dudus, how would lawsuits against the US manufacturers and dealers achieve anything if everything they have done has been legit? No court of law is going to say that the manufacturer and US dealer are going to be responsible for the actions of the third person who proceeded to remove identifying numbers in secret and then loaned/sold the weapons to a fourth person (such as a Don). That would be like saying you can sue Hyundai for a drunk driving accident. You can't because Hyundai makes the car, not the driver and in the end the person who owns the car has ultimate responsibility. Now which court is going to say that the American dealers should refrain from carrying out legitimate transactions? If it was that the American dealers then became aware of their customers making the guns illegal then there would be grounds for criminal negligence at the very least in court and maybe criminal conspiracy, but if a company like Manatt can be led to believe that it was being paid by the "Government of Jamaica" and that there wasn't anything particularly fishy about the money at the start, then what of a dealer selling a gun to person who has no known criminal record and who seems to be a legitimate businessman? And what good would it do to sue a legitimate Jamaican businessman in an American court? How would such a lawsuit even work in a Jamaican court if said businessman has so tampered the weapon that one cannot definitively trace it back to him? Sure he may not have the weapon he purchased (maybe it went missing and he wasn't aware of its disappearance until the police questioned him), but that isn't enough to have a lawsuit (much less criminal charges) stick, since the legal system rests on proven truth.
Comment