Munro Williams
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Judge Rules Lawsuit Against Gunmakers Can Proceed
from The Chigago Tribune
By Rick Hepp
Tribune Staff Writer
February 14, 2001
While saying that various gun manufacturers were not negligent in the deaths of slain Chicago Police Officer Michael Ceriale and four other gunshot victims, a Cook County Circuit Court judge today ruled that the manufacturers could be held liable under public nuisance laws.
Judge Jennifer Duncan-Brice ruled that the families of Ceriale and the other victims who were fatally shot in Chicago by offenders using handguns could proceed with their lawsuit alleging that gun makers, distributors and dealers created a public nuisance by designing and marketing handguns that appeal to gang members.
Ceriale was killed by gunfire in 1998 while on a predawn stakeout outside a housing project where prosecutors say the Gangster Disciples street gang was selling drugs. The trial of Jonathan Tolliver, 19, charged with first-degree murder in the Ceriale case, ended in a mistrial with a hung jury last week.
The families of Ceriale, Andrew Young and Salada Smith filed the lawsuit in 1999. Since then, the families of Miguel Macias and Willie Lee Lomax III have joined the suit. The families are asking an unspecified amount of damages from the gun industry as well as marketing restrictions on gun companies.
In an 18-page opinion, Duncan-Brice rejected the argument by lawyers for the gun industry that only those manufacturers whose guns were used in the shootings were liable. Comments from gun industry lawyers were not immediately available.
Jonathan Baum, an attorney for the victims, said the judge turned down the gun industry's argument that there has to be a "direct link" between the manufacturer and the death of the victim to prove negligence.
"The question is not whether it's their gun, it's whether it's their nuisance," Baum said. "Are they contributing to the flood (of illegal guns into Chicago)? It's the flood that's the nuisance, not the particular handgun."
Baum said the lawsuit argues that there is a "juvenile arms race . . . that's inspiring fear and dread on the streets . . . and that all of these defendants are contributing to it even if it wasn't their particular gun."
Duncan-Brice gave the gun industry permission to take her ruling immediately to the Illinois Appellate Court, which is weighing a similar case brought by the City of Chicago. The city's lawsuit against the industry was thrown out and is now on appeal.
James Door, who represents the manufacturers, said he was "optimistic and confident" that the appellate court would overturn today's ruling, which he called "contrary to Illinois law."
"Courts around the country are consistently saying there is no basis to bring a nuisance suit," Door said, noting that nine of 13 lawsuits suits brought against the gun industry have been dismissed in the past two years.
There they go again...
:barf:
from The Chigago Tribune
By Rick Hepp
Tribune Staff Writer
February 14, 2001
While saying that various gun manufacturers were not negligent in the deaths of slain Chicago Police Officer Michael Ceriale and four other gunshot victims, a Cook County Circuit Court judge today ruled that the manufacturers could be held liable under public nuisance laws.
Judge Jennifer Duncan-Brice ruled that the families of Ceriale and the other victims who were fatally shot in Chicago by offenders using handguns could proceed with their lawsuit alleging that gun makers, distributors and dealers created a public nuisance by designing and marketing handguns that appeal to gang members.
Ceriale was killed by gunfire in 1998 while on a predawn stakeout outside a housing project where prosecutors say the Gangster Disciples street gang was selling drugs. The trial of Jonathan Tolliver, 19, charged with first-degree murder in the Ceriale case, ended in a mistrial with a hung jury last week.
The families of Ceriale, Andrew Young and Salada Smith filed the lawsuit in 1999. Since then, the families of Miguel Macias and Willie Lee Lomax III have joined the suit. The families are asking an unspecified amount of damages from the gun industry as well as marketing restrictions on gun companies.
In an 18-page opinion, Duncan-Brice rejected the argument by lawyers for the gun industry that only those manufacturers whose guns were used in the shootings were liable. Comments from gun industry lawyers were not immediately available.
Jonathan Baum, an attorney for the victims, said the judge turned down the gun industry's argument that there has to be a "direct link" between the manufacturer and the death of the victim to prove negligence.
"The question is not whether it's their gun, it's whether it's their nuisance," Baum said. "Are they contributing to the flood (of illegal guns into Chicago)? It's the flood that's the nuisance, not the particular handgun."
Baum said the lawsuit argues that there is a "juvenile arms race . . . that's inspiring fear and dread on the streets . . . and that all of these defendants are contributing to it even if it wasn't their particular gun."
Duncan-Brice gave the gun industry permission to take her ruling immediately to the Illinois Appellate Court, which is weighing a similar case brought by the City of Chicago. The city's lawsuit against the industry was thrown out and is now on appeal.
James Door, who represents the manufacturers, said he was "optimistic and confident" that the appellate court would overturn today's ruling, which he called "contrary to Illinois law."
"Courts around the country are consistently saying there is no basis to bring a nuisance suit," Door said, noting that nine of 13 lawsuits suits brought against the gun industry have been dismissed in the past two years.
There they go again...
:barf: