Mexico’s ambitious lawsuit against U.S. gunmakers, alleging their role in arming drug cartels, has been definitively nixed by the U.S. Supreme Court. In a unanimous ruling, the justices overturned a lower court’s decision, granting significant relief to Smith & Wesson and Interstate Arms and reinforcing the broad protections of the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act.
The lawsuit, filed in 2021, argued that the gun companies intentionally maintained a distribution system that allowed for the widespread practice of “straw purchases,” funnelling weapons to criminal organizations across the border. Mexico sought both financial compensation and a court order to compel the companies to mitigate the “public nuisance” their products caused.
Despite a federal appeals court initially allowing the case to proceed, the Supreme Court disagreed, finding that Mexico’s complaint did not plausibly plead that the companies “aided and abetted” unlawful sales. Justice Elena Kagan’s opinion highlighted the legal standard required for such allegations to move forward.
This legal development unfolds amidst a complex backdrop of U.S.-Mexico relations, marked by ongoing discussions on trade, border security, and efforts to combat drug trafficking. Mexico has consistently asserted that the proliferation of U.S.-made firearms is a significant driver of its internal violence and instability.