The Daily - Can Gun Makers Be Held Accountable for Mass Shootings?
Episode Date: July 12, 2019As mass shootings became commonplace, attempts to hold gun makers accountable kept hitting the same roadblock — until now. We look at a lawsuit that could transform the firearms industry. Guests: Na...talie Kitroeff, a business reporter for The New York Times, spoke with David Wheeler, whose 6-year-old son, Ben, died in the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School; and Sheryl Gay Stolberg, who covers Congress for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: A Connecticut Supreme Court ruling has created a potential opening for Sandy Hook families to maneuver around the gun industry’s legal shield and hold companies liable for the attack.The families are hoping to replicate a tactic used in lawsuits against cigarette manufacturers.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro. This is The Daily.
Today.
As mass shootings have become commonplace, attempts to hold gun makers accountable
keep hitting the same roadblock. Until now. My colleague Natalie Kitchoeff talks to David Wheeler about a lawsuit
that could transform the gun industry.
It's Friday, July 12th.
David, I think to start, I wanted to ask, what was Ben like?
Ben was six. So he, in many ways, was a very, very typical six-year-old boy. A lot of energy.
He was always banging into something.
He always had a bruise or a bump or a scar or something.
His nickname was Crash because he was, you know, one or two trips to the ER in those six years.
And his older brother, Nate, you know, he couldn't get a word in edgewise.
Few of us could.
He still had a little bit of a lisp that he was working on. He hadn't lost any of his baby teeth yet, which is not
entirely usual at age six. Usually kids have lost a few by then, but he hadn't lost any baby teeth
yet. And he was really bummed about that. And so he had a kind of an obsession with sort of the
tooth fairy and how that whole thing worked. But he was a very rambunctious and
energetic and lovely kid. So can you bring us back to December 14th, 2012? How did that day begin?
Well, it was a typically chaotic family day in a lot of ways. Everybody trying to get out the door
in order to catch the bus or get to school on time or get to work on time in my case.
And then that morning, Benny woke up with sniffles. He had some sniffles and my wife asked me
if we should send him to school. And I said, sure. I mean, her day was going to be turned
completely upside down if he didn't go to school. So I said, look, what would happen if you keep
him home, send him to school. So we sent him, you know, and that's something I've had to live with.
And then I was at my office and Francine, my wife, I don't know if she'd seen text.
I don't know what happened, but she'd heard that something had happened at the school.
So she called me and said, something's going on at the school.
Can you check it out?
And this is about 9.45 in the morning.
And I'm not sure why I did this, but I called the offices of our town newspaper because I thought if there's local news happening, they're going to know about it before anybody else might.
So I called them and they said, yes, the school is locked down. They wouldn't give me any more information. They said,
we don't know exactly what's going on, but the school is locked down. Something's going on.
They may have said it was a possible shooting or something.
Breaking news is coming to us out of Connecticut, the southwestern part of that state where police are reporting that they are responding to reports of a shooting.
This is just coming across the wires.
It is Sandy Hook Elementary, is that correct?
Sandy Hook Elementary School.
And so I got in the car and I raced back.
And then while I was driving, I got a text from my wife telling me that she had our older son, but we were still waiting for
Ben and to meet her at the firehouse, the Sandy Hook Volunteer firehouse.
So I got there around 11, roughly, and I found my wife and her older son and lots of people
milling around, lots and lots of people, and a lot of chaos and a lot of, you know, people not knowing what was going on.
And at this point, I'd been calling the hospital, you know, describing him to see if he was there.
You know, we weren't getting any information from anyone really about what had happened in the school.
I just sort of was trying to remain optimistic and hoping for the best.
And then we waited. And then we waited.
And then we waited.
The school is still on lockdown.
SWAT teams have been on the scene.
We have seen the images of the terrified children being whisked out of the school, led by their teachers, and taken to a fire station nearby.
It must have been around noon or one o'clock or so.
The families who were still missing, family members, were asked to convene in this one room in the firehouse.
And that was when I realized that it might not end well.
And I remember saying to my wife, you know, we need to start considering the possibility that we may have lost him.
And then the governor came around 2, 2.30, and he made his announcement.
He said, if you're in here, if you're in this room and you're still missing a family member, they have expired.
They have been killed. take me through the thought process that evolves in the weeks and months after the shooting
how did your thinking evolve? What starts to come up
for you? The more details I got from law enforcement, for example, that in the classroom where my son was with his class and his
substitute teacher and the special ed teacher that was there, when I learned that they found
80 shell casings in that room, 80, you know, that sort of rocks you on your heels a little.
I've always felt that we had a problem in this country with the ease of access to high-powered
weapons by those who are not responsible enough to handle them. That's not new. But I'm not a
reader of gun magazines, and I don't frequent the websites, so I wasn't aware of how overly hyped
the advertising was. Here's a consumer product being marketed to men of all ages.
here's a consumer product being marketed to men of all ages.
And the imagery being used in the advertising is all militaristic, from the choice of the typeface down to the images that they're putting back there.
And the tagline next to an image of a military person holding this weapon
is, forces of opposition bow down.
Now, if you're a disaffected young man who feels like he doesn't have enough power in his life or agency, doesn't feel like anybody cares whether he lives or dies, who sees violence as an answer to his problems.
cares whether he lives or dies, who sees violence as an answer to his problems,
I don't think it's too much of a stretch to see how that might appeal to a person like that.
I remember one of these ads for this specific gun, the one that said something about reissuing your man card.
I think the line was for this particular weapon, the Bushmaster, saying reinstate your man card. Right, I think the line was for this particular weapon, the Bushmaster,
saying reinstate your man card.
So look, it's been the point of advertising
since the dawn of time to convince you
that your life is empty and will continue to be empty
and you won't be happy until you spend the money
to buy whatever it is they're selling,
which will somehow magically make your life complete.
That's how it works.
But it is absolutely and completely irresponsible for the makers of the world's most lethal consumer products
to put them out in the world this way.
So there has to be some responsibility for how you put what you make as a manufacturer out into the world.
You've got to be responsible.
So I wanted to do something.
And I wanted to try to change the situation as I understood it.
And when I learned about the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act,
known by the acronym PLACA, I couldn't believe it. I didn't know about it. Nobody I knew knew
about it. And I was astonished that such a law could exist. It's completely un-American.
It's anti-capitalist. It's a protection for an industry that no other industry of producing consumer goods gets.
And I think that's wrong.
After the break, my colleague Cheryl Gay Stolberg on the story behind Plaka and how victims like Wheeler are trying to circumvent it.
We'll be right back.
Cheryl, you cover Congress,
and you were covering Congress
when it passed the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, also known as PLACA. Can you tell us about this law?
So PLACA is a law passed by Congress in 2005. It protects gun sellers and manufacturers from liability when a crime is committed with their products.
when a crime is committed with their products.
There are some exceptions, but by and large,
gun manufacturers in this country can't be sued when somebody commits a crime with a gun.
How did PLACA get passed in the first place? Because it's rare, right, for an industry to have that level of legal protection?
Well, it is rare.
Usually, the courts decide whether a lawsuit can go forward, not Congress. And the
story behind PLACA is a really fascinating one. It starts in 1994 after a spate of mass shootings,
including some shootings at schools. And Democrats in Congress decide that they want to push forward with a bill that would ban the assault-style, you know, military-style weapons that were being used in these shootings.
So in 1994, as part of a broader crime bill, they pass what is now known as the Assault Weapons Ban.
pass what is now known as the Assault Weapons Ban. The ban prohibits by name the sale of 19 specific weapons that have the features of guns used in the military. And these are guns like the
AR-15, which the shooter in Newtown used. And it also outlaws magazines that could hold more than
10 rounds of ammunition. It had a sunset provision.
Congress said it was going to last for 10 years.
And the NRA, not surprisingly, was very, very unhappy about this.
And 1994 is an election year.
And so the NRA basically sets out to defeat as many Democrats as they possibly
can. And they go after the biggest Democrat of all, the House Speaker Tom Foley, who was
from Washington state. Now, Foley had already ticked off the NRA by having a vote in the House
on the assault weapons ban.
But because he was Speaker, he didn't have to say whether he would vote for it or against it. So he was neutral on it. But then there was a mass shooting in his state. And a reporter asked
him after that, do you favor the assault weapons ban? And he said he did.
So the NRA starts organizing aggressively against him.
And they even go so far as to send this actor, Charlton Heston,
who was a gun rights activist, but also just a really well-known actor at the time,
they send him to Washington to campaign against Foley. And lo and behold, Foley
loses. So in leaving, I thank you and I salute you and I wish you all, those of you who are
leaving with me and those... Not only does Foley lose, but it's a total wipeout for Democrats.
But this was a political earthquake with the fault line running right through Capitol Hill.
Democrats lost the house they'd controlled for all but four years since 1932.
Part of that was the Gingrich Revolution, but a big part of that was the gun issue and the mobilization of the NRA.
And it really sent a message to Democrats that, you know, if you cross the NRA, your career is toast.
So this is a huge victory for the NRA.
I mean, they're knocking off the Speaker of the House.
Yeah, huge. Absolutely huge. The last time a Speaker of the House lost his seat was in the
1800s. And this kind of really established the power of the NRA, but also the myth of the NRA,
if you will, as this kind of all-powerful group in Washington that could
make or break a politician. And yet the assault weapons ban has passed, so the NRA has a lot of
work to do. Right. They did have a lot of work to do, and they continued to fight.
By 2000, that actor, Charlton Heston, has become president of the NRA.
And he goes to the group's annual convention where thousands of gun enthusiasts come.
And he gives this hellfire and brimstone speech. When loss of liberty is looming as it is now, the siren sounds first in the hearts of freedom's vanguard.
So as we set out this year to defeat the divisive forces
that would take freedom away, I want to say those fighting words.
And he's holding this rifle above his head
and he's daring gun control activists
to take his weapons away.
And then he turns his fury right at Al Gore,
who's running for president.
For everyone within the sound of my voice
to hear and to heed,
and especially for you, Mr. Gore,
from my cold, dead hands.
It was, you know, a declaration of war.
And then in 2002, something happened in Washington that I think really marked a turning point in this debate.
And that was the case of the D.C. sniper.
The shooting started yesterday at 5.20 p.m.
A bullet went through a window of this store, narrowly missing a clerk inside.
In early October, a shot was fired through the front window of a craft store in suburban Maryland.
And people just thought it was like some random thing.
But then like an hour later... At 6.04 p.m., a middle-aged white man was killed outside of the supermarket.
Not far away, a 55-year-old government worker was shot and killed in the parking lot of a grocery store.
This morning, the murders resumed.
The next morning...
At 7.41 a.m., another white man mowing his lawn.
Four people were shot dead within a span of two hours.
At 8.12 a.m., an Indian man gassing up his can.
Minutes later, at 8.37, an Hispanic woman sitting, reading a book on a bench outside of a restaurant.
People were really frantic.
The young lady that I just seen about five minutes or ten minutes ago off the bus was laying right there, and it was just terrible.
Schools started keeping
kids inside. You know it's a sick mind it's obviously loves terrorizing society. I mean it
could be the new wave of terrorism. What better way to terrorize a neighborhood than to start
killing people at random in different places all within a given you know area. This man just doesn't know what he's done to us.
He's taken away an angel.
Finally, nearly three weeks after the first shooting,
these two guys, they were arrested.
Prosecutors in Maryland said they will file six counts of first degree murder against the two sniper suspects. By the time this ended, 10 people were dead and
three people were wounded. And in 2004, the survivors and their families decided to sue
the gun company and also the store that sold the gun to the snipers. And what they alleged was that the store ran in a grossly negligent manner,
that it lost track of its guns, and it kept such shoddy records
that it couldn't even account for the assault rifle that the sniper used.
So they sued the store, and they also sued the gun maker for continuing to sell
its weapons to a store that it knew was operating in a shoddy way. And in 2004, Bushmaster, the
maker of the gun and also the store, settled for $2.5 million. And how big of a deal was that?
And how big of a deal was that? New York City brought suit, joined like 30 other cities and localities suing the gun industry.
And the NRA was just apoplectic.
So what does the NRA do?
So the NRA views these lawsuits as an existential threat.
And they say that they are going to be put out of business if they continue.
And so they start pushing Congress for a law.
And what they want is a law that will protect them against these lawsuits, which they say are
frivolous. They argue that this would be like the victims of a drunk driver suing the car
manufacturer because the person who operated the car was drunk. And so they put all their political muscle in Washington
behind this effort to get this law passed.
And what does Congress do?
Democrats in Congress are still feeling the bruises from the 1994 election.
Like, they don't want to have anything to do with gun control.
So in 2005, they pass PLACA. It wipes out all these lawsuits, including the
New York City suit. And basically, it's a broad-based immunity for gun manufacturers
and gun sellers. Are you telling me that it's impossible to sue a gun manufacturer?
me that it's impossible to sue a gun manufacturer. Well, not completely impossible. There are some exceptions. There were six of them in Plaka. And over the years, many people have been trying to
get around Plaka using those exceptions. And among them is David Wheeler and the other Newtown families. So they find a lawyer and in 2014, they sued.
And I talked to that lawyer and he told me about his strategy to get around Plaka.
And what is that strategy?
So they focused on two exceptions.
The first exception was something called negligent entrustment.
And that's basically legalese for saying that if somebody gives or sells a gun very carelessly to a person, posing a high risk of misusing it, that's negligent entrustment. You're giving something to somebody in a negligent way.
The other exception they focused on was something called the predicate
exemption. And basically that meant that you could sue if the sale of the gun violated any law of the
state in which it was sold. So the lawyer for the family seized on Connecticut's unfair trade
practices law. And basically they waged a deception in marketing case. They argued that
the messages that Bushmaster used in its advertising, like the man card thing, were
specifically designed to appeal to troubled young people like the shooter in the Newtown case.
The first strategy then is to go after the gun makers
for knowingly selling guns to a person
who might use them to harm someone.
And the second strategy is to go after the gun makers
for marketing, for appealing to people
who were prone to violence.
Right, that's right.
And what happens in court with those strategies?
So they go to state court in Connecticut, and the court throws both claims out.
The judge says negligent entrustment just doesn't work.
But she also gave a hint to the lawyers on the predicate exemption side of their case.
She said she was bound by a previous ruling to decide against them on the marketing claim.
But she kind of hinted that if they appealed, the Connecticut Supreme Court might overrule her.
So that's what they did.
And in March of this year, they got a decision.
Today, huge, hugely, hugely important ruling in Connecticut.
The Connecticut Supreme Court ruled Sandy Hook family's Ken Sue Remington
for how it marketed the AR-15-style rifle used in the school shooting
that killed 20 children and six educators.
The lawsuit challenges...
So in March of this year,
the Connecticut Supreme Court basically gave the go-ahead for this lawsuit.
That seems pretty consequential.
Well, we know that the gun manufacturers are almost certainly going to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.
But you're right, it is very consequential,
and it's consequential for a few reasons.
First of all, you know, it could set the stage for other families
to pursue similar suits around the country,
providing kind of a legal roadmap for ways to get around PLACA.
And then if the suit goes to trial,
the families are hoping to get internal documents from the gun makers in much the same way as plaintiffs in the tobacco cases got internal documents from the tobacco companies showing all of their deceptive marketing practices and things that they knew about how their product was harmful, etc.
product was harmful, etc. And if that happens, it could really be a whole new ballgame. It could change the national discourse around guns. We could see maybe gun makers being regulated
or more lawsuits, and that could be, in effect, the undoing of PLACA.
David, I want to understand, what do you want to happen? What do you see as the best case scenario for how this strategy ends?
as the best case scenario for how this strategy ends?
I would like the firearms industry to change the way they think about marketing their products.
And I would like our culture to accept that there are some of these consumer products that need to be regulated more carefully.
What do you make of the argument that it isn't fair to hold the gun
manufacturers accountable for the way people use their product? That, you know, everyone who buys
a gun understands that it's a lethal weapon. They aren't learning that from advertising.
What do you make of that? That's certainly true.
If you're going to put the most lethal consumer product ever devised out into the public,
then you ought to bear some responsibility for how you do that,
the method by which you do that.
So, you know as well as anyone that the gun lobby in this country is really powerful, how likely do you think it is
that this small step, this small but important step, makes a change?
The gun lobby in this country is powerful because people have had their eye on other
things for 40 years and they haven't been paying attention.
But that may not always be true.
Things change.
Cultural attitudes change.
It takes a long time, but it does happen.
And we have a long cultural history of changing things so that needless death is avoided.
And the next time you get a prescription at CVS, right?
The pill bottle top.
Designated drivers didn't exist 40 years ago.
These are examples of us as a culture working to stop needless death.
Unnecessary death. David, thank you so much. Of course.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
Thank you very much, everyone.
Are you a citizen of the United States of America?
Oh, gee, I'm sorry.
I just can't answer that question.
On Thursday evening,
during a speech in the Rose Garden,
President Trump said he would end his effort to put a question about citizenship
on the 2020 census,
but would instead seek the same information
through other means.
Today, I'm here to say we are not backing down
on our effort
to determine the citizenship status of the United States population.
Having been blocked by the courts,
Trump said he would direct government agencies to provide every record needed
to count the number of non-citizens in the U.S.
Knowing this information is vital to formulating sound public policy, whether the issue is health care, education, civil rights, or immigration.
We must have a reliable count of how many citizens, non-citizens, and illegal aliens are in our country.
And the Times reports that beginning on Sunday,
the Trump administration will carry out a series of nationwide raids to arrest and deport thousands of undocumented immigrants.
The raids will target about 2,000 immigrants
who were ordered to leave the country but remained anyway
and are a show of force designed to discourage more migrants
from trying to cross the southern border.
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