The other day, someone made a comment about how all these suits against manufacturers were against the PLCAA and I responded that they were using state laws, not Federal ones. I can't find the text, so I can't provide the specific exchange, but I found a portion of this article to be directly on point...
Advancing Michigan bill would repeal legal protections for gun industry
Advancing Michigan bill would repeal legal protections for gun industry
...A 2005 federal law already provides liability protections for firearms manufacturers.
That federal policy "would still block some victims' lawsuits, but state lawmakers have significant authority to draft this legislation in a manner that empowers victims to make it through the cracks left open in the federal industry immunity law if they so choose," said Ari Freilich, state policy director at the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence...
One exception to the federal protection allows victims of gun violence to sue if they can prove they were harmed by a firearm industry member's knowing violation of a state law regulating the firearm industry, Freilich said.
"In other words, even as Congress generally shielded the firearm industry from many common law tort actions and judicially created doctrines, it specifically preserved state legislatures' central role in enacting statutes governing firearm industry responsibilities and accountability," he added. "What states choose to do with that authority is up to their lawmakers today."
Freilich called on Michigan legislators to replace the current immunity protections with "a firearm industry standard of responsible business conduct that clearly authorizes victims of gun violence to have their day in court if they can prove they were harmed by a firearm industry member's knowing violations of that state law regulating firearm industry commerce."...
That federal policy "would still block some victims' lawsuits, but state lawmakers have significant authority to draft this legislation in a manner that empowers victims to make it through the cracks left open in the federal industry immunity law if they so choose," said Ari Freilich, state policy director at the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence...
One exception to the federal protection allows victims of gun violence to sue if they can prove they were harmed by a firearm industry member's knowing violation of a state law regulating the firearm industry, Freilich said.
"In other words, even as Congress generally shielded the firearm industry from many common law tort actions and judicially created doctrines, it specifically preserved state legislatures' central role in enacting statutes governing firearm industry responsibilities and accountability," he added. "What states choose to do with that authority is up to their lawmakers today."
Freilich called on Michigan legislators to replace the current immunity protections with "a firearm industry standard of responsible business conduct that clearly authorizes victims of gun violence to have their day in court if they can prove they were harmed by a firearm industry member's knowing violations of that state law regulating firearm industry commerce."...
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