
IMAGE SOURCE, AFP Image caption, The gun makers called Mexico’s lawsuit a “clash of national values”
Mexico is seeking billions in damages, accusing manufacturers of facilitating the illegal trafficking of weapons.
The firms, including Smith & Wesson, argue their sales are constitutionally protected in the US, calling Mexico’s lawsuit a “clash of national values”.
In 2019 alone, some 17,000 murders in Mexico were linked to trafficked arms.
Mexico’s strict rules on arms sales mean they can only be purchased legally at one shop in Mexico City.
Mexico says criminal organisations therefore buy thousands of weapons in the US. A US department found that some 70% of firearms recovered in Mexico between 2014 and 2018 had come from the US.
It said the companies had sold “ever-more lethal” weapons without “mechanisms of security or traceability”.
On Monday the gun makers, including Glock, Colt’s and Baretta, said in a motion to dismiss that their firearms were purchased lawfully in the US and that the sales were protected by the US constitution.
The firms said that while Mexico had acted to eliminate private gun ownership, the US recognised the right to keep and bear arms, and that Mexico could not apply its gun laws across borders.
They said Mexico was seeking to “bankrupt US gun makers” and the lawsuit “threatens America’s constitutional freedoms”.
Several Mexican governments have in the past urged the United States to halt illicit trafficking of firearms.