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MEXICO COMES KNOCKING
A seemingly ridiculous plan by the Mexican government to sue
u.s. gunmakers for drug-cartel
violence south of the border could spell doom for America’s firearm industry. America's 1st Freedom. Oct. 2011.
By Dave Kopel
Certainly,
the Mexican government has legitimate grounds for a lawsuit against Obama
administration staffers and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives (batfe) employees who
organized “Operation Fast and Furious.” That “investigation” coerced licensed
firearm dealers into selling guns to straw purchasers who were plainly buying
guns on behalf of criminals.
As the result of that Obama/batfe
fiasco, approximately 2,500 guns were put into the hands of criminals, and many
of them were taken to Mexico for use by drug cartels, especially the Zetas.
Subsequently, the guns have been used in many shootings, homicides and other
crimes in Mexico.
“Operation Fast and Furious” was, in fact, a plain violation of
u.s. law—specifically the Arms
Export Control Act, which prohibits anyone from exporting firearms to other
countries unless the u.s. State
Department issues a permit. There is no “law enforcement” exception that would
apply to “Fast and Furious.”
The United States has the legal authority to bring cases against people in
foreign countries who organize conspiracies to smuggle illegal weapons into the
United States with the intent that those weapons end up in the hands of
gangsters. Likewise, Mexico has the legal authority to file lawsuits—or even
criminal charges—against Americans who intentionally conspire to promote illegal
gun smuggling into Mexico.
The Mexican government has every right to be furious about “Operation Fast and
Furious.” Indeed, the government has said that it wants to extradite the “Fast
and Furious” perpetrators to Mexico for criminal trial. Unfortunately, Mexican
President Felipe Calderón also is laying plans for baseless lawsuits against
law-abiding Americans.
In conjunction with President Barack Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
and Attorney General Eric Holder, Mexico’s Calderón spent late 2008 and early
2009 loudly complaining that guns from the United States constitute about 90
percent of Mexican “crime guns.” Shortly thereafter, the Obama administration’s
“Fast and Furious” program began, which would have the immediate and inevitable
effect of increasing the number of American guns used in Mexican crimes.
However, the Obama-Calderón team was not able to convince Congress that cracking
down on law-abiding Americans is the solution to Mexico’s drug cartel problem.
Moreover, the assertions about American guns in Mexico turned out to be greatly
exaggerated. Only a fraction of crime guns found in Mexico are traced by
batfe agents. Most of the traces
fail. Many of the American guns turn out to have originally been supplied to the
Mexican army or police, and then given to Mexican gangsters by corrupt Mexican
government employees.
A report by the u.s. Department
of Justice revealed that the average age of an American gun found in Mexico is
14 years. That shows that the American guns in Mexico are mainly guns that are
stolen one at a time in the United States and sold into the black market, where
some of them get taken to Mexico. In other words, the typical American gun found
in Mexico is not a new firearm that was recently purchased from a gun store in
the southwest u.s.
The Calderón government, however, seems willfully oblivious to the facts. Not surprising, since yanqui-bashing has long been politically popular in Mexico. According to Mexico’s ambassador to the United States, American gun stores could be described as “providers of material support to terrorists.” (In an April 11, 2011, letter to the Dallas Morning News, the ambassador argued against the claim that Mexican cartels were “terrorists.” He said that if they were, then American gun stores were terrorist supporters.)
Never mind the fact that every time an American gun store sells a firearm, the
store first must get permission from the
fbi’s National Instant Check System or a state police equivalent.
And never mind that the only way that American gun manufacturers sell firearms
to consumers is via federally licensed firearm dealers who only make a sale
after approval from the government.
None of those facts has stood in the way of the Mexican government taking steps
to sue American gunmakers. The Mexican government has already hired a law firm:
Reid, Collins & Tsai. That firm, with offices in New York City and Austin,
Texas, is a boutique firm specializing in innovative cases. They were retained
by Mexico on Nov. 2, 2010.
Where would such a lawsuit take place? Well, one obvious place is in a Mexican
court. None of the American state and federal protections against abusive
anti-gun lawsuits would apply in a Mexican court. Of course, the Mexican
government, in a Mexican court, would be the “home team.” It would not be fair
to say that all Mexican courts are corrupt, but it would be realistic to
acknowledge that Mexico’s federal government would have the ability to pressure
Mexican judges.
Why would a Mexican court have jurisdiction over American gunmakers? To start
with, many American gunmakers have voluntarily done business in Mexico by
selling guns there. The vast majority of such sales are to the America and other
nations.
What about the American gunmakers who do not sell to Mexico? Getting
Mexican court jurisdiction over them would be hard, but not necessarily
impossible. The Mexican government could allege that the American manufacturers
knew, or should have known, that the manner in which they sell guns in the
United States would inevitably have consequences in Mexico.
Following a victory in a Mexican court, likely including an award of millions of
dollars in damages, the Mexican government could then ask an American court to
seize the money in the American gunmakers’ bank accounts, or to seize their
other assets, such as manufacturing equipment, buildings or land. American
courts are usually willing to enforce judgments from foreign courts unless there
was some procedural irregularity in the foreign court. So as long as the Mexican
government is careful to play by the rules in the Mexican court, the result
could be the financial destruction of American gunmakers.
Another potential venue is the International Court of Justice. Informally known
as the “World Court,” the icj is
located in The Hague, Netherlands. It is part of the United Nations, which
should tell you all you need to know about its probable attitude towards gun
rights and citizen gun ownership.
In April 2010, Chicago’s then- Mayor Richard Daley held the 10th annual “Richard
j. Daley Global Cities Forum,”
with mayors from around the world. At the event, Daley announced the idea of
suing American gun manufacturers in the World Court. Also endorsing the idea was
Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter and Mexico City Mayor Marcelo Ebrard Casaubón.
The World Court can only issue binding decisions in nation vs. nation suits. For
example, a current case is Costa Rica v. Nicaragua, brought by Costa Rica
because the Marxist Sandinista government of Nicaragua has been sending its
military across the border and has built military camps in Costa Rica.
Thus, a World Court case would have to be Mexico v. United States of America.
Unlike some nations, the United States has not given blanket consent to World
Court jurisdiction, so the World Court could hear the case only if the Obama
administration allowed it.
It’s not hard to imagine the Obama administration doing so and then putting up a
deliberately weak “defense” in the World Court. The result could be a World
Court order that the u.s.
government impose drastic new restrictions on gunmakers and gun owners. The
Obama administration would then have the perfect pretext of “international law
requirements” to create all sorts of harsh new regulations. American courts
could uphold those regulations since they would supposedly be necessary for the
American government to comply with its obligations under international law.
The other possible international court for a Mexican government case would be
the Inter-American Court of Human Rights located in Costa Rica. This court is
part of the Organization of American States (oas),
a group which is quite hostile to gun ownership.
The Obama administration has been attempting—so far unsuccessfully—to get the
Senate to adopt the oas’ gun
control treaty, known as cifta.
As I explained in a policy study for the Heritage Foundation,
cifta would obligate the
u.s. government to impose drastic
new gun controls. [“The
oas Firearms Convention Is
Incompatible with American Liberties.”]
Again, the Obama administration would have to cooperate in order for the
Inter-American Court to hear the case. The result could be the same as from the
World Court: a mandatory international obligation for the
u.s. federal government to impose
severe regulations on gun owners and gunmakers.
The final possibility for the Mexican suit is in an American federal court. The
Calderón government could cherry-pick a court with the most anti-gun judges. Or
the government could follow the strategy of the anti-gun lawsuits that the Brady
Center masterminded in 1998-1999—sue in many courts all over the United States,
the better to force the gun manufacturers to defend a plethora of suits all at
once and to prevent them from sharing their legal costs.
The Mexican lawsuit, or lawsuits, would, of course, have a serious obstacle. The
2005 Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (plcaa)
prohibits nearly all anti-gun suits except those arising from criminal conduct
on the part of a gunmaker or gun seller. Many states have similar laws, although
not all are as strong and comprehensive as the
plcaa.
The Mexican government could allege that the firearm retailers are engaged in
criminal conduct by knowingly selling to retailers (or by selling to wholesalers
who sell to such retailers) who violate federal law by selling guns to straw
purchasers or other illegal buyers.
Such a claim would be very difficult to prove because it isn’t true. But the
Brady Center makes this claim all the time, and the thin collection of bogus
“facts” that the Brady Center cites in support of the claim might be enough for
a court to decide not to throw the case out immediately. Then, the Mexican
government could engage in “discovery.” It would have the legal right to go on
fishing expeditions into the documents of the gun manufacturers and to
interrogate their employees at length. The hope would be that enough evidence
could be found to keep the case going, and that perhaps a judge who is hostile
to Second Amendment rights might eventually rule in Mexico’s favor.
Alternatively, or additionally, Mexico could attack the
plcaa itself. This would be an
uphill battle, since the Brady Center has already launched numerous failed legal
attacks on the plcaa.
The u.s. Supreme Court, however,
has never ruled on the plcaa. So
the strategy of the Mexican government could be to accept some defeats in lower
courts while moving the case toward the Supreme Court.
The process would probably take several years, which could give President Obama
(if he is re-elected in 2012) time to appoint more anti-gun justices to the
u.s. Supreme Court. An
Obama-dominated court could throw out the
plcaa entirely. Or the court
could invent some kind of implicit exception to the
plcaa so that the Mexican lawsuit
could succeed. All it would take is one more Obama appointment. In District
of Columbia v. Heller (2008) and McDonald v. Chicago (2010), the
Second Amendment only survived by a single vote in 5-4 decisions.
In any American court, the government of Mexico would be an especially powerful
plaintiff. Most judges spend their entire careers without ever hearing a case
brought by a foreign government. Any judge will understand that it would be a
national security disaster for the United States if the Mexican government were
to be overthrown by the cartels and Mexico became a narco-state. Some
intelligence analysts are speculating that the Mexican cartels might attempt a
takeover in the next year or two.
Yet if the Mexican government is in danger, Americans are not to blame. Still,
judges tend to be cautious people, and if the Mexican government comes into
court claiming that its survival depends on a judge overturning the
plcaa and cracking down on
American gun rights, some judges might be persuadable. That could be more likely
if the Obama administration were filing friend-of-the-court briefs in support of
the Mexican government.
Whatever constraints a desire for re-election may place on Barack Obama’s
anti-gun ideology, those constraints will immediately vanish on Nov. 7, 2012. A
Mexican government lawsuit, ultimately decided by Obama-appointed judges, could
wipe out American gun manufacturers—all without a need for any judge to formally
overrule Heller and repudiate the Second Amendment. |
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