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Related: About this forumQuartermasters of the cartels - US gun manufacturers. Mexico seeks to dam 'iron river' of cartel guns flowing in from US
The U.S. Supreme Court is considering whether Mexico can sue U.S. gun manufacturers for their part in the drug cartel violence south of the border.
Mexico is suing U.S. gun manufacturers, including Smith & Wesson, claiming the U.S. gun industry is turning a blind eye to the illegal trafficking of high-powered weapons across the border. Mexico is seeking $10 billion from gun producers in damages.
As U.S. and Mexico officials jockey to address border security issues and U.S. fentanyl addiction, Mexico's President Claudia Sheinbaum early this month stressed that to stop the flow of drugs into the United States, the U.S. too must address the trafficking of weapons into Mexico.
Mexico's attorney, Catherine Stetson, argued that weapons companies are aiding and abetting criminal networks through the sale of weapons that are smuggled into the country across the border. She pointed out that 90% of weapon sellers are law-abiding, it is the 5% are selling to these criminal networks that are responsible for violence. The attorney also cited the promotion and sale of guns that are "coveted" by cartels.
https://www.elpasotimes.com/story/news/politics/2025/03/20/supreme-court-considers-mexico-lawsuit-against-us-gun-manufacturers/81941099007/

yourout
(8,339 posts)Should be one of their adds.
multigraincracker
(35,281 posts)Plus most of the fentanyl is brought through Ports of Entry by Gringos.
underpants
(189,674 posts)Mexico has extremely strict gun control laws, with only one military-run gun store, the Directorate of Arms and Munitions Sales (DCAM), located on a military base outside Mexico City, where civilians can legally purchase firearms.