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Spotlight Put on Limits on Gun Torts in Mass Shootings

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Sun, 08/28/2016 - 18:53

Here is a recent piece I wrote for the Connecticut Law Tribune about the limits on liability for mass shootings:

The debate over guns usually brings to mind the Second Amendment and legislators passing laws about background checks and keeping guns out of the hands of people on the terrorist watch list or with mental health problems.

An event last week at the American Museum of Tort Law in Winsted highlighted the role of tort law in addressing the shooting of unarmed people. Speakers included Connecticut U.S. Sens. Chris Murphy and Richard Blumenthal and plaintiffs attorney Joshua Koskoff.

Koskoff is prosecuting a tort lawsuit on behalf of some of the families of the children killed in the Sandy Hook school shooting against Remington Arms Co., which manufactured the "Bushmaster" AR-15 rifle used by Adam Lanza to kill six adults and 20 children in 2012.

In an interview prior to the event, Murphy said that the purpose of tort law is to give victims a means of redress and, as a result, "tort law has had an ancillary benefit over the years in making products safer."

But, according to Murphy, victims of gun violence cannot get the same means of justice as other victims of civil wrongs can.

He points to the federal Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA), which was enacted 11 years ago and bans lawsuits against firearms manufacturers for harms resulting from the criminal or lawful misuse of those type of products.

The PLCAA "represents the apex of the gun industry's power," Murphy said.

However, Murphy said the political influence of the gun industry is clearly on the decline and it is now playing defense, not offense, on legislation. "There was a period of time when they were getting anything they wanted," he said.

Murphy rose to national attention for giving a 14-plus hour filibuster in June until the Senate acted on gun control legislation.

Koskoff, an attorney with Koskoff Koskoff & Bieder, has a pessimistic view of the PLCAA, saying it was hard to imagine a more favorable law to the gun industry, especially in comparison to the laws of other countries.

The plaintiffs in the Sandy Hook lawsuit have been successful in arguing that the PLCAA does not prevent them from prosecuting their theory that the AR-15 is a military weapon that should not have been sold to civilians.

In an interview after the event, Koskoff said that he explained in his remarks that the theory of the Sandy Hook case is that the AR-15 is uniquely perilous among other guns because it was created for the military to kill enemies in war.

The theory is that the gun is a dangerous instrument and it is negligently entrusted by Remington by selling he AR-15 to civilians who go on to use the gun in fatal shootings at schools, holiday parties and nightclubs, Koskoff said.

The lawsuit does not present theories that the AR-15 was defective or that the AR-15 is more dangerous than it needs to be, Koskoff added.

By participating in the museum event, Koskoff said he learned how interested the community is in the issue of gun violence and how they can help make things safer. "We can't just go on the way we've been going," Koskoff said. "It's not consistent with a thriving civilization."

Tort law not only provides a remedy to people who have gone through a terrible loss, but it creates a deterrence for wrongdoers and helps inform their future choices, Koskoff added.

"Without that you have no incentive for industry to act in a manner that keeps us all safer," Koskoff said.

Rick Newman, the executive director of the museum, said that the museum is holding events to highlight the benefits of tort law in making life better for everyone.

"Tort law really benefits people by compensation but also by deterrence and disclosure of wrongdoing," Newman said.

This spring, the museum had an event about how tort law has exposed patterns of sexual abuse in religious institutions. The museum also is planning a program in the future about sports and torts.

Last week's program highlighted the tension between "how do we preserve and protect the Constitution [with its] right to bear arms and, at the same time, balance people's fear against sudden, random, mass slaughter," Newman said.

Newman said he does not have a position on where to draw the line, but that he wants the museum to be part of convening that conversation.

Sandy Hook Families Sue School Over Shooting

Two families of children killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting two years ago have sued the town of Newtown over allegedy lax security at the school, the Hartford Courant's Dave Altimari reports. The lawsuit alleges that a substitute teacher "had neither a key to lock the door nor any knowledge of the … safety and security protocols rehearsed at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in case an intruder or other dangerous individual gained access to the school." In that classroom, shooter Adam Lanza killed all but one girl.

 

Families Sue Gunmaker Over Sandy Hook Shooting

The families of 20 first-graders killed by Adam Lanza at a Connecticut elementary school have sued the manufacturer of the military assault rifle used in the school shooting, Bloomberg's Phil Milford and Christian Dolmetsch reports. Lawyers for the families said in a statement that the Bushmaster Firearms International LLC rifle was specifically designed for combat, not for defending one's home or for hunting.

Milford and Dolmetsch report that the complaint alleges "Bushmaster knew or should have known that selling assault rifles to civilians posed an 'unreasonable and egregious' risk of injury to others."

The lawsuit also names names "Camfor, a firearm wholesaler, and Riverview Gun Sales, the East Windsor store where the gun was purchased by Lanza's mother, Nancy," the Connecticut Law Tribune reported. Lanza also killed his mother with the gun before killing 20 children, six adults and himself at the Sandy Hook Elementary School.
 

Sandy Hook Families May Sue Gunmaker

Parents of children killed in the Sandy Hook school shooting two years ago have filed wrongful death claim notices on the behalf of their children, the Hartford Courant's Dave Altimari reports. Filing the notice does not mean that the parents will definitely proceed with lawsuits, and no defendants are filed in the notice. But Altimari indicates that "sources said several families met over the weekend with lawyers from Koskoff, Koskoff & Bieder, a Bridgeport law firm, to discuss a potential lawsuit against Bushmaster, the North Carolina-based manufacturer of the Bushmaster AR 15 that Adam Lanza used to kill 20 first-graders and six adults on Dec. 14, 2012." Other lawyers are considering a lawsuit against the town of Newtown or its school board regarding the secuirty at the school or suing the estate of Nancy Lanza, the mother of Adam Lanza.

23 Attorney Generals Challenge CT's Gun Laws

Connecticut enacted the strongest gun laws in the country in the wake of the Sandy Hook school shooting. Now 23 attorney generals from other states are joining a challenge to the constitutionality of those laws, the Connecticut Law Tribune's Jay Stapleton reports. The coalition of attorney generals filed a similar amicus brief to challenge New York's gun laws.

"The coalition claims Connecticut's gun law violates the law established in [the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in District of Columbia v.] Heller by banning versions of the AR–15 semi-automatic rifle, which is popular with hunters and sports shooters. It was also the type of weapon used in the Newtown shootings that killed 26 students and educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School on Dec. 14, 2012," Stapleton writes.

A Year Ago I Spent Christmas in Newtown

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Wed, 12/25/2013 - 16:57

A year ago I spent Christmas with my husband in Newtown, Connecticut, as he covered the community in the wake of the Sandy Hook school shootings. Such grave loss was a reminder to be grateful for what is good in a time that should be about happiness and celebration, not hate and condolence. Here is the blog I wrote a year ago today on the experience

When I envisioned spending Christmas accompanying my photojournalist husband on his holiday photo assignments, I envisioned I would be going to something like last year's assignment when he covered a grandfather surprising his family by arriving on Christmas in a Santa Claus suit when his normal custom is to spend the day of mistletoe in Florida. I did not envision I would walk down a slush-filled street as a Desi family walked up the slope with the mother holding a bouquet of flowers in her arms and each of her three children holding a stuffed animal. They were bound to add their own material act of witness to the hundreds of other such acts making up one of the memorials to the schoolchildren and the school administrators murdered 11 days ago in Newtown, Connecticut.  Newtown is like many other New England towns made pretty by bubbling brooks, steep hillsides impregnated with impressive boulders, and with handsome stone and clapboard churches. Just as there was across many towns in New England, there was a white Christmas today. But the snow fell on the stuffed animals, poems and Christmas ornaments of several memorials, several acts of mourning stations. Jason's assignment was to go with a reporter from Texas to document how people were spending the holiday in this traumatized town. Last night's snowfall was melting. The scent of vanilla was on the air from the candles burning, and there were sparrows chirping in the trees overhead. The formal dress shop--which one of the memorials stretches in front of--changed the gowns displayed in its windows to green-and-white: the colors of the school where the shooting happened. Across from the memorial at the drive up to the school is an old graveyard where the last dead were buried in 1942. Does it make it better to know that sorrow is not a new thing, that generations before have always been so burdened? Another memorial is at the village center, spread across a bridge. Someone has written in spraypaint under the bridge: "We have everything and we have nothing. Small and unstable we self-destruct. We are sleeping sheep and there are wolves among us." I prefer to focus on the signs posted, elsewhere and everywhere, in the town: "We are Sandy Hook. We choose love." Today, in memoriam, I choose love.

CT Task Force Votes to Narrow Freedom of Information

The Connecticut legislative panel, appointed to examine restrictions on access to records in the wake of the Sandy Hook school shooting, voted 14-3 to recommend "setting up a new system that will allow the public, including members of the media, to privately inspect [crime photos, 911 audio tapes and other information from homicides], also including video and internal police communications from a homicide. They would then go through a process to obtain actual copies, ultimately having to prove there's a strong public interest in the information," the Associated Press reports. It is not unknown if Connecticut legislators will adopt the recommendation.

The panel would shift the burden onto the media or other members of the public requesting the information.

The taskforce also recommended that "the identity of minors who witness a crime of violence, sexual offense or drug offense should not be disclosed," the AP reports.

After AP's Long Fight to Get Sandy Hook 911 Calls, 'Anguish and Tension' Shown

After a nearly year-long open-records fight, a prosecutor relented on his opposition to the Associated Press's request to get copies of the 911 calls made as Adam Lanza shot schoolchildren and school professionals within 11 minutes of entering Sandy Hook Elementary School. The calls were released today, according to the AP. 

Teresa Rousseau, whose daughter Lauren was among the six educators killed and an editor at the Danbury News-Times, said "there was no need to play the tapes on the radio or television," the AP said. '"I think there's a big difference between secrecy and privacy," she said. "We have these laws so government isn't secret, not so we're invading victims' privacy,'" the AP also reported.

CT Prosecutor Ends Fight to Block Disclosure of Sandy Hook 911 Calls to Associated Press

The Associated Press reports that prosecutor State's Attorney Stephen Sedensky III announced today he will no longer fight against the disclosure of 911 calls made as Adam Lanza shot schoolchildren and school officials at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. Last week, Sedensky was ordered by a trial judge to release the 911 calls to the Associated Press. The AP says it wants to review the recordings, in part, to scrutinize the law enforcement response to the mass shooting.

Judge Orders Release of Sandy Hook 911 Calls

The Connecticut Mirror reports that Superior Court Judge Eliot D. Prescott ordered the release of 911 calls made after Adam Lanza opened fire at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., unless he is overturned on appeal.

'"Delaying the release of the audio recordings, particularly where the legal justification to keep them confidential is lacking, only serves to fuel speculation about and undermines confidence in our law enforcement officials,'" The Connecticut Mirror reported the judge opining.

The judge rejected all of the prosecution's argument to keep the 911 calls out of the public, including that releasing the calls would "have a chilling effect on those who might need to call 911," The Connecticut Mirror further reported.

The Associated Press is seeking the 911 calls.

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