News

Mexico is expelling 26 high-ranking cartel figures to the United States in the latest major deal with the President Donald ...
Three Texas men have been arrested for allegedly buying assault rifles for Mexican cartels, authorities claimed ...
The Supreme Court tossed Mexico’s $10-billion lawsuit against U.S. gun makers, but the case forced U.S. officials to acknowledge that thousands of guns are smuggled into Mexico from the United ...
Instead of villainizing guns and suing gunmakers, Mexico should take a lesson from defensive gun use in the United States.
Last week, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of seven American gun manufacturers that Mexico had charged with aiding illegal gun sales to drug cartels. In the aftermath, it has somehow escaped ...
In 2021, Mexico sued several gun manufacturers and one gun distributor under a variety of tort claims, trying to hold them liable for the gun-violence epidemic harming the country.
The U.S. Supreme Court has unanimously rejected a $10 billion lawsuit by the Mexican government against U.S. gun manufacturers. Mexico had accused Smith & Wesson, Colt, Glock and other companies ...
The Supreme Court tossed Mexico's $10-billion lawsuit against U.S. gun makers, but the case forced U.S. officials to acknowledge that thousands of guns are smuggled into Mexico from the United States.
Finding in favor of Mexico, the appellate court reversed the decision, deciding that Mexico had sufficiently shown that the manufacturers aided and abetted gun dealers’ unlawful sales to Mexican ...
Mexico argued that gun companies knowingly facilitated trafficking, but the court sided with manufacturers.
Firearms manufacturers challenging the case argued that Mexico had not established direct links between the companies and cartels and that no new information was presented.
Mexico will continue its lawsuit against five Arizona gun dealers despite a U.S. Supreme Court ruling Thursday tossing a similar case against gun manufacturers.