diff --git "a/data/CHRG-109/CHRG-109hhrg20015.txt" "b/data/CHRG-109/CHRG-109hhrg20015.txt" new file mode 100644--- /dev/null +++ "b/data/CHRG-109/CHRG-109hhrg20015.txt" @@ -0,0 +1,2530 @@ + + - PROTECTION OF LAWFUL COMMERCE IN ARMS ACT +
+[House Hearing, 109 Congress]
+[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
+
+
+
+                         PROTECTION OF LAWFUL 
+                          COMMERCE IN ARMS ACT
+
+=======================================================================
+
+                                HEARING
+
+                               BEFORE THE
+
+                            SUBCOMMITTEE ON
+                   COMMERCIAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE LAW
+
+                                 OF THE
+
+                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
+                        HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
+
+                       ONE HUNDRED NINTH CONGRESS
+
+                             FIRST SESSION
+
+                                   ON
+
+                                H.R. 800
+
+                               __________
+
+                             MARCH 15, 2005
+
+                               __________
+
+                           Serial No. 109-21
+
+                               __________
+
+         Printed for the use of the Committee on the Judiciary
+
+
+    Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.house.gov/judiciary
+
+
+                                 ______
+
+                    U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
+20-015                      WASHINGTON : 2005
+_____________________________________________________________________________
+For Sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office
+Internet: bookstore.gpo.gov  Phone: toll free (866) 512-1800; (202) 512�091800  
+Fax: (202) 512�092250 Mail: Stop SSOP, Washington, DC 20402�090001
+
+                       COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
+
+            F. JAMES SENSENBRENNER, Jr., Wisconsin, Chairman
+HENRY J. HYDE, Illinois              JOHN CONYERS, Jr., Michigan
+HOWARD COBLE, North Carolina         HOWARD L. BERMAN, California
+LAMAR SMITH, Texas                   RICK BOUCHER, Virginia
+ELTON GALLEGLY, California           JERROLD NADLER, New York
+BOB GOODLATTE, Virginia              ROBERT C. SCOTT, Virginia
+STEVE CHABOT, Ohio                   MELVIN L. WATT, North Carolina
+DANIEL E. LUNGREN, California        ZOE LOFGREN, California
+WILLIAM L. JENKINS, Tennessee        SHEILA JACKSON LEE, Texas
+CHRIS CANNON, Utah                   MAXINE WATERS, California
+SPENCER BACHUS, Alabama              MARTIN T. MEEHAN, Massachusetts
+BOB INGLIS, South Carolina           WILLIAM D. DELAHUNT, Massachusetts
+JOHN N. HOSTETTLER, Indiana          ROBERT WEXLER, Florida
+MARK GREEN, Wisconsin                ANTHONY D. WEINER, New York
+RIC KELLER, Florida                  ADAM B. SCHIFF, California
+DARRELL ISSA, California             LINDA T. SANCHEZ, California
+JEFF FLAKE, Arizona                  ADAM SMITH, Washington
+MIKE PENCE, Indiana                  CHRIS VAN HOLLEN, Maryland
+J. RANDY FORBES, Virginia
+STEVE KING, Iowa
+TOM FEENEY, Florida
+TRENT FRANKS, Arizona
+LOUIE GOHMERT, Texas
+
+             Philip G. Kiko, Chief of Staff-Genral Counsel
+               Perry H. Apelbaum, Minority Chief Counsel
+                                 ------                                
+
+           Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law
+
+                      CHRIS CANNON, Utah Chairman
+
+HOWARD COBLE, North Carolina         MELVIN L. WATT, North Carolina
+TRENT FRANKS, Arizona                WILLIAM D. DELAHUNT, Massachusetts
+STEVE CHABOT, Ohio                   ADAM SMITH, Washington
+MARK GREEN, Wisconsin                CHRIS VAN HOLLEN, Maryland
+RANDY J. FORBES, Virginia            JERROLD NADLER, New York
+LOUIE GOHMERT, Texas
+
+                  Raymond V. Smietanka, Chief Counsel
+
+                        Susan A. Jensen, Counsel
+
+                  James Daley, Full Committee Counsel
+
+                   Stephanie Moore, Minority Counsel
+
+
+                            C O N T E N T S
+
+                              ----------                              
+
+                             MARCH 15, 2005
+
+                           OPENING STATEMENT
+
+                                                                   Page
+The Honorable Chris Cannon, a Representative in Congress from the 
+  State of Utah, and Chairman, Subcommittee on Commercial and 
+  Administrative Law.............................................     1
+The Honorable Melvin L. Watt, a Representative in Congress from 
+  the State of North Carolina, and Ranking Member, Subcommittee 
+  on Commercial and Administrative Law...........................     3
+The Honorable Steve Chabot, a Representative in Congress from the 
+  State of Ohio..................................................     4
+The Honorable Chris Van Hollen, a Representative in Congress from 
+  the State of Maryland..........................................     6
+The Honorable Howard Coble, a Representative in Congress from the 
+  State of North Carolina........................................     7
+The Honorable John Conyers, Jr., a Representative in Congress 
+  from the State of Michigan, and Ranking Member, Committee on 
+  the Judiciary..................................................     8
+The Honorable Louie Gohmert, a Representative in Congress from 
+  the State of Texas.............................................     8
+
+                               WITNESSES
+
+Mr. Rodd C. Walton, Secretary and General Counsel, Sigarms, Inc.
+  Oral Testimony.................................................    10
+  Prepared Statement.............................................    12
+Mr. Dennis A. Henigan, Director, Legal Action Project, Brady 
+  Center to Prevent Gun Violence
+  Oral Testimony.................................................    13
+  Prepared Statement.............................................    15
+Mr. Bradley T. Beckman, Counsel, Beckman and Associates, Counsel 
+  to North American Arms
+  Oral Testimony.................................................    25
+  Prepared Statement.............................................    26
+Mr. Lawrence G. Keane, Senior Vice President and General Counsel, 
+  National Shooting Sports Foundation, Inc.
+  Oral Testimony.................................................    27
+  Prepared Statement.............................................    29
+
+                                APPENDIX
+               Material Submitted for the Hearing Record
+
+Prepared Statement of the Honorable Chris Cannon, a 
+  Representative in Congress from the State of Utah, and 
+  Chairman, Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law....    55
+Prepared Statement of the Honorable Cliff Stearns, a 
+  Representative in Congress from the State of Florida...........    57
+H.R. 1225, the ``Terrorist Apprehension and Record Retention 
+  (TARR) Act of 2005''...........................................    59
+GAO Report entitled ``GUN CONTROL AND TERRORISM: FBI Could Better 
+  Manage Firearm-Related Background Checks Involving Terrorist 
+  Watch List Records.............................................    62
+The ARMS site description of FN's Five-seveN Pistol..............   105
+H.R. 1136, the ``Protect Law Enforcement Armor (PLEA) Act''......   108
+News Articles for the record offered by the Honorable John 
+  Conyers, Jr., a Representative in Congress from the State of 
+  Michigan, and Ranking Member, Committee on the Judiciary.......   113
+Response to Post-Hearing Questions from a Minority Member to 
+  Bradley T. Beckman, Counsel, Beckman and Associates, Counsel to 
+  North American Arms............................................   133
+Article submitted by Lawrence G. Keane, Counsel, Beckman and 
+  Associates, Counsel to North American Arms.....................   138
+Op-Ed Article from New York Daily News, Sunday, January 9, 2005, 
+  submitted by Lawrence G. Keane, Counsel, Beckman and 
+  Associates, Counsel to North American Arms.....................   144
+Letter from Walter Olson, Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute for 
+  Policy Research to the Honorable Chris Cannon..................   145
+
+ 
+                         PROTECTION OF LAWFUL 
+                          COMMERCE IN ARMS ACT
+
+                              ----------                              
+
+
+                        TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 2005
+
+                  House of Representatives,
+                         Subcommittee on Commercial
+                            and Administrative Law,
+                                Committee on the Judiciary,
+                                                    Washington, DC.
+    The Subcommittee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:10 a.m., in 
+Room 2141, Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Chris Cannon 
+(Chair of the Subcommittee) presiding.
+    Mr. Cannon. Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. This 
+hearing of the Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative 
+Law will now come to order to consider today H.R. 800, the 
+``Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act,'' which was 
+introduced on February 15 by our colleague from Florida, Mr. 
+Stearns. It currently has 157 cosponsors, including me.
+    H.R. 800 addresses abusive lawsuits aimed at the firearms 
+industry. It provides that a qualified civil liability action 
+cannot be brought in any State or Federal court. Qualified 
+civil liability action is defined as a civil action or 
+proceeding brought by any person against a manufacturer or 
+seller of firearms or ammunition for damages resulting from the 
+criminal or unlawful misuse of such products.
+    There are exceptions, however. The bill does not prohibit 
+an action against a person who transfers a firearm or 
+ammunition knowing that it will be used to commit a crime of 
+violence or a drug trafficking crime or to commit an identical 
+or a comparable State felony offense. It also does not prohibit 
+an action brought against a seller for negligent entrustment or 
+negligence per se.
+    The bill also includes several additional exceptions, 
+including one for actions in which a manufacturer or seller of 
+a qualified product knowingly and willfully violates a State or 
+Federal statute applicable to sales or marketing when such 
+violation was a proximate cause of the harm for which relief is 
+sought. Other exceptions under the bill include one for actions 
+for breach of contract or warranty in connection with the 
+purchase of a firearm or ammunition and an exception for 
+actions for damages resulting directly from a defect in design 
+or manufacture of a firearm or ammunition when used as 
+intended. The bill also makes clear that only licensed 
+manufacturers and sellers are covered by the bill.
+    Tort law rests on a foundation of personal responsibility. 
+A product may not be defined as defective unless there is 
+something wrong with the product rather than with the product's 
+use. However, in the last several years, some lawsuits filed 
+against the firearms industry would hold it liable for actions 
+of those who use their products in a criminal or unlawful 
+manner. Such lawsuits threaten the historic connection between 
+tort law and personal responsibility and have forced firearms 
+manufacturers into bankruptcy, severely curtailing the recovery 
+available for those asserting traditional claims of product 
+manufacturing defects.
+    While some of these lawsuits have been dismissed and some 
+States have acted to limit them in one way or another, they 
+continue to be aggressively pursued. In January, the Supreme 
+Court refused to overturn a decision by the Ninth Circuit Court 
+of Appeals permitting such frivolous lawsuit against a gun 
+manufacturer for a crime committed by a third party. The 
+strategy behind these lawsuits is no secret. One of the 
+personal injury lawyers suing the firearms industry, John Cole, 
+told the Washington Post, quote, ``The legal fees alone are 
+enough to bankrupt the industry.'' Professor David Capel also 
+stated that the cities suing the firearms industry, quote, 
+``don't even have to win. All they have to do is keep suing. 
+They'll kill the industry with the cost of defending all the 
+lawsuits.''
+    Lawsuits seeking to hold the firearms industry responsible 
+for criminal and unlawful use of its products by others are 
+attempts to accomplish through litigation what has not been 
+achieved by legislation and the democratic process. As 
+explained by one Federal judge, quote, ``The plaintiffs' 
+attorneys simply want to eliminate handguns.'' Taking advantage 
+of our currently unregulated court system, the personal injury 
+lawyers are misusing the courts to limit the sale and 
+distribution of firearms well beyond jurisdictional boundaries. 
+A lawsuit in a single county of a State could destroy a 
+national industry, denying citizens everywhere the right to 
+keep and bear arms, a right guaranteed by the Constitution.
+    Insofar as these lawsuits have the practical effect of 
+burdening interstate commerce in firearms, Congress has the 
+authority to act under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution 
+as well as the Second Amendment. Such lawsuits also directly 
+implicate core federalism principles articulated by the Supreme 
+Court, which has made clear that, quote, ``one State's power to 
+impose burdens on the interstate market is not only subordinate 
+to the Federal power over interstate commerce, but it is also 
+constrained by the need to respect the interests of the other 
+States.''
+    The direction of this slippery slope is obvious. If the 
+judicial system is allowed to eliminate the firearms industry 
+based on legal theories holding manufacturers liable for the 
+misuse by others of its products, surely those theories will be 
+applied to other industries whose products are capable of being 
+misused. Knives, for example, are intended and used for non-
+violent purposes. They are virtually indispensable for eating. 
+Yet hundreds of thousands of violent crimes every year are 
+perpetrated with knives.
+    We have already seen multi-million-dollar lawsuits against 
+the makers of hamburgers and steaks for causes--or for damages 
+caused when people abuse those products and overeat. Surely the 
+manufacturers of steak knives will be sued next when such 
+knives are used for criminal purposes.
+    Congress must begin to stem the slide down the slippery 
+slope. It can do that by fulfilling its constitutional duty and 
+exercising its authority under the Commerce Clause to prevent a 
+few State courts from bankrupting the national firearms 
+industry and denying all Americans their fundamental right to 
+bear arms. We need to preserve the benefit of American-made 
+weapons for our soldiers overseas who are so ably defending us 
+all from terrorism. Let's not allow the American firearms 
+industry to be bankrupted so we're left to rely on foreign 
+countries to provide weapons for our own soldiers.
+    I now yield to Mr. Watt, the Ranking Member of the 
+Subcommittee, for an opening statement. Mr. Watt?
+    Mr. Watt. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I apologize to you and 
+other Members of the Subcommittee for being a minute or two 
+late. I actually was trying to get back on my schedule this 
+morning and run for a change and that threw everything off, 
+trying to get back on schedule.
+    I guess I find it interesting that the first hearing that 
+we are having this year allows me to quote a famous Republican 
+former President. ``Here we go again.'' Here you go.
+    Another year of trying to close the courthouse doors to 
+innocent victims of preventable violence of any kind. Another 
+year of radically altering and undermining our system of 
+States' rights, which so many on this Committee have given so 
+much and so much energy to saying that they support. Another 
+year of trying to confer sweeping immunity to a single 
+industry, the gun industry, in this case. Here we go again. 
+Here we go again.
+    I'd have to say, Mr. Chairman, that last year's debate on 
+this bill didn't reveal to me any reason why individuals harmed 
+by guns that were recklessly placed in the stream of commerce 
+should not be allowed to seek a remedy from those responsible, 
+including those whose negligent conduct--negligent conduct--
+resulted in dangerous weapons landing in the hands of 
+criminals. Nor was I convinced that there exists a national 
+crisis that requires Federal intervention in this matter. 
+States are and have been perfectly capable, through both their 
+courts and legislatures, of developing tort principles and 
+addressing gun policy at a local level.
+    Finally, I didn't find anything in last year's testimony or 
+any of the things that I have found out about this bill that 
+would suggest to me why it would be necessary to single out for 
+unprecedented protection the entire gun industry, even as the 
+number of deaths and injuries from gun violence and accidental 
+shootings has escalated. Under this bill, on one within the gun 
+industry bears any responsibility, no duty of care for the 
+misuse of dangerous weapons.
+    When the industry acts responsibly, there should be no 
+liability. I agree with that wholeheartedly. But when elements 
+within the industry act without regard to the safety of our 
+citizens, those harmed by such indifference or recklessness 
+should be afforded a remedy.
+    I don't know what happened to the concept of personal 
+responsibility, corporate responsibility, our whole theory of 
+negligence in this country. Our whole theory of tort law in 
+this country is based on negligence, and I have no idea why one 
+industry should be exempt from those theories that we have 
+developed for so long. They are all about personal 
+responsibility. That's what our whole negligence system is 
+about.
+    If any of our witnesses can today address these very basic 
+and fundamental concerns about this bill, I'm still looking for 
+enlightenment about it. But I believe that unless and until 
+these three core issues are adequately addressed and 
+substantiated, the Federal court, the Federal Government, has 
+no jurisdiction for barring State courts from providing 
+appropriate relief to victims of negligent conduct.
+    We are off and running again. Here we go again, Mr. 
+Chairman. I yield back.
+    Can I just add one thing, Mr. Chairman? I want to put in 
+the record some information here that is just astonishing to 
+me. This is from the Smith and Wesson SEC filing,\1\ and I'm 
+quoting this. ``In the 9-month period ended January 31, 2005, 
+we incurred $4,535 in defense costs net of amounts receivable 
+from insurance carriers relative to product liability and 
+municipal litigation. For the 9 months ended January 31, 2005, 
+we spent $4,150,000 on advertising.'' Put that into this 
+calculus. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+    \1\ The information referred to was not available to include in 
+this hearing.
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+    Mr. Cannon. Without objection, that'll be included in the 
+record.
+    Would the gentleman yield to a question? How much did they 
+spend on their insurance premiums, do you know? Does the filing 
+reveal that?
+    Mr. Watt. I have no idea, but probably no more than any 
+other inherently dangerous product maker would be spending on 
+their insurance. There are some risks of business. You have 
+insurance on your automobile, probably a lot more than most 
+people sitting around because people think that you are more 
+vulnerable, you drive more, you expose yourself to more risks, 
+you're more valuable, you're more important, and I suspect your 
+insurance premiums are higher than most of the people sitting 
+in this audience.
+    Mr. Cannon. I drive very carefully, so I keep my premiums 
+down. I don't think these guys control who sues them.
+    We'd like to welcome Adam Smith from Washington, Steve 
+Chabot from Ohio, Mr. Van Hollen from Maryland, and Mr. Coble 
+from North Carolina. Does anyone other than Mr. Smith want to 
+make an opening statement? Oh, and we've got the gentleman, Mr. 
+Franks, from Arizona. Would anyone like to make an opening 
+statement of any sort?
+    Mr. Chabot. Mr. Chairman, if I could, just very briefly.
+    Mr. Cannon. Let me, if you don't mind, I'm going to ask Mr. 
+Smith to go first and then we'll come back to you.
+    Mr. Chabot. Sure.
+    Mr. Cannon. Would anyone else like to make a--Mr. Coble? 
+Okay.
+    Mr. Smith. It's more of a question just for the witnesses 
+so that as they're testifying, they can hopefully address it, 
+and we've sort of gotten this from the two opening statements.
+    The big question for me is exactly what liability is left. 
+I mean, the basic notion that if you sell a gun in a perfectly 
+legal way and basically have no negligence in how you go 
+through that process, then you should not then be liable if 
+someone misuses it is something that I support. I think it is 
+different, frankly, than what went on with the tobacco industry 
+when they sold a product and misled the public for a good many 
+years about the dangers. There's no misleading about the 
+dangers of a firearm. As Mr. Watt himself said, it's fairly 
+apparent how dangerous it is, so the person who's buying it 
+knows that.
+    But in the debate over this issue, I have heard so much 
+conflicting information on what liability remains, you know, 
+what negligence can be demonstrated by the person. Certainly, 
+if they sell to someone who shouldn't have bought a firearm, 
+someone who is disqualified through the law because they are a 
+felon, mentally incompetent, or below the age of 18 or the 
+normal categories, they should be liable.
+    But there's one specific case that arose not far from my 
+district, the sniper case out here. The gun that was used in 
+those crimes was actually purchased in my district, or 
+actually, I should say, actually came from a store in my 
+district. It is still unclear how that got to be in the 
+person's possession because the gun shop has no records. They 
+have records that they had the guns and then, oops, they're 
+gone. They have no records of how it actually got to be in 
+somebody else's hands or even out of their store, for that 
+matter.
+    To my mind, that is at least enough of a case of negligence 
+that you go to court. I mean, you'd have to hear from the jury 
+and so forth. I do not want to exclude that company from 
+liability when they had some number of guns that just went 
+unaccountably missing. That is negligence, to my mind, 
+depending on the facts. It's at least a case for the jury, 
+let's put it that way.
+    And if I could just get some kind of correct answer--I 
+suspect that I'll get about five different contradictory 
+answers--as to whether or not this bill would exempt people 
+like that from liability when there was some clear evidence of 
+negligence, and you can imagine a variety of other different 
+negligent circumstances where it at least should be a question 
+for the jury whether or not this negligence rose to the level 
+of liability.
+    I certainly agree with the Chairman's sentiment that if you 
+sell a legal product without negligence, even if it's 
+dangerous, it's like an automobile is a good analogy, if you 
+use it poorly and get in the accident, it shouldn't be the 
+liability of the manufacturer unless there was some negligence. 
+But I'm just trying to figure out what the limits are. So if 
+you could address that issue as you testify, that would be very 
+helpful to me.
+    Mr. Cannon. Thank you. The gentleman yields back.
+    Mr. Chabot, you are recognized for 5 minutes.
+    Mr. Chabot. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I won't take the 5 
+minutes. I'll be very brief. I just want to first of all 
+commend you for holding this important hearing today and to 
+reiterate my support for this really much-needed piece of 
+liability reform legislation. I want to commend Mr. Stearns for 
+offering it.
+    It's really critical for a number of reasons. It'll protect 
+really people's Second Amendment rights. You know, we give lip 
+service to it all the time, but this is one thing, I think, 
+when we can really stand up for the citizens' Second Amendment 
+rights, and the firearms industry, I think, has been targeted. 
+And even if you ultimately prevail in the lawsuit, the 
+resources that you have to use up and the time, the attorneys' 
+fees, court costs, all the rest, can be quite sigsnificant and 
+it can drag on really interminably.
+    And we also have--I think it's an example of some of the 
+activist courts, too, in these cases. We have a judiciary which 
+too often is rewriting the law and legislating from the bench, 
+and I think this is an example where the activist courts have 
+gotten too involved. As I mentioned before, even if you win as 
+a defendant in one of these cases, you can lose.
+    And you'll have a city which is essentially using what they 
+might consider to be unlimited resources, but when you consider 
+many of the cities right now which are in real financial 
+straits, they'll get involved in one of these lawsuits and it 
+just drags on and on and on, so you're utilizing the resources 
+which could much better be used to fill potholes and do other 
+things which the cities really ought to be about. Instead, 
+they're suing an industry which I think has really been under 
+assault for a number of years now.
+    If citizens are going to be able to actually exercise their 
+Second Amendment rights, they're going to have to be able to 
+purchase these weapons and purchase firearms. When you have the 
+assault that's been on a number of these companies for some 
+time now, it really does infringe upon those Second Amendment 
+rights.
+    So I want to commend you for having this hearing, and 
+again, strongly urge my colleagues to support this much-needed 
+legislation. I yield back.
+    Mr. Cannon. Thank you. Mr. Van Hollen, did you want to take 
+5 minutes?
+    Mr. Van Hollen. Thank you.
+    Mr. Cannon. The gentleman is recognized for 5 minutes.
+    Mr. Van Hollen. I thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I won't take 
+the whole 5 minutes. I will be brief.
+    It's a coincidence that the two new Members, at least on 
+the Democratic side of the Committee here, are two Members who 
+were involved, by coincidence, in the sniper shooting, because 
+while the guns that were used in the sniper shooting may have 
+been sold in Mr. Smith's district, they were used and with the 
+result that many people were killed in the district I 
+represent.
+    I have attended over the last couple of years a number of 
+memorial services for the victims. A number of memorials have 
+been placed in public places in my Congressional district and 
+other places around the Washington area in memory of the 
+victims of those shootings.
+    And I really have many of the same issues Mr. Smith asked 
+about, although as I read the legislation, it's pretty clear 
+that that case would not have been able to go forward, a case 
+that was settled, a case where there was some payment of 
+damages, I believe in the range of $2 million by the owners of 
+the store and some monies paid by the manufacturer.
+    If you look back in the record of this debate in the 
+Senate, there was an effort in the Senate after the House 
+passed the bill to attach an amendment that would have made it 
+clear that under the circumstances of the sales of the guns 
+used in the Sniper shooting that it could have gone forward. I 
+think that those of us who have looked at the facts of that 
+case believe that it was a situation where there was clearly 
+reckless negligence, negligence on behalf of the gun store.
+    And I, in reading this and having read the legal opinions 
+of a number of law firms in town, I think it's quite clear that 
+if this legislation passes in its current form, those victims 
+would not have an opportunity to obtain justice and redress 
+through the courts in this country and they would have had the 
+courthouse door shut on them.
+    It's ironic that this piece of legislation was actually 
+being debated by the House of Representatives about the time 
+the sniper shootings occurred and it was withdrawn at that time 
+because people understood that the public wouldn't stand for a 
+Congress passing a piece of legislation that took away the 
+rights of the victims. And here we are a couple of years later 
+when people think memories have faded and there is again, 
+regrettably, in my view, a piece of legislation which I think 
+is quite clear would shut the doors of justice to those 
+victims.
+    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
+    Mr. Cannon. Thank you, and Mr. Coble, did you want to--the 
+gentleman is recognized for 5 minutes.
+    Mr. Coble. Mr. Chairman, I will not take the 5 minutes. I 
+thank you for recognizing me. But not unlike my friend from 
+North Carolina, the Ranking Member, I want to apologize for my 
+arrival and to furthermore, Mr. Chairman, apologize for my 
+abrupt departure because I have an aviation hearing going on as 
+we speak here.
+    I just want to state for the record, Mr. Chairman, that if 
+a manufacturer--strike that. It is my belief that if a 
+manufacturer develops a lawful product and lawfully markets it 
+absence negligence, I think that manufacturer should be held 
+harmless. If, on the other hand, there is negligent conduct 
+involved, then I think that manufacturer should have to answer 
+to it.
+    I don't mean to overly simplify it, but that's my position, 
+Mr. Chairman, and I yield back.
+    Mr. Cannon. I thank the gentleman for yielding back. This 
+may be a moment in history. We've had four people speak and not 
+go over the time. In fact, all of them were significantly under 
+the time.
+    Mr. Watt. Except the Chairman, of course. [Laughter.]
+    Mr. Cannon. Oh, I didn't keep track. [Laughter.]
+    The way I read the clock, it was okay. [Laughter.]
+    But I only said four. I think you were under, too, which 
+would make it five.
+    Mr. Watt. I was under.
+    Mr. Coble. Mr. Chairman, would you yield to me just a 
+second?
+    Mr. Cannon. I would certainly yield.
+    Mr. Coble. I think you and the Ranking Member probably have 
+wider latitude than the rest of us on your opening statements.
+    Mr. Cannon. I thank the gentleman.
+    The Committee is pleased to have the Ranking Member of the 
+full Committee, Mr. Conyers of Michigan, with us. Did you want 
+to make a statement, Mr. Conyers?
+    Mr. Conyers. If I could, and I thank you very much----
+    Mr. Cannon. The gentleman is recognized for 5 minutes.
+    Mr. Conyers. --Mr. Chairman. Last week, the GAO issued a 
+report which concluded that the FBI could better manage its gun 
+buying records when matching them against lists of suspected 
+terrorists. In particular, the GAO determined that information 
+sharing procedures needed to be considerably improved in order 
+to help Federal counterterrorism officials better track 
+suspected terrorists who attempt to purchase firearms.
+    Nor are we here to discuss the two assault weapons used in 
+unrelated multiple shootings in February. One shooting involved 
+a Tyler, Texas person and the other took place in Los Angeles, 
+with assault rifles in both cases. The fact that both shootings 
+occurred on the same day made the two stories even more 
+newsworthy, but obviously, not deserving, unfortunately, of a 
+Congressional response.
+    Neither have we seen fit to respond to the requests from 
+law enforcement officials to take appropriate Congressional 
+action in response to recent introduction of the Five-Seven 
+handgun, dubbed by some as the ``copkiller'' gun because it is 
+easily concealable and can penetrate bulletproof vests of law 
+enforcement officers. The Director of the International 
+Brotherhood of Police Officers described this new weapon as an 
+assault weapon that fits your pocket.
+    And so in the minds of any, any one of the aforementioned 
+public policy problems should take precedent over the one 
+before us today because they pose grave risk to human life. And 
+so the bill that purports to protect our court system, even 
+though it's not--if or when a frivolous lawsuit is brought 
+before----
+    Well, I'll return my time, Mr. Chairman. But I think this 
+is an incredibly important issue that is before your 
+Subcommittee and I thank you for the opportunity to discuss it 
+with you.
+    Mr. Cannon. I thank the gentleman, and I'm now astounded 
+that we've had, with possibly the exception of me, although I 
+didn't look at the clock, everyone spoke for less than 5 
+minutes and that will allow us to get on--we are joined by the 
+gentleman from Texas, Mr. Gohmert. Did you want to speak, Mr. 
+Gohmert?
+    Mr. Gohmert. If I might.
+    Mr. Cannon. The gentleman is recognized for 5 minutes----
+    Mr. Gohmert. Thank you.
+    Mr. Cannon. --recognizing the trend that we have in place, 
+Mr. Gohmert.
+    Mr. Gohmert. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I very much 
+appreciate that and I appreciate the individuals here and their 
+testimony.
+    It was mentioned about the shooting in Tyler, Texas. That 
+happened right outside the courthouse where I worked for a 
+decade and knew and loved so many of the people there. The 
+weapon used by the individual regarding a domestic situation 
+was used outside the courthouse and it was a semi-automatic 
+weapon. It was not an automatic weapon. It should be noted that 
+when we toss around the term ``assault weapon'' that any weapon 
+could be an assault weapon, just like any knife, whether steak 
+knife or 11-inch butcher knife, could be an assault knife. 
+Every weapon, no matter what it is, could be an assault weapon.
+    Congress did respond, at least this one did, immediately, 
+within a day or two went to the floor of the House and gave a 
+very moving, heartfelt, at least, tribute to Mark Wilson, who 
+was the man that had the concealed carry permit who immediately 
+put himself in danger by drawing a weapon he was lawfully 
+allowed to have and firing at the individual, the murderer, and 
+at least drawing his attention away from the others, and, I 
+believe, saving the life of many other people there.
+    And because Texas has a concealed carry permit and the 
+actions of Mark Wilson and the prompt response by law 
+enforcement after Mark, we did not have another Luby's like we 
+had years before where nobody had a weapon when a crazy nut 
+came in and started shooting wildly. Here, we had somebody and 
+we had a citizenry and a law enforcement that were armed. They 
+protected the public to minimize the damage that occurred 
+there, and I thank God for Mark Wilson and law enforcement and 
+for the laws that made that possible. Thank you.
+    Mr. Cannon. That was only about two-and-a-half minutes, Mr. 
+Gohmert. I am pleased. There has got to be some kind of record 
+for this. I mean, this is an amazing thing. I would remind the 
+Committee that, generally speaking, we want to get to witnesses 
+more early, and so as we read our statements, we work with, the 
+Ranking Member and me, to get issues in and we are going to try 
+in future hearings to avoid these kinds of--or opening 
+statements.
+    But, of course, as the panel and others will recognize, 
+these are very important issues. They are held very dearly by 
+everyone here and so we recognize that it may be a slightly 
+different case.
+    We now turn to our panel of witnesses. Our first witness is 
+Rodd Walton. Mr. Walton is the Secretary and General Counsel of 
+Sigarms, Inc. He's also a major in the United States Army 
+Reserve, Judge Advocate General Corps. Mr. Walton joined the 
+military right out of high school in 1984 and he has been in 
+the military for 21 years--hard to believe at your age. He 
+recently came off a one-and-a-half-year tour of duty in the war 
+on terror. In the American Bar Association, Mr. Walton serves 
+as Chair of the Business and Commercial Law Committee--good. In 
+the National Bar Association, Mr. Walton serves as Secretary of 
+the Small Business Law Section.
+    Our second witness is Dennis Henigan, the Legal Director of 
+the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence in Washington, D.C., 
+and the Director of its Legal Action Project. The Legal Action 
+Project is a national public interest law program which 
+provides pro bono legal representation to victims of gun 
+violence and lawsuits against the gun industry. In addition to 
+representing individual victims of violence, the Legal Action 
+Project also has represented over two dozen municipalities in 
+lawsuits seeking to recover the public costs of gun violence.
+    Our third witness is Bradley T. Beckman of Beckman and 
+Associates in Philadelphia. For roughly a dozen years, Mr. 
+Beckman has been National Counsel for North American Arms in 
+lawsuits brought by various municipalities. North American Arms 
+is a Utah-based manufacturer of high-quality personal 
+protection firearms that has been in business for over 30 
+years. Welcome from Utah.
+    Our fourth and final witness is Lawrence G. Keane. Mr. 
+Keane is the Senior Vice President and General Counsel of the 
+National Shooting Sports Foundation, Inc., the firearm 
+industry's trade association. He's responsible for all of 
+NSSF's legal, Government relations, and risk management 
+functions. Mr. Keane also served on the Board of Directors of 
+the Firearms Safety Education Foundation, Inc., a nonprofit 
+501(c)(3) charitable organization dedicated to educating the 
+public about firearms safety issues.
+    Without objection, all Members will have 5 days within 
+which to submit additional material for the record.
+    Now, it is the practice of the Committee to swear in all 
+witnesses appearing before it. If you would please stand and 
+raise your right hand.
+    Do you swear that the testimony that you are about to give, 
+that you will tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but 
+the truth, so help you, God?
+    Mr. Walton. I do.
+    Mr. Henigan. I do.
+    Mr. Beckman. I do.
+    Mr. Keane. I do.
+    Mr. Cannon. The record will note that the witnesses all 
+answered in the affirmative. Please be seated.
+    Now, Mr. Walton, we would like to hear from you for 5 
+minutes. I don't want to interrupt. We don't want to stop 
+anybody's train of thought, but I'll tap my pencil on the 
+podium here when you get at 5 minutes just so you're aware. 
+There's a little timer in front of you that it's green for 4 
+minutes, turns yellow for 1 minute, and then turns red at the 
+end of the 5 minutes. You don't have to stop at that red light, 
+but just be aware that we'd like to wind down, and then we'll 
+have plenty of time for questions. Thank you.
+    Mr. Walton?
+
+          TESTIMONY OF RODD C. WALTON, SECRETARY AND 
+                 GENERAL COUNSEL, SIGARMS, INC.
+
+    Mr. Walton. Mr. Chair, thank you for having me here, and 
+keeping with your time limit and the spirit of the meeting and 
+being timely, I'll do my best.
+    Chairman Cannon, Members of the Committee, my name is Rodd 
+Walton. I'm Secretary and General Counsel of Sigarms and its 
+affiliates and subsidiaries in the United States. I am here 
+today to ask you to support H.R. 800.
+    Since 1853, Sigarms and related companies, together with 
+our predecessors, have been manufacturing small arms for 
+military, law enforcement, and commercial use. Switzerland's 
+Federal Ministry of Defense challenged a Swiss wagon factory to 
+make a rifle for the Swiss army. Accepting the challenge, and 
+after receiving the contract, the wagon company changed its 
+name to Swiss Industrial Company--I'm not going to try to speak 
+it in German, but it's currently world known as Sigarms. SIG 
+brought our firearms industry to Virginia in 1985 and then 
+moved to New Hampshire, where we call home today.
+    The foundation and thrust of Sigarms' business has been and 
+will continue to be support of military and law enforcement 
+customers worldwide. The list of Sigarms' customers in the 
+United States reads like a Who's Who of law enforcement. 
+Sigarms pistols are carried by the Department of Homeland 
+Security, the U.S. Coast Guard, the Federal Air Marshals, the 
+U.S. Secret Service, State police agencies from Delaware, 
+Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Virginia, as well as the 
+Texas Department of Safety and the Texas Rangers, just to name 
+a few. And, SIG Sauer pistols are carried by many in combat, 
+most notably the U.S. Navy Seals. Today, about 65 percent of 
+the output of the New Hampshire-based manufacturing facility is 
+devoted to supplying firearms and training to military and law 
+enforcement.
+    Since 1988--excuse me, '98, we at Sigarms have been 
+defending ourselves against a multitude of lawsuits brought by 
+Government entities and organizations and individuals seeking 
+to blame the firearms industry, including SIG, for criminal and 
+wrongful misuse of firearms in the United States. To blame 
+Sigarms for the criminal misuse of firearms that are lawfully 
+manufactured and sold is unjust. It is also threatening to our 
+very existence. We have been fighting for our very survival 
+against these lawsuits, diverting time, money, and other of our 
+limited resources to defend ourselves.
+    As I walk through the plant, employees stop to ask me, 
+``How's the war going?'' The war that the employees are asking 
+about is not the Iraqi war. It's the war we are fighting 
+against plaintiffs filing junk and frivolous lawsuits against 
+the firearms industry, spurred on by plaintiffs' trial 
+attorneys.
+    Sigarms and many others in the industry have been fighting 
+for 10 years now, beginning with Hamilton v. Accu-Tek, in which 
+the plaintiffs claimed that we manufacturers negligently 
+distributed firearms. While the jury found the case--some of 
+the manufacturers to be liable, the verdicts were properly 
+reversed on appeal. The same plaintiffs' lawyers decided to 
+bring a similar case before the same trial judge. They brought 
+the NAACP case based on similar theories that had already been 
+rejected by the U.S. Court of Appeals. While we are resolved 
+not to wear down, there is a cost to this war.
+    Beyond these lawsuits draining our already fragile national 
+economy and littering our already overburdened court system, 
+this war is hindering companies like Sigarms from engaging in 
+legitimate business, making lawful products. The existence of 
+these lawsuits thwarts our ability to raise new capital, borrow 
+money, establish credit, obtain insurance, attract new 
+employees, and retain valued employees in the same manner that 
+companies of other industries are able to do without these 
+attacks.
+    These lawsuits are dangerous, and not only to us as 
+manufacturers of lawful products in other industries. Where 
+will this end? Should General Motors be liable for an 
+aggressive driver who crashes into another car? If the theory 
+of these cases are widely applied, it could result in the 
+bankruptcy of countless companies and the displacement of 
+innumerable amount of American workers.
+    I come here today to ask you to support H.R. 800. This bill 
+would protect legitimate businesses, such as Sigarms, that 
+provide hundreds of thousands of jobs for our citizens--
+assemblers, polishers, tool and die makers, cafeteria workers, 
+and people who fill our snack vending machines.
+    If enacted into law, this Act would preempt State and local 
+government entities and other parties from bringing aggregate 
+lawsuits against the firearms industry as a way to circumvent 
+our legislatures. It would promote interstate and foreign 
+commerce of small arms. A majority of the States--in fact, over 
+30--have passed legislation of some type that insulate the 
+firearms industry from these types of lawsuits. However, we 
+need and are seeking passage of Federal law that would afford 
+protection to the industry on a national level.
+    I think my time is about up, so I will yield to the chair. 
+Thank you, sir.
+    Mr. Cannon. Thank you very much.
+    [The prepared statement of Mr. Walton follows:]
+
+                  Prepared Statement of Rodd C. Walton
+
+    Chairman Cannon, Members of the Committee, my name is Rodd Walton. 
+I am Secretary and General Counsel of SIGARMS, Inc. and its affiliates 
+and subsidiaries in the United States. I am here today to ask you to 
+support H.R. 800.
+    Since 1853, SIGARMS related companies, together with our 
+predecessors, have been manufacturing small arms for military, law 
+enforcement and commercial use. Switzerland's Federal Ministry of 
+Defense challenged a Swiss wagon factory to make a rifle for the Swiss 
+Army. Accepting the challenge and after receiving the contract the 
+wagon company changed its name to the Swiss Industrial Company--
+Schweizerische Industrie-Gesellschaft known worldwide as SIG. SIG 
+brought our firearms business to Virginia in 1985 and then moved it to 
+New Hampshire, where we call our home today.
+    The foundation and thrust of SIGARMS business has been and will 
+continue to be support military and law enforcement customers 
+worldwide. The list of SIGARMS customers in the United States reads 
+like a Who's Who of law enforcement. SIG SAUER pistols are carried by 
+the Department of Homeland Security, The U.S. Coast Guard, The Federal 
+Air Marshalls, The U.S. Secret Service, state police agencies from 
+Delaware, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Virginia as well as the 
+Texas Department of Public Safety and the Texas Rangers just to name a 
+few. And SIG SAUER pistols are carried by many in combat and most 
+notably by the U.S. Navy SEALs.
+    Today, approximately 65% of the output at the New Hampshire-based 
+manufacturing facility is devoted to supplying firearms and training to 
+military and law enforcement.
+    Since 1998, we at SIGARMS have been defending ourselves against a 
+multitude of lawsuits brought by government entities, organizations and 
+individuals seeking to blame the firearms industry, including SIGARMS, 
+for the criminal and wrongful misuse of firearms in the United States. 
+To blame SIGARMS for the criminal misuse of firearms that are lawfully 
+manufactured and sold is unjust. It also is threatening to our very 
+existence. We have been fighting for our very survival against these 
+lawsuits, diverting time, money and other of our limited resources to 
+defend ourselves.
+    As I walk through our plant, employees stop to ask me how the war 
+is going. The war that our employees are asking about is not the Iraqi 
+War; it is the war we are fighting against plaintiffs filing junk and 
+frivolous lawsuits against the firearms industry, spurred on by 
+plaintiffs' trial lawyers.
+    SIGARMS and many others in the industry have been fighting for ten 
+years now, beginning with the Hamilton v. Accu-Tek case, in which the 
+plaintiffs claimed that we manufacturers negligently distributed our 
+firearms. While the jury in that case found some of the manufacturers 
+liable, the verdicts were properly reversed on appeal. The same 
+plaintiff's lawyer decided to bring a similar case before that same 
+trial judge. They brought the NAACP v. A.A. Arms, Inc. case based on 
+similar theories that had already been rejected by the U.S. Court of 
+Appeals. While we are resolved not to wear down, there is a cost to 
+this war.
+    Beyond these lawsuits draining our already fragile national economy 
+and littering our already over-burdened court system, this war is 
+hindering companies like SIGARMS from engaging in a legitimate 
+business, making a lawful product. The existence of these lawsuits 
+thwarts our ability to raise new capital, borrow money, establish 
+credit, obtain insurance, attract new employees, and retain valued 
+employees in the same manner that companies in other industries are 
+able to do without these attacks against their industry.
+    These lawsuits are dangerous not only to us but also to 
+manufacturers of lawful products in other industries. Where will it 
+end? Should General Motors be liable for an aggressive driver who 
+crashes into another car? If the theory of these cases is widely 
+applied, it could result in the bankruptcies of countless companies and 
+the displacement of innumerable amount of American workers.
+    I come here today to ask you to support H.R. 800. This Bill would 
+protect legitimate businesses, such as SIGARMS, that provide hundreds 
+of thousands of jobs for our citizens, assemblers, polishers, tool and 
+die makers, cafeteria workers and the people who fill our snack vending 
+machines.
+    If enacted into law, this Act would preempt state and local 
+government entities and other parties from bringing aggregate liability 
+lawsuits against the firearms industry as a way to circumvent our 
+legislatures. It also would promote interstate and foreign commerce of 
+small arms. A majority of the states--in fact, over 30 states--have 
+passed legislation of some type that insulate the firearms industry 
+from these types of suits. However, we need and are seeking passage of 
+Federal law that would afford protection to the industry on a national 
+level.
+    Let me emphasize that this legislation would not provide the 
+sweeping immunity that many of its opponents suggest. This Bill would 
+not protect gun manufacturers from liability claims. Instead, it would 
+stop lawsuits against our industry that are based on the criminal 
+misuse of lawfully distributed products and premised on theories such 
+as public nuisance and market share liability.
+    If passed, this Bill would help to set a much needed precedent that 
+frivolous and junk suits like these should be stopped. If passed, it 
+would prevent the usurpation of power by the judicial branch from the 
+legislative branch. For it is the legislature that makes laws on how we 
+should manufacture, design, and sell firearms, not the courts. If not 
+stopped, these lawsuits clearly will threaten other legitimate and 
+vital industries in America.
+    This Bill if enacted would restore the rule of law and protect 
+manufacturers and sellers in the firearms and ammunition industry who 
+act legally from being harassed by frivolous and junk lawsuits. 
+However, the Bill ensures that if a seller provides a firearm and the 
+seller knows or should have known that the firearm would be used 
+negligently, that seller would be liable.
+    We are dutifully helping to defend our country when attacked and in 
+times of war. I ask that each of you help us in our time of war so that 
+we can focus on making the best firearms available for our men and 
+women in uniform and law enforcement.
+    In conclusion, it makes no difference that SIGARMS or other firearm 
+manufacturers make high quality firearms that enjoy excellent records 
+of safety. It makes no difference that we and our industry are 
+committed to continuing our efforts, individually and together with 
+others, to increase awareness of the issues related to the safe 
+handling and storage of firearms and the criminal acquisition of 
+firearms. In makes no difference that the firearms industry is one of 
+the most patriotic and staunchly pro-law and order industries in the 
+corporate landscape. These frivolous and junk lawsuits are being 
+brought to exert undue pressure on our industry to settle or cave under 
+the massive weight of litigation. Without this Federal legislation, the 
+survival of SIGARMS, our firearms and ammunition industries, and all of 
+the jobs, taxes, and commerce that we contribute to the U.S. economy 
+are threatened.
+
+    Mr. Cannon. Mr. Henigan, you are recognized for 5 minutes.
+
+TESTIMONY OF DENNIS A. HENIGAN, DIRECTOR, LEGAL ACTION PROJECT, 
+              BRADY CENTER TO PREVENT GUN VIOLENCE
+
+    Mr. Henigan. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you to the 
+entire Subcommittee for this opportunity to appear today.
+    Let me state my position on this bill in the must 
+unequivocal terms. This bill is nothing but a special interest 
+giveaway to the gun lobby and a shameful attack on the legal 
+rights of gun violence victims.
+    As an attorney at the Brady Center, I have had the honor to 
+represent on a pro bono basis gun violence victims whose rights 
+would be trampled by this legislation, and I have a difficult 
+time explaining to those clients why we are here today. As 
+Ranking Member Conyers noted, just recently we have heard that 
+suspected terrorists repeatedly have been able to buy guns over 
+the counter in our country. The Department of Homeland Security 
+recently issued an alert about that Belgian gun manufacturer 
+that is selling a handgun in this country that shoots bullets 
+that can penetrate police body armor.
+    And what is the response of the U.S. Congress to these 
+recent threats to our national safety and security? Is it to 
+move quickly to prevent terrorists from buying guns over the 
+counter? Is it to ban copkiller handguns? No. It is to hold 
+hearings on a bill to give special legal protection to the most 
+reckless gun sellers in America.
+    Mr. Chairman, this Congressional response defies rational 
+explanation. I regret to say the only explanation is the 
+overarching power of the gun lobby.
+    Now, the proponents of this bill say it affects only 
+frivolous lawsuits brought to bankrupt the gun industry. This 
+assertion is insulting to the victims who have sought to assert 
+their legal rights against this industry and it also grossly 
+misrepresents what this bill does.
+    Consider first the lawsuit brought by Brady Center 
+attorneys for New Jersey Police Officers David Lemongello and 
+Ken McGuire. These two officers were seriously wounded in a 
+shoot-out with an armed robbery suspect, and the Ruger pistol 
+used by the shooter was sold by a West Virginia pawn shop 
+called Will's Jewelry and Loan. It was one of 12 handguns sold 
+by Will's in a single transaction 6 months before the shooting 
+to a gun trafficking team. A woman named Tammi Lea Songer acted 
+as a straw buyer for a gun trafficker, James Gray. Gray pointed 
+out the guns he wanted. Songer paid the clerk $4,000 in cash. 
+It was perfectly obvious those guns were headed to the illegal 
+market.
+    So the officers brought a civil damages suit against Will's 
+and a West Virginia judge determined that the suit stated 
+legally valid claims. If this legislation had passed last year, 
+the judge's decision would have been nullified and the police 
+officers' suit would have been dismissed. But fortunately, the 
+bill failed. The suit went forward. And in June of last year, 
+Will's settled the suit with a payment of $1 million in damages 
+to those two brave police officers. And as a result of this 
+suit, that gun shop no longer engages in large-volume sales of 
+handguns.
+    So because this bill failed last Congress, two brave police 
+officers received a measure of justice, the pawn shop was held 
+accountable for this reckless sale, and the pawn shop now 
+operates more responsibly than it did before, and I might add, 
+no one went bankrupt.
+    But consider also the case brought by Brady Center lawyers 
+for the victims of the D.C. area sniper shootings against 
+Bull's Eye Shooter Supply, the gun shop in Tacoma, Washington, 
+that Mr. Smith referred to, where the gun that was used in that 
+shooting mysteriously disappeared from that gun shop. And it 
+turned out that in the previous 3 years, some 238 other guns 
+had mysteriously walked away from that gun shop.
+    So eight D.C. sniper victims and their victims brought a 
+lawsuit with our help seeking damages against Bull's Eye, and 
+we also sued Bushmaster, the manufacturer of the assault rifle, 
+because it sold military-style assault rifles to the general 
+public while doing absolutely nothing to ensure that the 
+retailers it chose to do business with were responsible 
+corporate citizens.
+    Well, in June of 2003, a Washington State trial judge ruled 
+the victims' claims were legally valid against both of those 
+defendants, but if this immunity bill had passed, Mr. Chairman, 
+it would have required dismissal of that lawsuit, even though a 
+Washington State court had already held it consistent with 
+accepted principles of law. And in the last Congress, we had 
+letters from former White House Counsel Lloyd Cutler as well as 
+noted attorney David Boies analyzing exactly the question Mr. 
+Smith raised and concluding that, in fact, this would bar that 
+lawsuit.
+    Mr. Smith. Mr. Chairman, I'm sorry to break the flow here, 
+but could I ask a question on that?
+    Mr. Chabot. [Presiding.] Yes, if you will make it quick.
+    Mr. Smith. In reading the bill, it says that the immunity 
+shall apply but shall not include an action brought against a 
+seller for negligent entrustment or negligence per se. I guess 
+given that exception, you're telling me you couldn't make a 
+case for negligence in that situation?
+    Mr. Henigan. That's right, Mr. Smith. Neither of those 
+exceptions would have applied, and let me explain why. First of 
+all, negligence per se would have required a showing that the 
+gun shop violated a law leading to the shooting that occurred. 
+That's what negligence per se requires, as opposed to ordinary 
+negligence, Mr. Smith, which simply requires a violation of the 
+common law duty of ordinary care.
+    In every State that adopts negligence per se, you have to 
+show a violation of a law and then you have to show the causal 
+link between the shooting and the violation. Here, what we had 
+was a situation in which----
+    Mr. Smith. You could go on, but that answers the question.
+    Mr. Chabot. Okay, and if you wouldn't mind wrapping up your 
+testimony, Mr. Henigan.
+    Mr. Henigan. Okay.
+    Mr. Chabot. Your 5 minutes are up.
+    Mr. Henigan. I'd be happy to do that. These cases, Mr. 
+Chairman, show how the proponents of this bill have 
+misrepresented what the bill does, because these are two cases 
+that were not frivolous. They were two cases not about trying 
+to hold gun sellers responsible simply because a criminal uses 
+the gun to shoot somebody, but to hold them responsible for 
+their own conduct.
+    I would suggest, Mr. Chairman, that if we are going to be 
+in the business of immunizing from civil liability the most 
+reckless gun sellers among us, that is not only going to 
+deprive gun violence of their legal rights, it's going to make 
+us all more unsafe. It's going to mean more guns on the 
+streets, and for those reasons, we urge that this bill be 
+defeated. Thank you.
+    Mr. Chabot. Thank you, Mr. Henigan.
+    [The prepared statement of Mr. Henigan follows:]
+
+                Prepared Statement of Dennis A. Henigan
+
+    Chairman Cannon, Ranking Member Watt, Members of the Subcommittee, 
+I appreciate this opportunity to appear before you today. On behalf of 
+Jim and Sarah Brady, and their organizations, let me state my position 
+on H.R. 800 in the most direct and unequivocal terms: this bill is 
+nothing but a special interest giveaway to the gun lobby and a shameful 
+attack on the legal rights of innocent victims of gun violence.
+    As Director of the Legal Action Project at the Brady Center to 
+Prevent Gun Violence,\1\ I have the honor to represent, on a pro bono 
+basis, innocent victims of gun violence whose rights would be trampled 
+by this legislation. I have a difficult time explaining to these 
+clients, who have personally faced the horror of gun violence, why the 
+response of the United States Congress to their personal tragedies, and 
+to the continuing national tragedy of gun deaths and injuries, is to 
+give special legal protection to the most reckless members of the gun 
+industry.
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+    \1\ The Brady Center, and its affiliate, the Brady Campaign to 
+Prevent Gun Violence united with the Million Mom March, are the largest 
+organizations dedicated to creating an America free from gun violence.
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+    Just last week, the GAO reported that suspected terrorists, who are 
+not permitted to board airplanes or cruise ships, repeatedly have been 
+allowed to purchase guns over-the-counter.
+    The Department of Homeland Security recently issued an alert to all 
+its law enforcement personnel about a Belgian gun maker selling a 
+handgun in America that shoots bullets that penetrate police body 
+armor.
+    Another gun maker is selling .50 caliber sniper rifles with such 
+extraordinary range and power that they can bring down airplanes.
+    And gun deaths in America, after a seven-year decline, have started 
+to rise again and are now over 30,000 a year. In the last two weeks, 
+our Nation has learned, once again, that no one is truly safe from gun 
+violence: a judge's family slain in Chicago, a judge and two others 
+murdered in an Atlanta courtroom and, on Saturday, seven worshippers 
+shot and killed while attending church services in Milwaukee.
+    What is the response of the United States Congress to these clear 
+and present threats to our national safety and security? Is it to move 
+quickly to strengthen the Brady background check system to stop 
+terrorist suspects from buying guns? Is it to ban cop-killer guns and 
+terrorist sniper rifles? No. It is to hold hearings on a bill that 
+would protect from legal accountability the most reckless gun sellers 
+in America.
+    Mr. Chairman, this Congressional response is beyond rational 
+explanation. I suggest the only explanation is the power of the gun 
+lobby.
+
+  GUN INDUSTRY IMMUNITY LEGISLATION IS A SHAMEFUL ATTACK ON THE LEGAL 
+                     RIGHTS OF GUN VIOLENCE VICTIMS
+
+    The proponents of this legislation claim it would block only 
+``frivolous'' lawsuits against gun sellers brought only to bankrupt the 
+gun industry. Not only is this assertion a gross misrepresentation of 
+the bill, it also is an insult to gun violence victims who have sought 
+justice in the courts - justice that would be denied if this bill 
+became law.
+    This legislation would provide legal immunity in many cases to 
+grossly irresponsible gun dealers who supply the criminal gun market, 
+as well as to manufacturers of defectively designed firearms. It would 
+throw out of court innocent victims of gun violence, even where courts 
+have found their cases justified by general and established principles 
+of law. Never before has a class of persons harmed by the dangerous 
+conduct of others been so wholly deprived of the right to legal 
+recourse. As Senator Mike DeWine (R-Ohio) stated so eloquently in 
+opposing this legislation of the Floor of the United States Senate a 
+year ago: ``I oppose this bill because...it singles out one particular 
+group of victims and treats them differently than all other victims in 
+this country...It denies them their access to court.''
+    When this bill was debated in the last Congress, two lawsuits, then 
+pending in the courts, were at the center of the debate. Lawyers at the 
+Brady Center represented the victims in both cases. Had this 
+legislation been passed into law last year, these lawsuits would have 
+been blocked.
+
+Gun Industry Immunity Legislation Would Have Deprived Two New Jersey 
+        Police Officers of their Legal Rights Against a Reckless West 
+        Virginia Pawnshop
+    The first suit had been filed by two brave New Jersey police 
+officers, David Lemongello and Ken McGuire. Almost two years ago, 
+Officer Lemongello testified before this Subcommittee and told their 
+story. In January of 2001, Dave Lemongello was on a stakeout of a gas 
+station in Orange, New Jersey that had been the target of several armed 
+robberies. He spotted an individual walking near the station who 
+matched the description of a suspect in the robberies. When the officer 
+approached, the individual, career criminal Shuntez Everett, opened 
+fire with a Ruger pistol. Lemongello was hit three times, fell to the 
+ground, and radioed for help. Officer McGuire responded, chased Everett 
+into a nearby backyard, and the two exchanged fire. McGuire also was 
+seriously wounded, but was able to return fire. Everett died from his 
+wounds. The shootings ended the police careers of the two officers.
+    How was a convicted felon like Shuntez Everett able to obtain a 
+handgun? It turned out that the gun used in the shooting was one of 
+twelve handguns purchased from a West Virginia pawnshop six months 
+before by a gun trafficking team. Tammi Lea Songer, acting as a straw 
+purchaser for gun trafficker James Gray, paid $4,000 in cash for the 
+guns, after Gray pointed out which guns he wanted. The pawnshop, Will 
+Jewelry and Loan in Charleston, West Virginia, completed the sale, even 
+though it was obvious that the handguns were headed directly into the 
+illegal market. Indeed, the sale was so suspicious that Will reported 
+it to ATF the next day, long after the shop had pocketed the profits 
+and the guns were headed to New Jersey. Ironically, another one of the 
+twelve guns was taken by Ken McGuire from a criminal suspect months 
+before the gas station shooting. Because of the recklessness of a West 
+Virginia gun dealer, Orange, New Jersey became a more dangerous place 
+and the careers of two police officers were ended.
+    We represented Officers McGuire and Lemongello in a civil damages 
+lawsuit against Will's pawnshop. The suit charged the pawnshop with 
+negligence, and contributing to a public nuisance, in the sale of guns, 
+creating a foreseeable risk that the guns would be used in criminal 
+activity. In March of 2003, Judge Irene Berger of the Kanawha County 
+Circuit Court denied Will's motion to dismiss our case, finding that 
+the officers had stated a legally valid claim under general principles 
+of West Virginia law. If the last Congress had enacted the predecessor 
+of H.R. 800, Judge Berger's ruling would have been superceded and 
+Officers McGuire and Lemongello would have been denied their day in 
+court.
+    Because gun industry immunity legislation was defeated in the 
+Senate a year ago, the case against Will's pawnshop went forward. In 
+June of last year, Will's settled the case by paying $1 million in 
+damages to the two officers. As a result of the suit, the pawnshop 
+changed its policies and now no longer engages in large-volume gun 
+sales. Two other gun dealers in the Charleston area have adopted 
+similar policies.
+    I ask the Subcommittee to consider the outcome of this lawsuit. For 
+these two brave police officers, justice was done. Will's pawnshop was 
+properly held accountable for its reckless sale to a gun trafficking 
+team and it now operates more responsibly. And no one declared 
+bankruptcy. This outcome was possible only because this special 
+interest immunity legislation did not become law.
+
+Gun Industry Immunity Legislation Would Have Deprived the DC-area 
+        Sniper Victims of Their Legal Rights Against a Reckless 
+        Washington State Gun Dealer and the Assault Weapon Manufacturer 
+        that Supplied It
+    A second lawsuit that would have been blocked by this legislation 
+is the civil damages action brought by the victims of the DC-area 
+sniper shootings. Certainly no one on this Subcommittee will ever 
+forget the paralyzing fear inflicted on this community by the snipers 
+John Lee Muhammad and Lee Boyd Malvo in the Fall of 2002. For some 
+families, that fear became tragedy, as 10 people were killed and four 
+more injured by the snipers. When the snipers were arrested, they were 
+found with the Bushmaster XM-15 assault rifle that had been used in the 
+shootings. The gun was traced back to Bull's Eye Shooter Supply, a 
+Tacoma, Washington gun shop. Incredibly, though, Bull's Eye had no 
+record of what happened to the gun. The shop had no record of sale, no 
+record of a background check, and had not reported the gun lost or 
+missing. The gun had mysteriously disappeared. Bureau of Alcohol, 
+Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) audits showed that Bull's Eye 
+had mysteriously ``lost'' 238 other guns in a three-year period, an 
+average of more than one gun missing every week. Bull's Eye was one of 
+the most irresponsible gun dealers in the Nation. It ranked in the top 
+.27% of gun dealers nationwide in number of missing guns and in the top 
+1% in the number of guns traced to crime.
+    Neither Malvo nor Muhammad could legally have purchased a gun. 
+Malvo was a juvenile; Muhammad had a disqualifying domestic violence 
+restraining order on his record. Only through the gross negligence of 
+Bull's Eye could they have obtained the Bushmaster assault rifle. The 
+Brady Center represented eight of the sniper victims and their families 
+in a lawsuit against Bull's Eye, charging that the shop's negligence 
+put a deadly assault rifle in the hands of the killers. We also sued 
+Bushmaster, the manufacturer of the gun, on the ground that companies 
+that make high-firepower assault weapons have a special duty to ensure 
+that their retailers are responsible corporate citizens. Bushmaster did 
+not even require its retail dealers to report to it the results of ATF 
+audits, which would have revealed Bull's Eye's chronic problem of 
+``missing'' guns. Indeed, even after the press reported the gun shop's 
+record, Bushmaster stated that it still considered Bull's Eye a ``good 
+customer''.
+    In June of 2003, a Washington State trial judge denied motions to 
+dismiss by both Bull's Eye and Bushmaster, deciding that the victims' 
+claims were legally valid under general principles of Washington State 
+law. The Washington State Court of Appeals denied Bushmaster's appeal 
+of this ruling.
+    As former White House Counsel Lloyd Cutler concluded, after 
+conducting his own independent analysis, the immunity bill that reached 
+the Floor of the Senate in the last Congress would have superceded the 
+judge's ruling and required the sniper case to be dismissed. Because 
+the legislation was defeated, however, the lawsuit brought by the 
+sniper victims went forward. In September of last year, the parties 
+reached a settlement, resulting in the payment, by both Bull's Eye and 
+Bushmaster, of a combined total of $2.56 million in damages to the 
+victims. Bushmaster also agreed in the settlement to make its dealers 
+aware of programs to encourage safe sales practices by gun retailers - 
+something the company had never done before.
+    Again, consider the outcome of this lawsuit. The sniper victims 
+received justice. Bull's Eye and Bushmaster were made accountable for 
+their shoddy business practices. And, again, no one declared 
+bankruptcy.
+    No one can seriously argue that these were ``frivolous'' lawsuits, 
+and yet they would have been blocked by the immunity legislation. It is 
+hardly surprising that in February of last year, Henry Cohen, a 28-year 
+veteran of the Congressional Research Service and the author of a 
+report on gun industry immunity legislation, stated ``it does not 
+appear the bill would be limited to frivolous lawsuits. That's my 
+neutral assessment.'' \2\
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+    \2\ Steve Volk, Specter Shoots Blanks, Philadelphia Weekly, 
+February 18, 2004.
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+Gun Industry Immunity Legislation Would Protect a Careless Gun 
+        Manufacturer that Hired Criminals and Allowed Them to Walk Away 
+        with Guns
+    H.R. 800 would also affect currently pending cases brought by gun 
+violence victims. An example is the lawsuit brought by the family of a 
+young man named Danny Guzman, an innocent bystander who was shot on the 
+street in Worcester, Massachusetts on Christmas Eve in 1999. After the 
+shooting, the loaded gun used in the shooting was found behind an 
+apartment building by a four-year-old child. The gun had no serial 
+number.
+    Police investigators determined that the gun was one of several 
+stolen from Kahr Arms, a Worcester gun manufacturer, by Kahr's own 
+employees who were hired despite their long criminal records. One of 
+the thieves, Mark Cronin, had been hired by Kahr to work in its plant 
+despite his history of crack addiction, theft to support that 
+addiction, alcohol abuse and violence, including several assault and 
+battery charges. Cronin had been able to walk out of the factory with 
+stolen guns, even before they had been stamped with serial numbers. 
+Cronin told an associate that he takes guns from Kahr ``all the time'' 
+and that he ``can just walk out with them.'' Cronin later pled guilty 
+to the thefts. The investigation also led to the arrest of another Kahr 
+employee, Scott Anderson, who also had a criminal history and who pled 
+guilty to stealing guns from Kahr. At least fifty Kahr firearms 
+disappeared from its manufacturing plant in a five-year period. 
+Worcester Police Captain Paul Campbell classified the record keeping at 
+the Kahr facility as so ``shoddy'' that it was possible to remove 
+weapons without detection.
+    Brady Center attorneys represent Danny Guzman's family in a 
+wrongful death suit against Kahr arms, charging Kahr with negligence in 
+completely failing to screen its employees for criminal history and in 
+maintaining a security system so inadequate that employees repeatedly 
+were able to walk out of the plant with unserialized guns. In April, 
+2003, a Massachusetts trial judge denied Kahr's motion to dismiss the 
+suit, finding it supported by general principles of Massachusetts law. 
+It is now in pretrial discovery. Had immunity legislation been passed, 
+the ruling of the Massachusetts court would have been nullified and 
+Danny Guzman's family would be denied the right to justice against a 
+gun maker that allowed drug criminals to ``help themselves'' to free 
+lethal weaponry.
+gun industry immunity legislation would be a ``breathtakingly radical'' 
+     revision of liability law for the benefit of a single industry
+    Far from affecting only ``frivolous'' lawsuits, H.R. 800 would 
+exempt the gun industry from the oldest principle of our civil 
+liability law: that persons, or companies, who act negligently should 
+be accountable to the foreseeable victims of their negligence. Indeed, 
+in the last Congress, over sixty law professors, from across the 
+country, joined a letter calling the legislation ``breathtakingly 
+radical'' because it ``affords to a handpicked few - those who make, 
+distribute, and sell guns - special protection against the most 
+commonplace, long-established form of tort liability: accountability to 
+the standard of care required by principles of negligence.'' The 
+professors called the immunity bill ``one of the most radical statutory 
+revisions of the common law of torts that any legislature - federal or 
+state - has ever considered, let along passed.''
+    Proponents of this legislation try to obfuscate its radicalism 
+through arguments that simply misstate the law.
+    First, they assert that it is unfair to hold the seller of a 
+product responsible for the conduct of a criminal. However, the cases 
+brought by Officers McGuire and Lemongello and the sniper victims did 
+not seek to hold the defendant gun sellers liable simply because guns 
+they sold were used by criminals. Rather, these victims sought to hold 
+the gun sellers liable for their own irresponsible conduct that enabled 
+criminals to be armed and to commit violent crimes. The courts in West 
+Virginia and Washington State based their rulings on the longstanding 
+legal doctrine that a defendant can be liable when his own negligent 
+conduct creates a foreseeable risk that a third party will commit a 
+criminal act. Courts, for example, have applied this doctrine to hold 
+landlords liable when their failure to secure their buildings allows 
+criminals to victimize their tenants. It has been applied to drivers 
+who leave their keys in the ignition in high-crime areas, allowing 
+thieves access to a car that is then used to inflict injury on others. 
+Courts in these cases are holding the landlords and the drivers liable 
+for their own negligence that enabled someone else to commit a criminal 
+act.
+    Second, proponents of the bill argue that it is unfair to hold a 
+gun company liable if its product, and its conduct, are entirely legal. 
+This argument confuses criminal liability, which requires a showing of 
+illegal conduct, with civil liability, which does not. The issue in a 
+civil negligence case is whether the defendant has acted with 
+reasonable care, not whether the defendant has violated a statute. For 
+example, when a doctor leaves forceps in a surgical patient, he can be 
+liable for his failure to use reasonable care. There is no requirement 
+that his conduct violate a statute. It is particularly telling that the 
+exception from immunity in H.R. 800 for illegal conduct applies only 
+where a gun manufacturer ``knowingly violated'' a State or Federal gun 
+statute. In other words, under this bill, a gun company is immunized 
+from liability even if it has violated the law, as long as the company 
+can demonstrate its ignorance of the law. It is also telling that the 
+proponents of gun industry immunity opposed, and defeated, an amendment 
+offered last year by Senator Levin (D-Mich.) that would have permitted 
+lawsuits where a gun injury or death was caused by ``grossly negligent 
+or reckless'' conduct by a gun company. Can there be any doubt that the 
+purpose of this legislation is to protect gun manufacturers and dealers 
+from civil liability, even if their conduct has been grossly negligent, 
+reckless or even illegal?
+    Third, the legislation's supporters assert that they are merely 
+asking the Congress to do what over 30 states have already done. It is 
+flatly untrue that over 30 states have enacted radical legislation of 
+this kind. The vast majority of state immunity statutes apply only to 
+suits brought by local governments and have no effect on the legal 
+rights of individual gun violence victims. In fact, only five states 
+have enacted legislation that limits the legal rights of individual gun 
+violence victims to the extent of H.R. 800. For those in Congress who 
+regard themselves as guardians of state prerogatives against federal 
+encroachment, it is fair to ask: Why should Congress override the 
+decisions of 45 states not to strip away the legal rights of gun 
+violence victims?
+    In virtually all states, victim claims against gun sellers are 
+judged by the courts according to age-old principles of law that apply 
+to everyone else. H.R. 800 is an effort by the United States Congress 
+to impose a special set of legal rules on state courts that apply only 
+to suits against gun companies. This bill is the worst form of special 
+interest legislation. Its passage would be a tribute to the power of 
+the gun lobby and an embarrassment to the country.
+
+    GUN INDUSTRY IMMUNITY LEGISLATION WOULD ENDANGER COMMUNITIES BY 
+  DESTROYING A STRONG INCENTIVE FOR GUN SELLERS TO BEHAVE RESPONSIBLY
+
+    Mr. Chairman, irresponsible conduct by gun sellers has tragic real-
+world consequences. As the Brady Center lawsuits dramatically show, 
+reckless gun sellers put guns into the hands of criminals and endanger 
+innocent lives. ATF has found from its own gun trafficking 
+investigations that licensed gun dealers are the largest single source 
+of guns trafficked into the underground market.\3\ Because of 
+irrational statutory limitations on its enforcement powers, and limited 
+resources, ATF is hampered in its efforts to ensure that gun dealers 
+obey the law. The Office of the Inspector General of the Justice 
+Department recently estimated that, at ATF's current rate of 
+inspections, it will take the Bureau twenty-two years to inspect all of 
+the approximately 100,000 current federal firearms licensees.\4\ When 
+ATF does inspect dealers, violations of the law often are found, but 
+severe statutory constraints on ATF's license revocation powers make it 
+difficult for the Bureau to take meaningful action. According to the 
+Inspector General, in FY 2003, ATF found that 1,812 of its inspections 
+had revealed violations, with an average of over 80 violations for each 
+inspection. However, ATF had issued only 54 notices of license 
+revocation.\5\
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+    \3\ Following the Gun: Enforcing Federal Firearms Laws Against 
+Firearms Traffickers, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (June 
+2000), at 13.
+    \4\ Inspections of Firearms Dealers by the Bureau of Alcohol, 
+Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Report No. I-2004-005, U.S. Dept. of 
+Justice Office of the Inspector General (July 2004), at iii.
+    \5\ Id. at vi.
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+    The National Rifle Association has worked for years to weaken ATF's 
+enforcement of federal gun laws. It has been tragically successful in 
+this endeavor, by limiting ATF's legal authority and its resources. As 
+a result, it is all the more important to maintain a strong civil 
+liability system to give gun sellers a powerful incentive to behave 
+responsibly. One of the recognized purposes of civil liability is to 
+encourage individuals and companies to use reasonable care to prevent 
+injury to others by ensuring that wrongful and dangerous conduct will 
+result in damages liability. Having weakened ATF's enforcement powers, 
+now the gun lobby seeks to remove the only remaining incentive for gun 
+sellers to consider public safety in their business practices. The 
+importance of civil liability was noted by former gun industry insider 
+Robert Ricker, who wrote in a sworn declaration that ``until faced with 
+a serious threat of civil liability for past conduct, leaders in the 
+industry have consistently resisted taking constructive voluntary 
+action to prevent firearms from ending up in the illegal gun market.'' 
+\6\
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+    \6\ Mr. Ricker is a former NRA lawyer and former Executive Director 
+of the American Shootings Sports Council, an industry trade 
+association. His revelations about the gun industry are discussed in 
+greater depth in the attached Brady Center special report, Smoking 
+Guns: Exposing the Gun Industry's Complicity in the Illegal Gun Market, 
+which details much of evidence against the gun industry uncovered in 
+litigation.
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+    Far from pursuing legislation to strengthen ATF, proponents of 
+immunity in Congress would rather reassure reckless gun sellers that 
+they need no longer worry about the prospect that courts will hold them 
+accountable to the victims of their conduct. If H.R. 800 passes, it 
+will mean more gun sellers acting with utter contempt for public 
+safety, with disastrous consequences for communities throughout the 
+Nation. This is why, Mr. Chairman, there is substantial opposition to 
+this legislation in the law enforcement community, including the Major 
+Cities Chiefs Association, the International Brotherhood of Police 
+Officers, the Police Foundation, the National Black Police Association, 
+the Hispanic Police Command Officers Association and several state 
+associations of police chiefs.\7\ In addition to recognizing that 
+police officers like David Lemongello and Ken McGuire may be among the 
+gun victims whose rights are infringed by this bill, these 
+organizations also understand that H.R. 800 will only mean more illegal 
+guns on the streets. It only takes a few ``bad apple'' gun dealers to 
+funnel thousands of guns to criminals. ATF has found that only one 
+percent of licensed gun dealers account for 57% of the guns traced to 
+crime.\8\ These law enforcement organizations agree with us that good 
+gun dealers don't need legal immunity; bad gun dealers don't deserve 
+it.
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+    \7\ A letter opposing H.R. 800 from these organizations, and other 
+members of the law enforcement community, is attached.
+    \8\ Commerce in Firearms in the United States, Bureau of Alcohol, 
+Tobacco and Firearms (February 2000), at 2.
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ GUN INDUSTRY IMMUNITY LEGISLATION IS FAR MORE RADICAL THAN TORT REFORM
+
+    Finally, it is important to distinguish H.R. 800 from other 
+legislation this Congress has considered, and will consider, to reform 
+our civil justice system. This bill is far more radical than any other 
+proposal the Congress will address. Unlike class action reform, H.R. 
+800 does not simply change the legal forum in which gun liability cases 
+are considered; it protects reckless gun sellers from liability in any 
+forum. Unlike medical malpractice reform, H.R. 800 does not simply 
+limit the amount and kind of damages that can be recovered by gun 
+violence victims against reckless gun sellers; it deprives victims of 
+any recovery. Unlike the asbestos litigation reform proposals, H.R. 800 
+sets up no alternative to the court system for victims to be 
+compensated; it denies all avenues for compensation. In short, H.R. 800 
+gives the gun industry special legal privileges that other industries 
+can only dream about. And it makes the victims of reckless gun sellers 
+into ``second-class'' citizens, who lack the basic civil liberties of 
+other Americans who have been injured by the wrongful conduct of 
+others.
+    For these reasons, on behalf of the Brady Center to Prevent Gun 
+Violence, and the brave gun violence victims we represent in court, I 
+urge you to oppose this legislation. Thank you again for the 
+opportunity to share my views.
+
+                               ATTACHMENT
+
+
+
+    Mr. Chabot. Mr. Beckman, you are recognized for 5 minutes.
+
+   TESTIMONY OF BRADLEY T. BECKMAN, BECKMAN AND ASSOCIATES, 
+                 COUNSEL TO NORTH AMERICAN ARMS
+
+    Mr. Beckman. Good morning, Mr. Chairman and Members of the 
+Subcommittee. My name is Bradley Beckman and I'm National 
+Counsel for North American Arms, which is in Mr. Cannon's 
+district.
+    The legal assault that has been brought against North 
+American Arms and the other manufacturers by Mr. Henigan's 
+organization and various municipalities are nothing short of 
+legal terrorism. This has been an assault that has been ongoing 
+for many years.
+    North American Arms is a small manufacturer, relatively 
+modest-sized, been in business for 30-odd years. It employs a 
+number of people and it has a number of suppliers that are 
+employed and it goes on down the line. The burden that is put 
+upon a small company like North American Arms and many that are 
+similarly situated is extraordinary.
+    I listened to Mr. Henigan's comments about what this bill 
+has to do with, and respectfully, I suggest that this bill has 
+nothing to do with terrorism, 50-caliber ammunition, armor-
+piercing bullets, copkiller handguns, but it has everything to 
+do with prevention of legal terrorism.
+    Companies like North American Arms have been essentially 
+held for ransom because they've been told if they don't, 
+they're going to continue to be assaulted with litigation of 
+this sort.
+    I listened with interest to the comments about the Bull's 
+Eye case because I was involved in that case. I was engaged as 
+trial counsel. The acts of those criminals were just that. That 
+was a firearm that was stolen. Bushmaster sold a lawful product 
+in a non-defective condition which was openly stolen from the 
+retailer. This legislation, I submit, under my understanding of 
+the way it is written, would not prevent litigation such as 
+that against a wrongful seller, somebody who has violated the 
+law by allowing that firearm to escape their clutches.
+    With regard to the Lemongello case in West Virginia, we're 
+talking about, again, tragedies where we've seen law 
+enforcement officers killed. Ruger sold another product in a 
+non-defective condition in compliance with a host of laws. It 
+did nothing wrong. To suggest that this legislation will 
+prevent somebody from getting into the courthouse door, I think 
+is simply a misstatement of what this bill is designed to 
+prevent.
+    Mr. Henigan was involved since the mid-1990's with 
+approximately 30 lawsuits brought by municipalities throughout 
+the country--Cincinnati, several in California, Detroit. Each 
+and every one of them has been unsuccessful. However, the cost 
+has been staggering. That is what this legislation is about.
+    If the courthouses in America were designed to address 
+that, then I would submit that we wouldn't have a legislature. 
+We would have just a judicial branch. But this is up to the 
+legislative body to make the laws. If our legislature should 
+determine that firearms are illegal in some form or another, 
+that's a matter for another day. This is to prevent the 
+proverbial gun in the ribs to the manufacturers, the 
+distributors, and the lawful sellers who comply with a very 
+large host of law and regulation.
+    If somebody could explain--I listened to Mr. Smith ask what 
+liability is left. Well, we have retailers who are complying 
+with law, distributors, and manufacturers. As we go through the 
+chain, as we find somebody who violates the laws that presently 
+exist, that's not going to be covered by this legislation. What 
+is covered is the--truly a perversion of the tort system to try 
+to use the tort law of public nuisance, which has been one of 
+the prime sticks that the plaintiffs have tried to use against 
+this industry, to essentially bankrupt them, and while there 
+may have been some companies larger than others, better able to 
+withstand some of the legal assault, I can tell you from the 
+perspective of a modest-sized manufacturer like North American 
+Arms, it cannot withstand that assault and there are a number 
+of other similarly situated companies.
+    I see that my time is expiring, and I thank you.
+    Mr. Chabot. I can assure you you'll have an opportunity to 
+respond to questions and speak some more.
+    [The prepared statement of Mr. Beckman follows:]
+
+                 Prepared Statement of Bradley Beckman
+
+    Mr. Chairman, my name is Bradley Beckman and I am here representing 
+a modest-sized firearms manufacturer with which I am sure you are 
+familiar, North American Arms. North American Arms is based in your 
+district. I want to begin by thanking you for holding this hearing. The 
+legal assault on the firearms industry by opportunistic lawyers and 
+anti-gun politicians threatens to bankrupt an entire industry that 
+scrupulously follows all federal, state and local laws in the 
+manufacture of our products and their sale to federally licensed 
+firearms distributors.
+    North American Arms employs approximately 40 people and specializes 
+in the manufacture of small-sized, personal protection firearms. Many 
+individuals who choose to carry our high-quality products are members 
+of the law enforcement community who use them as a second or ``backup'' 
+firearm to their standard sidearm. North American Arms has been named 
+in several of the state and municipal suits against the firearms 
+industry.
+    The lawsuits brought against gun manufacturers are nothing short of 
+outrageous. Holding gun makers liable for the criminal misuse of our 
+products--one of the central accusations in these suits--is akin to 
+holding Ford, Chevy or Honda responsible for the illegal actions of a 
+drunk driver or holding Kodak responsible for the use of their film in 
+the vile world of child pornography. It is an accusation that defies 
+common sense. While these lawsuits barely pass the straight face test, 
+the consequences of these suits are no laughing matter.
+    North American Arms is literally being crushed under the weight of 
+legal expenses. Money that could be used for developing new markets, 
+hiring workers, improving firearms design and safety is instead 
+channeled to fund the huge costs associated with the legal defense of 
+the company.
+    These lawsuits are nothing short of legal backmail-lawyers, 
+politicians and anti-gun groups want to achieve in the courtroom 
+draconian changes in gun laws that have been rejected by Congress and 
+state legislatures. Their message is simple: ``settle with us or we 
+will bankrupt you with lawsuits.'' This legal extortion must be 
+stopped.
+    North American Arms is a responsible firearms manufacturer that 
+adheres strictly to all laws governing the manufacture and sale of our 
+products to distributors. We have an excellent relationship with law 
+enforcement. We have done nothing wrong, yet if a judge and jury in, 
+for example, New York, decide against our industry it holds the 
+potential of bankrupting not just North American Arms, but the entire 
+U.S. firearms industry. It is doubtful that North American Arms or 
+other manufacturers could post the necessary bond to appeal a verdict. 
+If these suits are successful, they will be a wrecking ball on our 
+national economy. Any member of Congress from Michigan should be ready 
+for a similar assault on the auto industry. We already see suits 
+against purveyors of fast food. The list of targeted industries could 
+go on and on.
+    I want to close with two quotes. The first from a recent decision 
+by California Judge James Marchiano, writing for a unanimous state 
+Court of Appeals decision in favor of the firearms industry just last 
+month. Judge Marchiano wrote:
+
+        ``The only business practice the defendants in this case have 
+        engaged in is marketing their products in a lawful manner to 
+        federally licensed dealers . . .''
+
+        ``In this case, there is no causal connection between any 
+        conduct of the defendants and any incident of illegal 
+        acquisition of firearms or criminal acts or accidental injury 
+        by a firearm. Defendants manufacture guns according to federal 
+        law and guidelines.''
+
+    In March 2002, the City of Boston dismissed with prejudice its 
+lawsuit against firearms manufacturers. The city, facing mounting legal 
+bills and recognizing that it would lose its case, stated in its 
+dismissal that:
+
+        ``. . . members of the Industry and firearms trade associations 
+        are genuinely concerned with and are committed to, the safe, 
+        legal and responsible sale and use of their products . . . The 
+        Industry and the City believe that through cooperation and 
+        communication they can continue to reduce the number of firearm 
+        related accidents, can increase awareness of the issues related 
+        to the safe handling of storage of firearms, and can reduce the 
+        criminal acquisition of firearms.''
+
+    Mr. Chairman, passage of H.R. 800 is common-sense judicial reform. 
+This bill will protect jobs, prevent the misuse of the courts to 
+circumvent elected officials and prevent abuse of the judicial system.
+    Thank You.
+
+    Mr. Chabot. Mr. Keane?
+
+   TESTIMONY OF LAWRENCE G. KEANE, SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT AND 
+   GENERAL COUNSEL, NATIONAL SHOOTING SPORTS FOUNDATION, INC.
+
+    Mr. Keane. Chairman Cannon, distinguished Members of the 
+Subcommittee, my name is Lawrence Keane and I'm the Senior Vice 
+President and General Counsel for the National Shooting Sports 
+Foundation, the trade association for the firearms industry. We 
+strongly support this bill because it's an important common 
+sense legal reform that will help restore integrity and 
+fairness to our nation's judicial system by preventing lawsuit 
+abuse.
+    This vital, bipartisan legislation is critical to 
+protecting America's firearms industry from destruction and 
+bankruptcy at the hands of opportunistic trial lawyers, 
+seriously misguided politicians, and radical anti-gun interest 
+groups who seek to destroy and bankrupt our industry through 
+massive damage awards and/or bleeding us dry through ever-
+mounting legal fees. These ``regulation-through-litigation'' 
+lawsuits misuse our judicial system in an attempt to dictate to 
+all Americans public policy choices that are rightfully the 
+purview of Congress and the elected State legislators. Under 
+our Constitution, those policy choices are for Congress, not 
+judges.
+    The threat posed by ``regulation-through-litigation'' is 
+why the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of 
+Manufacturers, the National Association of Wholesalers, and 
+others support this bill. As the National Association of 
+Manufacturers has said, ``It is a certainty that other 
+businesses will be the next target if these groups succeed in 
+misusing the courts against the firearms industry.'' This 
+legislation is also supported by organized labor. The United 
+Mine Workers, representing about 1,000 Remington factory 
+workers, said the bill will, ``help prevent lawsuits by various 
+parties that are intended to shut down the legitimate and legal 
+firearms industry in the United States because of the improper 
+use of firearms by individuals.'' These lawsuits seek to blame 
+federally-licensed firearms manufacturers for the actions of 
+criminals.
+    Despite some industry success in the courts, this well-
+funded, highly-coordinated onslaught of abusive lawsuits 
+against Members of our industry continues unabated. A single 
+$100 million verdict will bankrupt virtually all the 
+defendants.
+    Members of our industry are being sued today, right here in 
+the District of Columbia, under a law that imposes absolute 
+liability upon manufacturers for criminal shootings occurring 
+in the District because they lawfully sold a gun that was then 
+later illegally brought into the District and used in a crime. 
+Bushmaster is being sued under this same statute with respect 
+to the firearm misused in the sniper case.
+    But the poster child for this bill is a case called Ileto 
+v. Glock, where a manufacturer is being sued in Federal court 
+in California for selling a firearm to a police department in 
+Washington State that was later used in a criminal shooting. A 
+distributor is being sued in that case, even though it never 
+owned, possessed, or sold the firearm in question. Winning on 
+the merits is not necessary in order for these politician and 
+anti-gun activists, like Mr. Henigan, to impose through 
+litigation or financially extorted or coerced settlements, a 
+gun control agenda repeatedly rejected by Congress and State 
+legislature.
+    These anti-gun plaintiffs can implement their gun control 
+policies through the entire nation if the coercive effect 
+resulting from the staggering cost to defend these cases forces 
+manufacturers into a Hobson's choice of capitulation or 
+bankruptcy.
+    The industry-wide cost to defend these cases is staggering. 
+It exceeds $200 million, which is a huge sum for a small 
+industry like ours that taken together doesn't equal a simple 
+Fortune 500 company. These lawsuits threaten the very existence 
+of the manufacturers, such as Sigarms, that produce the tools 
+for law enforcement and military agencies that they use to 
+protect America's freedoms here and abroad every day. These 
+lawsuits have national defense and homeland security 
+implications.
+    The legislation you are considering today is as important 
+for what it does not do. It does not, as Mr. Henigan tries to 
+allege, close the courthouse door to those who have been 
+injured by firearms that have been, for example, illegally sold 
+or have been negligently entrusted or are defectively designed. 
+The bill expressly provides that injured parties will be able 
+to assert well-established tort law claims against the 
+manufacturers themselves of firearms.
+    The Wall Street Journal in an editorial got it right when 
+it said, ``This isn't immunity, as some critics claim. The gun 
+makers and distributors would still have to abide by product 
+liability laws and still face civil suits for violating 
+regulations on the sale and distribution. But just as Sony is 
+not responsible for someone who uses a camcorder to film child 
+pornography, no longer could Beretta be held responsible for 
+someone using its legally purchased product to rob a liquor 
+store.'' It's that judicial abuse that this legislation is 
+carefully drafted to stop, and nothing more.
+    There are several refinements to the bill that was passed 
+by the House in the 108th Congress. We support those changes 
+because they enhance and clarify the bill's purpose and intent.
+    We agree with President Bush, who said, ``Recently our 
+nation depends on a fair legal system that protects people who 
+have been harmed without encouraging junk lawsuits that 
+undermine the confidence in our courts while hurting our 
+economy, costing jobs, and threatening small business.'' Over 
+30 States have already enacted similar laws designed to stop 
+junk lawsuits that are intended to destroy our industry and to 
+achieve gun control regulation through litigation.
+    The time has come for Congress to enact common sense legal 
+reform to prevent an unconstitutional attempt to circumvent 
+Congress and State legislatures, to restore integrity and 
+fairness to our judicial system, to protect one of America's 
+oldest and most important industries, and to prevent the loss 
+of thousands of American jobs vital to the health of our 
+economy, and to protect a critical component of our national 
+security industrial base.
+    Today, it's guns. We are already seeing similar legal 
+assaults on the fast food industry. Are cars, alcohol, and 
+distilled spirits next in line at the courthouse door? We've 
+already seen it start with alcohol.
+    The National Shooting Sports Foundation urges you to vote 
+in favor of the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act. 
+Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for permitting the National Shooting 
+Sports Foundation the opportunity to address the Subcommittee 
+and for the Subcommittee's time and attention.
+    Mr. Cannon. [Presiding.] Thank you, Mr. Keane.
+    [The prepared statement of Mr. Keane follows:]
+
+                Prepared Statement of Lawrence G. Keane
+
+    Chairman Cannon and distinguished members of the Subcommittee, my 
+name is Lawrence G. Keane. I am the senior vice president and general 
+counsel of the National Shooting Sports Foundation, Inc. (NSSF). The 
+National Shooting Sports Foundation appreciates the opportunity to 
+appear before the Subcommittee this morning to offer testimony in 
+support of the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (H.R. 800).
+    Formed in 1961, the National Shooting Sports Foundation, with 
+approximately 2,500 members, is the trade association for the firearm, 
+hunting and recreational shooting sports industry. NSSF is proud of our 
+industry's cooperative relationship with law enforcement, as 
+exemplified by the NSSF--Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and 
+Explosives (ATF) partnership program called Don't' Lie for the Other 
+Guy that ATF Director Carl Truscott described as ``vital in educating 
+Federal firearms licensees (FFL's) and their employees how to recognize 
+and deter the illegal purchase of firearms through straw purchases.'' 
+He called the program ``an important tool for ATF as we pursue our 
+missions of preventing terrorism, reducing violent crime, and 
+protecting the public through Project Safe Neighborhoods and other 
+initiatives.'' NSSF's commitment to promoting the safe and responsible 
+use of firearms is typified by our Project ChildSafe program. Operating 
+under a grant from the U.S. Department of Justice, NSSF, in partnership 
+with state and local governments throughout the United States, has 
+distributed to the public over 25 million firearm safety kits, which 
+includes a free firearm lock. We are very proud that Don't Lie and 
+Project ChildSafe are both components of the Justice Department's 
+Project Safe Neighborhoods program.
+    We strongly support the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act 
+(H.R. 800) because it is an important common sense legal reform that 
+will help restore integrity and fairness to our nation's judicial 
+system by preventing lawsuit abuse. This vital bipartisan legislation 
+is critical to protecting America's firearm industry from destruction 
+and bankruptcy at the hands of opportunistic trial lawyers, seriously 
+misguided politicians and radical antigun interest groups who seek to 
+destroy and bankrupt our industry through massive damage awards and/or 
+bleed us dry through ever mounting legal fees. These predatory lawsuits 
+misuse and abuse our nation's judicial system in an attempt to dictate 
+to all Americans public policy choices that are rightfully the purview 
+of Congress and elected state legislators. In dismissing one such suit, 
+a Florida appellate judge astutely observed that
+
+        [Miami-Dade County's] request that the trial court use its 
+        injunctive powers to mandate redesign of firearms and declare 
+        that the [firearms manufacturers'] business methods create a 
+        public nuisance, is an attempt to regulate firearms and 
+        ammunition through the medium of the judiciary. . . . The 
+        County's frustration cannot be alleviated through litigation as 
+        the judiciary is not empowered to `enact' regulatory measures 
+        in the guise of injunctive relief. The power to legislate 
+        belongs not to the judicial branch of government but to the 
+        legislative branch.
+
+    This misuse of lawsuits by interest groups to force public policy 
+changes, so-called ``regulation through litigation,'' when under our 
+Constitution those policy choices are for Congress and state 
+legislatures to make, represents a direct threat to the entire business 
+community and the nation's economy. This is why the U.S. Chamber of 
+Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers, the National 
+Association of Wholesalers, the American Tort Reform Association, and 
+many others support H.R. 800. As National Association of Manufacturers 
+executive vice president Michael Baroody has said, ``It is a certainty 
+that other businesses will be the next target if these groups succeed 
+in misusing the courts against the firearms industry.''
+    This legislation is supported by organized labor as well. Cecil 
+Roberts, president of the United Mine Workers of America, which 
+represents nearly a thousand workers at the Remington Arms Company's 
+plant in New York, said this bill ``will help prevent lawsuits by 
+various parties that are intended to shut down the legitimate and legal 
+firearms industry in the United States because of improper use of 
+firearms by individuals.'' He cautioned, ``The United States is losing 
+our industrial base and since January 2001 we have lost 2.5 million 
+industrial jobs in the U.S. . . . We need to take steps to protect and 
+encourage growth of our industrial base, including our firearms 
+manufacturers.''
+    Beginning in 1998, a group of approximately forty urban 
+politicians, aligned with contingency-fee trial lawyers and anti-gun 
+activists, have flooded our nation's courts with lawsuits filed against 
+law-abiding, federally licensed firearm manufacturers, wholesale 
+distributors and retailers. These suits blame federally licensed 
+firearm manufacturers for the actions of criminals. The plaintiffs in 
+these cases allege that the sale of a legal product in full compliance 
+with the vast and extensive array of federal, state and local laws and 
+regulations somehow causes criminal violence to occur. They allege that 
+members of the industry are subverting the law by knowingly and 
+willingly selling guns to criminals and are funneling firearms to the 
+so-called ``criminal market.'' These despicable allegations are both 
+patently false and highly offensive and defamatory to the tens of 
+thousands of men and women who work in our industry.
+    Despite some success in the courts, this well-funded, highly 
+coordinated onslaught of abusive lawsuits against members of our 
+industry continues unabated. Several cases are currently pending at the 
+trial court level with several more cases at various stages of appeal 
+that could be returned to trial courts for costly and time-consuming 
+discovery and trial. A single hundred million dollar verdict will 
+bankrupt virtually all of the defendants. In fact, the companies would 
+almost certainly be unable to post the bond required to enable them to 
+appeal such an award. Recently, the City of New York enacted into law 
+the Gun Industry Responsibility Act that imposes absolute liability on 
+law abiding, federally licensed firearm manufacturers and dealers for 
+criminal shootings that occur in New York City. Members of our industry 
+are being sued today right here in the District of Columbia under a 
+similar law that imposed absolute liability upon manufacturers and 
+dealers for criminal shootings occurring in the District because they 
+lawfully sold a firearm that was then illegally brought into the 
+District and used in the commission of a crime. A manufacturer is being 
+sued in federal court in California for selling firearms to a police 
+department in Washington State that was later used in a criminal 
+shooting. In that same case, a distributor is being sued even though it 
+never owned, possessed or sold the firearm in question. This case, 
+Ileto v. Glock, is the poster child for the Protection of Lawful 
+Commerce in Arms Act.
+    Winning on the merits is not necessary in order for these 
+politicians and antigun activists to impose through litigation, or 
+financially extorted and coerced settlements, a radical gun control 
+agenda repeatedly rejected by Congress and state legislatures, and not 
+supported by the American public. At the time he filed his suit, 
+Chicago Mayor Richard Dailey said, ``We're going to hit them where it 
+hurts--in their bank accounts. . .'' Andrew Cuomo, then Housing and 
+Urban Development Secretary, threatened firearm manufacturers with 
+``death by a thousand cuts.'' NAACP president Kweisi Mfume said its 
+lawsuit was ``an effort to break the backs'' of industry members. These 
+antigun plaintiffs can implement their gun control policies throughout 
+the entire nation if the coercive effect resulting from the staggering 
+financial cost to defend these baseless suits forces industry members 
+into a Hobson's choice of either capitulation or bankruptcy. Companies 
+have gone bankrupt, and thousands of people thrown out of work, 
+vindicating themselves against baseless lawsuits; just ask Dow Corning.
+    The collective, industry-wide cost to defend these ill-conceived, 
+politically motivated, predatory lawsuits has been truly staggering. 
+Exact figures are unavailable because the defendants are competitors, 
+and each considers its defense costs to be confidential business 
+information. However, based on discussions with insurance industry 
+executives, manufacturers' corporate counsel, reading cost estimates in 
+various publications and NSSF's own experience as a defendant in these 
+cases, I believe a conservative estimate for the total, industry-wide 
+cost of defending ourselves to date now exceeds $200 million dollars. 
+This is a huge sum of money for a small industry like ours. The firearm 
+industry taken together would not equal a Fortune 500 company.
+    The cost of litigation is borne almost exclusively by the companies 
+themselves. With few exceptions, insurance carriers have denied 
+coverage. These antigun plaintiffs have carefully drafted their 
+complaints to take them outside of liability insurance coverage in 
+order to apply maximum financial pressure on the defendant 
+manufacturers. Because of these lawsuits, firearm industry members now 
+confront skyrocketing premium increases when renewing their insurance 
+policies. In addition, insurance policies now universally exclude 
+coverage for these types of suits. This has resulted in large, across-
+the-board price increases for consumers. In addition, in these trying 
+economic times, taxpayers of the cities that have chosen to pursue the 
+utterly discredited notion that manufacturers are responsible for the 
+acts of criminals are forced to shoulder their city's cost of pursuing 
+such a lawsuit, money that would be better spent hiring more police 
+officers, procuring new equipment or funding critical social services.
+    These lawsuits threaten the very existence of the manufacturers 
+that produce the tools our military and law enforcement agencies use 
+every day to protect America and our freedoms both here at home and 
+abroad. If these companies are driven out of business, from whom will 
+our military and law enforcement purchase firearms? Make no mistake 
+about it; these lawsuits have national defense and homeland security 
+implications.
+    The legislation you are considering today is perhaps more important 
+for what it does not do. It does not, as antigun interest groups have 
+falsely alleged, ``close the courthouse doors'' to those who have been 
+injured by firearms that have been illegally sold, supplied to a person 
+likely to use the firearm in a manner involving an unreasonable risk of 
+injury to himself or another, or prevent a suit due to a defectively 
+designed or manufactured product. The bill expressly provides that 
+injured parties will be able to assert well-recognized tort law claims 
+against the manufacturers and sellers of firearms. The Wall Street 
+Journal clearly stated in an editorial that, ``This isn't immunity, as 
+some critics claim. Gun makers and distributors would still have to 
+abide by product liability laws and still face civil suits for 
+violating regulations on sales or distribution. But just as Sony is not 
+responsible for someone who uses a camcorder to film child pornography, 
+no longer could Beretta be held responsible for someone using its 
+legally purchased product to rob a liquor store.'' (Wall Street 
+Journal, April 17, 2003.) It is that abuse of our judicial system that 
+this legislation is carefully drafted to stop, nothing more and nothing 
+less.
+    The loudest voices arrayed in opposition to this legislation are 
+the same antigun interest groups that are orchestrating and financing 
+the litigation assault to regulate the firearm industry in ways 
+Congress and state legislatures have roundly rejected and hold no 
+support with the American public.
+    There are several refinements between the bill passed by the House 
+in the 108th Congress (H.R. 1036) and this legislation. One change 
+better clarifies that suits can proceed where there is a defective 
+product, but that when a criminal volitionally pulls the trigger 
+causing injury, the manufacturer cannot be sued. As revised, for 
+instance, a juvenile who while target shooting without written 
+permission from his parents (a violation of 18 U.S.C. Sec. 922(y)) is 
+injured by defective ammunition could still be able to bring a suit 
+against the ammunition manufacturer. H.R. 800 defines a ``trade 
+association'' based on Internal Revenue Code and regulations. This new 
+definition avoids specious arguments that the former definition was 
+intended to protect the National Rifle Association. There was never any 
+such intention in the previous bill, and this language makes that 
+clear. H.R. 800 provides that manufacturers or sellers can be sued if 
+they ``knowingly'' violate laws applicable to the sale or marketing of 
+the product, and the violation is a proximate cause of harm to the 
+plaintiff. By comparison, H.R. 1036 said ``knowingly and willfully.'' 
+We support these refinements because they enhance and further clarify 
+the bill's purpose and intent.
+    Over thirty states have already enacted similar laws to stop 
+``junk'' lawsuits designed to destroy this industry and to achieve gun 
+control regulation through litigation. We agree with President Bush who 
+recently said, ``Our country depends on a fair legal system that 
+protects people who have been harmed without encouraging junk lawsuits 
+that undermine confidence in our courts while hurting our economy, 
+costing jobs and threatening small businesses.'' The time has come for 
+Congress to enact a common sense legal reform to restore integrity and 
+fairness to our judicial system, protect American jobs and industry and 
+to prevent an unconstitutional attempt to circumvent Congress and state 
+legislatures. We call upon Congress to prevent lawsuit abuse. The 
+future of one of America's oldest, most important industries and the 
+loss of thousands of American jobs vital to the health of our economy 
+is at stake, as is a critical component of our national security 
+industrial base.
+    The shuttering of the firearm industry will hit states--especially 
+rural states--especially hard. Each year hunters and shooters spend $21 
+billion generating 366,344 jobs that pay more than $8,896,623,900 in 
+salaries and wages and provide $1,223,049,215 in state tax revenue.
+    In closing, if these lawsuits are not stopped, then it is open 
+season on any industry. It is guns today, and we are already seeing 
+similar legal assaults on the fast food industry--cars, alcohol and 
+distilled spirits could be next in line at the courthouse door. In some 
+way, these lawsuits will impact job creation in your districts and 
+states and not for the better.
+    The National Shootings Sports Foundation urges you to vote in favor 
+of the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (H.R. 800). I thank 
+you Mr. Chairman for permitting the NSSF to address the Subcommittee 
+and for the Subcommittee's attention this morning.
+
+                               ATTACHMENT
+
+
+
+    Mr. Cannon. We'd like to welcome Mr. Delahunt from 
+Massachusetts, who's joined us.
+    We have a vote coming up, and I'd hate to hold the panel 
+through that vote and it would be hard for Members to come 
+back, so I'd ask unanimous consent to limit questioning by the 
+Members to 3 minutes. No objection, so ordered.
+    Mr. Watt, would you like to begin?
+    Mr. Watt. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I think in light of our 
+time constraints, I think I will not ask any questions. We've 
+been through this several times now in this Committee, and here 
+we go again. I mean, I made that point in my opening statement.
+    I would just say that this whole notion that Mr. Beckman 
+and Mr. Walton have--obviously, it's some public relations 
+thing that you've undertaken to compare this war to the war in 
+Iraq or call this legal terrorism and make it in some kind of 
+way comparable to terrorism in general, I think is insulting to 
+your argument, and I'll just leave that alone and tell you 
+that's my opinion. That's a constructive suggestion. For you 
+all to compare these things like that, I think is a bad, bad 
+public relations move.
+    I yield back, Mr. Chairman.
+    Mr. Cannon. The gentleman yields back.
+    Mr. Gohmert, would you like to question the witnesses?
+    Mr. Gohmert. Yes, I would.
+    Mr. Cannon. The gentleman is recognized for 3 minutes.
+    Mr. Gohmert. Thank you. Mr. Henigan, let me ask, what do 
+you take the term negligent entrustment to mean?
+    Mr. Henigan. Congressman, negligent entrustment is actually 
+defined in this bill, so it has a very special definition that 
+is not necessarily the same as the common law definition. 
+According to this bill, the suits that would be allowed under 
+that doctrine are suits in which a seller transfers a gun to an 
+obviously dangerous person and then that person misuses the gun 
+against someone. So it would be, for example, a situation where 
+a seller sells a gun to someone who is intoxicated and then 
+goes out and shoots someone. That is a very rare kind of case.
+    The much more frequent kind of case is the kind of thing 
+that happened in that gun shop in West Virginia, where the sale 
+of the gun is to a gun trafficking team and the person who 
+pulled the trigger was nowhere near the gun shop, but 
+nevertheless, the sale was incredibly suspicious. It had all 
+the earmarks of a sale to people who were going to take those 
+guns and sell them directly into the illegal market.
+    So the doctrine of negligent entrustment as it is defined 
+in this bill would not have preserved that case at all.
+    Mr. Gohmert. Well, it does seem, though, that the Second 
+Amendment, when it says--talks about not infringing the right 
+to keep and bear arms, doesn't mean what one constable back in 
+Texas thought it meant, that he had the right to wear short 
+sleeves. But until such time as that is amended, it seems like 
+we should be affording people the right to act within the 
+purview of that amendment.
+    I yield back the remainder of my time. Thank you, Mr. 
+Chairman.
+    Mr. Cannon. Thank you, Mr. Gohmert.
+    Mr. Van Hollen?
+    Mr. Van Hollen. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
+    Whenever the case of the sniper victims comes up, the 
+proponents of the bill say, oh, no, no, no, we're not talking 
+about trying to bar people like the sniper victims and their 
+families from court. It's other people in the world. In fact, 
+as I understood your testimony, Mr. Beckman, you said your 
+understanding of the bill was it would not bar that case. Is 
+that what your testimony was?
+    Mr. Beckman. Insofar as the claims against the manufacturer 
+of that firearm----
+    Mr. Van Hollen. Let--go ahead.
+    Mr. Beckman. Insofar as the claims against the manufacturer 
+of that firearm, I believe that this legislation would prevent 
+that. But respectfully, I suggest that Bushmaster sold its 
+lawful product in a non-defective condition, which the Congress 
+of the United States as well as every State said was a lawful 
+product.
+    Mr. Van Hollen. If I could, let me focus on the gun store, 
+the gun store that sold the weapons. Is it your testimony that 
+a lawsuit against the gun store on the facts of the sniper case 
+would still be allowed to go forward under this bill?
+    Mr. Beckman. Well, it----
+    Mr. Van Hollen. And if so, if you could point to the 
+specific provisions--specific provisions of this bill, because, 
+as you know, when you go in front of a court of law and you sit 
+before a judge, you've got to make an argument based on the 
+language in this bill. If you could tell me, based on the 
+facts, what provisions would allow that case would go forward, 
+I'd appreciate it.
+    Mr. Beckman. Okay. That firearm was not sold by Bull's Eye. 
+It was stolen by Bull's Eye. Strike that, stolen from Bull's 
+Eye. The qualified civil liability action would not include, in 
+my opinion, the failure of Bull's Eye to have maintained 
+control over whatever it--its inventory, because we already 
+have plenty of Federal law that dictates the inventory control 
+that the firearms manufacturers--the firearms retailers should 
+have, and it is the unlawfulness use that is--it would not be 
+precluded. And it would deal with, perhaps--you're asking me to 
+interpret this draft statute as I sit here, and I believe----
+    Mr. Van Hollen. Right. I'm not--you made a statement in 
+your testimony that I interpreted to mean that you thought that 
+this would allow this to go forward, so I thought that you 
+looked at the provisions. That's all.
+    Mr. Beckman. Yes, sir, I have, and I believe that the claim 
+against the retailer would have not been foreclosed under the 
+language of the statute. I believe that it would have 
+foreclosed the----
+    Mr. Van Hollen. And all I was asking you, Mr. Beckman, 
+based on your reading of the statute, what provisions in the 
+statute, based on your understanding of the facts, would allow 
+it to go forward, because the fact of the matter is, although 
+over 250 weapons were missing from this store, under the 
+requirements in this bill, you have to show a direct connection 
+between the particular gun that was stolen and used in the 
+shootings and a proximate cause between the disappearance of 
+that gun and the shootings.
+    And I just--the way I read this bill, and the way many 
+lawyers who have looked at the bill and written opinions and 
+submitted opinions to the Congress, it's quite clear, I 
+believe, that those claims would be barred against the store.
+    Mr. Beckman. Well, but again, I respectfully disagree, sir, 
+because I believe that it is a violation of Federal law, 
+existing Federal law, for the retailer to have not reported the 
+theft.
+    Mr. Van Hollen. If I could ask you, the requirement is if 
+you know of a theft, right?
+    Mr. Beckman. Well----
+    Mr. Van Hollen. In this case--Mr. Chairman, I don't mean to 
+belabor this point, but I'd just like to just wrap up, because 
+in this case, the testimony was that about 230 weapons had been 
+missing from the store. Their testimony was, and it was 
+unrefuted, that they were not aware of the theft of the 
+Bushmaster rifles used in the sniper killings until after the 
+killings took place, and therefore, there would be no legal 
+obligation on them to report something that they did not know 
+about under the statutes.
+    Even though the record is clear that this is a gun store 
+that did not keep control over its weapons--that's why 230 were 
+missing and they couldn't account for them. But the way this is 
+written, because their testimony is they didn't know about it, 
+therefore, they didn't have a legal obligation to report it. 
+Even though they were totally negligent in keeping control of 
+their arsenal, of the guns they were selling, they couldn't--
+the claim would not be brought.
+    I would ask if you could, in a written statement, show us 
+how that is not the case. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
+    Mr. Beckman. I'd be pleased----
+    Mr. Cannon. You're welcome to answer that question, if 
+you'd like.
+    Mr. Beckman. I believe that I've given my view as to why 
+the statute would not have precluded that case against the 
+retailer. It's still a violation of Federal law. It is just 
+akin go what Mr. Henigan explained in the West Virginia case, 
+where it was a knowing violation of the straw purchase. That 
+has been and will remain a violation of Federal law. Where we 
+have somebody who violates the law, that's not within the 
+purview of this statute. What is within the purview of this 
+statute is the 30-odd lawsuits that were brought by 
+municipalities around this country, all of which had no effect 
+whatsoever on this industry other than to cost them staggering 
+sums of money. And indeed, the lawsuits themselves were abject 
+failures. That's what this legislation is designed to address.
+    Mr. Van Hollen. Mr. Chairman, at some point, if you could 
+maybe later supply for the record the particular provision in 
+this bill that you say would still allow that lawsuit to go 
+forward, because what this bill does is provide general 
+liability and creates certain exceptions. If you could, please, 
+pinpoint what in the bill allows the lawsuit against the seller 
+of the weapons used in the sniper suit to go forward, I would 
+appreciate it.
+    Mr. Cannon. And if you could get that within 5 days, we 
+would appreciate that, so that we can include it in the record.
+    Mr. Beckman. I'd be pleased to do so.
+    Mr. Cannon. Thank you, Mr. Beckman.
+    The gentleman from Arizona, Mr. Franks, is recognized for 3 
+minutes.
+    Mr. Franks. Mr. Chairman, I know this isn't the appropriate 
+venue to kind of dissect this legislation, but it occurs to me 
+that in section 5, article III, 1, 2, the Malvo case is made 
+very clear. Neither of these individuals involved in the sniper 
+case could have legally purchased a gun in the first place, and 
+so I think it's a red herring.
+    But the ultimate situation is that in the final analysis 
+here, this is going to a deeper question in our country, and 
+that is simply the right of people to own and bear arms and 
+defend themselves and the right of manufacturers to manufacture 
+weapons that can accomplish that. Ultimately, even those that 
+are opponents of this bill would suggest that the police 
+officers of this nation should have the ability to defend other 
+people.
+    So with that statement made, it lays out very clearly that 
+it's not the weapons, it's whose hands they are in. If we don't 
+refocus our attentions as a nation into making sure that the 
+people who misuse the weapons are our focus rather than the 
+weapons, then we merely disarm the innocent and merely prevent 
+people from being able to defend themselves, and I can suggest 
+to you that criminals have always preferred unarmed victims, 
+and that is at the core bases of this discussion.
+    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
+    Mr. Cannon. Thank you.
+    The bell has not yet run. Mr. Delahunt, would you like to 
+ask questions?
+    Mr. Delahunt. If the chair doesn't object.
+    Mr. Cannon. How could I object? I wish you were on our 
+side, but what the heck. We'll do with the information we get, 
+whatever----
+    Mr. Delahunt. I just want to pick up on something that the 
+gentleman just talked about, a basic right and the Second 
+Amendment. I want to assure you, I support the Second 
+Amendment. But I also support what I consider as a basic right 
+of a citizen who, if he or she feels that there has been an 
+injury because of negligence or because of the actions of 
+someone else, a basic right to the justice system, to the civil 
+justice system. That is probably the core, most fundamental 
+right that we enjoy as Americans, access to a justice system.
+    You know, the gentleman speaks of staggering sums. How much 
+has been spent?
+    Mr. Beckman. Are you----
+    Mr. Delahunt. I'm speaking to the gentleman with the nice 
+white hair. [Laughter.]
+    Mr. Beckman. Are you talking about for North American Arms 
+specifically, or----
+    Mr. Delahunt. No. In other words, I'll tell you, I'm having 
+real difficulty finding out what the problem is. You know, all 
+I see is in the findings, I don't read anything about empirical 
+data supporting a premise that the industry is going to go 
+under.
+    Mr. Beckman. Well, respectfully, Congressman, we have other 
+laws that preclude us from sharing all of our information among 
+the manufacturers and distributors. So I can only speak to the 
+company, or companies, that I have first-hand knowledge of.
+    Mr. Delahunt. Okay.
+    Mr. Beckman. And I can tell you that my client has spent 
+hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars----
+    Mr. Delahunt. Defending lawsuits.
+    Mr. Beckman. Well, I'm talking about the municipal 
+litigation. I'm not talking about----
+    Mr. Delahunt. All right. Now, you've won those suits, 
+correct?
+    Mr. Beckman. Well, thus far, and where I have the problem 
+with it, why I think that this legislation----
+    Mr. Delahunt. Could I ask you--let me just interrupt, okay? 
+You represent a manufacturer.
+    Mr. Beckman. Yes, sir.
+    Mr. Delahunt. Would you have problems if manufacturers 
+enjoyed this particular--the benefit of this legislation, 
+because, you know, I dare say that the most obvious party in 
+terms of responsibility and negligence would be the seller, the 
+immediate seller. Now, if legislation were redrafted which 
+would continue the common law as it applies to the distributor, 
+the immediate seller, would you have a problem with that?
+    Mr. Beckman. I have a problem with holding--trying to hold 
+somebody liable for damages that is very remote, because it is 
+the same thing. We all know about the problems with drunk 
+driving in this country, and if we start holding the auto 
+manufacturers liable----
+    Mr. Delahunt. No, no, but you're not answering my question. 
+I'm saying, let's use your analogy. What about the bartender, 
+okay, that gives that customer who's obviously inebriated that 
+extra drink, as opposed to the maker of the scotch that was 
+consumed? Do you see a distinction there?
+    Mr. Beckman. Well, I do, and we have the Dram Shop Acts 
+that----
+    Mr. Delahunt. I'm not asking about the Dram Shop Acts. I'm 
+asking about the analogy between the producer of the whiskey 
+and the bartender who sells it in terms of responsibility. Do 
+you see a distinction there?
+    Mr. Beckman. I do. I do. I think that if you hold the 
+manufacturer of the whiskey responsible, that's not----
+    Mr. Delahunt. But what about the bartender?
+    Mr. Beckman. If the bartender is serving somebody who's 
+clearly inebriated, I think that's wrong.
+    Mr. Delahunt. Okay, and should be held liable?
+    Mr. Beckman. Indeed. If somebody is then injured by that 
+drunk person, yes, I have no problem with----
+    Mr. Delahunt. Well, I guess that's what I'm suggesting in 
+terms of the difference between the manufacturer and the seller 
+in that gun store to that individual who comes in.
+    Mr. Beckman. Well, unless we have a vertically integrated 
+industry where----
+    Mr. Delahunt. I'm not asking about vertical integration. 
+I'm asking about the individual who sells the gun at the gun 
+store, not--if you guys want to have a caucus, I'll be quiet 
+here and you two can work out the answer. Can I just please ask 
+the question without the gentleman whispering in your ear for 
+just a moment, okay? I'm sure he's more than capable of giving 
+me an answer.
+    Mr. Cannon. Do you want an answer to the question, or do 
+you want to embarrass the witness, Bill?
+    Mr. Delahunt. Maybe both, but at least an attempt----
+    Mr. Beckman. Fortunately, I don't embarrass very easily.
+    Mr. Delahunt. No. At least an attempt at giving me an 
+answer. There's a distinction between the manufacturer and the 
+gun store.
+    Mr. Beckman. I think there's a great distinction between 
+the manufacturer and the gun store, because you have somebody 
+who is the proverbial--18 inches away----
+    Mr. Delahunt. I'm not----
+    Mr. Cannon. The gentleman's time has expired and we have a 
+vote called----
+    Mr. Delahunt. Okay.
+    Mr. Cannon. --so if you don't mind, I'm going to give the 
+gentleman a chance to answer the question and you can clarify a 
+little bit if you want, but we probably do need to come to a 
+close.
+    Mr. Delahunt. I'll do the clarification at a later time.
+    Mr. Beckman. To answer your question, the person who is 18 
+inches away in a retail store, they have an obligation to 
+comply with the law, and if they're selling through straw 
+purchasers or if they're selling to somebody who is an 
+unqualified buyer, that is a violation of the law and that is 
+not something that is going to be barred under this statute.
+    Mr. Cannon. The gentleman's time having expired, Mr. Watt?
+    Mr. Watt. Mr. Chairman, Mr. Conyers has asked me to put 
+some things in the record, so I ask unanimous consent to insert 
+in the record a copy of the GAO report entitled, ``FBI Could 
+Better Manage Firearm-Related Background Checks Involving 
+Terrorist Watch List Records.''
+    Mr. Cannon. Without objection--oh, go ahead.
+    Mr. Watt. A copy of the bill that Mr. Conyers and 
+Representative Chris Shays introduced in response to the GAO 
+report; some information taken from a website which describes 
+the Five-Seven as a 20-round pistol that fires a 5.7 millimeter 
+bullet that will, quote, ``defeat most body armor in military 
+service around the world today;'' a copy of the bill 
+Representative Eliot Engel introduced which limits the use of 
+the Five-Seven firearm; and some articles which highlight 
+nearly a dozen or so assault weapons-related shootings which 
+all occurred in the past 9 months, many of the shootings 
+involving law enforcement officers.
+    Mr. Cannon. Without objection, so ordered.
+    [The material referred to is inserted in the Appendix.]
+    Mr. Cannon. I want to thank the panel for being here today. 
+The language which you said has helped us frame the language of 
+the debate that I think we're going to have. Actually, I think 
+it was more interesting year than it was last cycle, so perhaps 
+we can get to a vote in the House and also in the Senate and 
+make this thing move forward.
+    I just want to, not having taken my 5 minutes, let me just 
+make one point. That is, the hundreds of thousands of dollars 
+that your company, Mr. Beckman, spent on defense of these 
+lawsuits means the jeopardy of jobs in my district, and I would 
+prefer that we keep liability the way it historically has been 
+in America. That is personal, with personal responsibility, and 
+I think this bill does that.
+    Thank you very much, gentlemen. This hearing is adjourned.
+    [Whereupon, at 11:27 a.m., the Subcommittee was adjourned.]
+
+
+                            A P P E N D I X
+
+                              ----------                              
+
+
+               Material Submitted for the Hearing Record
+
+ Prepared Statement of the Honorable Chris Cannon, a Representative in 
+    Congress from the State of Utah, and Chairman, Subcommittee on 
+                   Commercial and Administrative Law
+
+    Good morning ladies and gentlemen; this hearing of the Subcommittee 
+on Commercial and Administrative Law will now come to order. We 
+consider today H.R. 800, the ``Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms 
+Act,'' which was introduced on February 15 by Representative Stearns. 
+It currently has 157 co-sponsors, including myself.
+    H.R. 800 provides that a ``qualified civil liability action'' 
+cannot be brought in any State or Federal court. ``Qualified civil 
+liability action'' is defined as a civil action or proceeding brought 
+by any person against a manufacturer or seller of firearms or 
+ammunition for damages resulting from the criminal or unlawful misuse 
+of such products. However, such term does not include an action against 
+a person who transfers a firearm or ammunition knowing that it will be 
+used to commit a crime of violence or a drug trafficking crime, or a 
+comparable or identical State felony law. It also does not include an 
+action brought against a seller for negligent entrustment or negligence 
+per se. The bill also includes several additional exceptions, including 
+an exception for actions in which a manufacturer or seller of a 
+qualified product knowingly and willfully violates a State or Federal 
+statute applicable to sales or marketing when such violation was a 
+proximate cause of the harm for which relief is sought. Other 
+exceptions include actions for breach of contract or warranty in 
+connection with the purchase of a firearm or ammunition; and an 
+exception for actions for damages resulting directly from a defect in 
+design or manufacture of a firearm or ammunition, when used as 
+intended. The bill also makes clear that only licensed manufacturers 
+and sellers are covered by the bill.
+    Tort law rests upon a foundation of personal responsibility in 
+which a product may not be defined as defective unless there is 
+something ``wrong'' with the product, rather than with the product's 
+user. However, in the last several years, lawsuits have been filed 
+against the firearms industry on theories of liability that would hold 
+it liable for the actions of others who use their products in a 
+criminal or unlawful manner. Such lawsuits threaten to separate tort 
+law from its basis in personal responsibility, and to force firearms 
+manufacturers into bankruptcy, leaving potential plaintiffs asserting 
+traditional claims of product manufacturing defects unable to recover 
+more than pennies on the dollar, if that, in federal bankruptcy court. 
+While some of these lawsuits have been dismissed, and some states have 
+acted to limit them in one way or another, the fact remains that these 
+lawsuits continue to be aggressively pursued. In January, the Supreme 
+Court refused to overturn a decision by the notorious Ninth Circuit 
+Court of Appeals that allowed a frivolous lawsuit brought against gun 
+manufacturers for a crime committed by a third party to go forward. One 
+of the personal injury lawyers suing the firearms industry--John 
+Coale--told The Washington Post--quote--``The legal fees alone are 
+enough to bankrupt the industry.'' Professor David Kopel (Ko-PELL) has 
+also stated that the cities suing the firearms industry--quote--``don't 
+even have to win . . . All they have to do is keep suing . . . They'll 
+kill [the industry] with the cost of defending all the lawsuits.''
+    Lawsuits seeking to hold the firearms industry responsible for the 
+criminal and unlawful use of its products by others are attempts to 
+accomplish through litigation what has not been achieved by legislation 
+and the democratic process. As explained by one federal judge--quote--
+``the plaintiff's attorneys simply want to eliminate handguns.''
+    Under the currently unregulated tort system, personal injury 
+lawyers are seeking to obtain through the courts stringent limits on 
+the sale and distribution of firearms beyond the court's jurisdictional 
+boundaries. Such a state lawsuit in a single county could destroy a 
+national industry and deny citizens everywhere the right to keep and 
+bear arms guaranteed by the Constitution. Insofar as these lawsuits 
+have the practical effect of burdening interstate commerce in firearms, 
+Congress has the authority to act under the Commerce Clause of the 
+Constitution, as well as the Second Amendment.
+    Such lawsuits also directly implicate core federalism principles 
+articulated by the Supreme Court, which has made clear that--quote--
+``one State's power to impose burdens on the interstate market . . . is 
+not only subordinate to the federal power over interstate commerce, but 
+is also constrained by the need to respect the interests of other 
+States . . .''
+    If the judicial system is allowed to eliminate the firearms 
+industry based on legal theories holding manufacturers liable for the 
+misuse of their products, it is also likely that similar liability will 
+be applied to an infinitely long list of other industries whose 
+products are statistically associated with misuse. Where will it end? 
+Knives are mostly used for nonviolent purposes, such as cooking, but 
+hundreds of thousands of violent crimes every year are perpetrated with 
+knives. We've already seen multi-million dollar lawsuits against the 
+makers of hamburgers and steaks for damages caused when other people 
+abuse those products and overeat. Surely the manufacturers of steak 
+knives will be sued next when such knives are used for criminal 
+purposes.
+    Congress must begin to stem the slide down this slippery slope. It 
+can do that by fulfilling its constitutional duty and exercising its 
+authority under the Commerce Clause to prevent a few state courts from 
+bankrupting the national firearms industry and denying all Americans 
+their fundamental right to bear arms. We need to preserve the benefit 
+of American-made weapons for our soldiers overseas who are so ably 
+defending all of us from terrorism. Let's not allow the American 
+firearms industry to be bankrupted so we're left to rely on foreign 
+countries to provide weapons for our own soldiers.
+    I now yield to Mr. Watt, the Ranking Member of the Subcommittee, 
+for an opening statement.
+
+Prepared Statement of the Honorable Cliff Stearns, a Representative in 
+                   Congress from the State of Florida
+
+
+
+H.R. 1225, the ``Terrorist Apprehension and Record Retention (TARR) Act 
+
+                               of 2005''
+
+
+
+
+   GAO Report entitled ``GUN CONTROL AND TERRORISM: FBI Could Better 
+Manage Firearm-Related Background Checks Involving Terrorist Watch List 
+                                Records
+
+
+
+          The ARMS site description of FN's Five-seveN Pistol
+
+
+
+      H.R. 1136, the ``Protect Law Enforcement Armor (PLEA) Act''
+
+
+
+  News Articles for the record offered by the Honorable John Conyers, 
+   Jr., a Representative in Congress from the State of Michigan, and 
+               Ranking Member, Committee on the Judiciary
+
+
+
+Response to Post-Hearing Questions from a Minority Member to Bradley T. 
+  Beckman, Counsel, Beckman and Associates, Counsel to North American 
+                                  Arms
+
+
+
+     Article submitted by Lawrence G. Keane, Counsel, Beckman and 
+               Associates, Counsel to North American Arms
+
+
+
+   Op-Ed Article from New York Daily News, Sunday, January 9, 2005, 
+   submitted by Lawrence G. Keane, Counsel, Beckman and Associates, 
+                     Counsel to North American Arms
+
+
+
+Letter from Walter Olson, Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute for Policy 
+                 Research to the Honorable Chris Cannon
+
+
+
+                                 
+
+