Wat_Tyler
Allah's Favorite
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2004
- Posts
- 67,645
Fucking figures:
https://www.baltimoresun.com/2024/1...timore_sun-breaking_news-nl&utm_content=alert
Baltimore’s case against Anne Arundel gun shop that sold thousands of ‘ghost gun’ kits to head to trial
Baltimore’s civil case against an Anne Arundel County gun shop that sold thousands of ghost gun kits just a few miles from the city limits will head to trial, a judge ruled this week.
Baltimore Circuit Judge Shannon E. Avery rejected a request from Hanover Armory’s attorneys to resolve the lawsuit in its favor without a trial, ruling that Baltimore’s lawyers would get to present their case to a jury. The trial is scheduled for December.
Surviving this legal hurdle represents another victory for Baltimore in its litigation related to the untraceable, finish-building-at-home guns that officials say have flooded city streets. In February, the city settled for $1.2 million with Polymer80 Inc., the nation’s largest manufacturer of so-called ghost guns. The part of the lawsuit targeting Hanover Armory continued.
Baltimore’s argument against the gun shop mirrors its ongoing case against opioid distributors. In both lawsuits, the city alleges the companies contributed to a public nuisance that deprived residents of their rights to health and safety. To succeed in the gun case, Baltimore’s lawyers must convince a jury that the shop added to a crisis of violence fueled by untraceable firearms.
And so on. Same shit, diff'runt day . . . .
https://www.baltimoresun.com/2024/1...timore_sun-breaking_news-nl&utm_content=alert
Baltimore’s case against Anne Arundel gun shop that sold thousands of ‘ghost gun’ kits to head to trial
Baltimore’s civil case against an Anne Arundel County gun shop that sold thousands of ghost gun kits just a few miles from the city limits will head to trial, a judge ruled this week.
Baltimore Circuit Judge Shannon E. Avery rejected a request from Hanover Armory’s attorneys to resolve the lawsuit in its favor without a trial, ruling that Baltimore’s lawyers would get to present their case to a jury. The trial is scheduled for December.
Surviving this legal hurdle represents another victory for Baltimore in its litigation related to the untraceable, finish-building-at-home guns that officials say have flooded city streets. In February, the city settled for $1.2 million with Polymer80 Inc., the nation’s largest manufacturer of so-called ghost guns. The part of the lawsuit targeting Hanover Armory continued.
Baltimore’s argument against the gun shop mirrors its ongoing case against opioid distributors. In both lawsuits, the city alleges the companies contributed to a public nuisance that deprived residents of their rights to health and safety. To succeed in the gun case, Baltimore’s lawyers must convince a jury that the shop added to a crisis of violence fueled by untraceable firearms.
And so on. Same shit, diff'runt day . . . .