PGC – After the courts allowed the Sandy Hook lawsuit to go forward that seeks to hold manufacturers of guns accountable for the violence individuals choose to commit using these same gauns, the lawsuits against gun manufacturers have only increased. Recently, the Mexican government joined in the lawsuit party and now our own law officers are using the same tactic to target gun manufacturers for bankrupty through litigation.
If you can’t kill the 2A legally, kill it economically by making the legal cost of operation beyond feasible, with exemptions written for the manufacturing of guns for police and military, no doubt.
To see Los Angeles County deputies sue a company that doesn’t even make guns but rather makes ghost gun kits that let others make their own guns is to telegraph to the world just how afraid law enforcement is of the 2nd amendment. These two deputies are suing a ghost gun machine maker because one of their machines made a ghost gun that was used in an ambush in which both these cops were shot at. This is lawfare, the use of law to commit political acts of violence against the American people.
Los Angeles Deputies Wounded In Ambush Attack Sue ‘Ghost Gun’ Kit Maker
From power1051.iheart.com
2021-08-10 12:24:15
Excerpt:
Two Los Angeles County deputies who were ambushed in their patrol car last September have filed a lawsuit against a company that makes “ghost gun” kits. The lawsuit accuses Nevada-based Polymer80 Inc. of negligently and unlawfully selling an “untraceable home-assembled gun kit” that was used in the attack.
Claudia Apolinar and Emmanuel “Manny” Perez-Perez were sitting in their marked patrol car when Deonte Murray walked up to the car and opened fire on the two officers.
Murray was arrested three days later and tossed a PF940c handgun from his vehicle during a police chase. Murray was not allowed to own a firearm due to numerous felony convictions. The gun did not have a serial number, but ballistics confirmed it was used in the attack on Apolinar and Perez-Perez.
The homemade gun kits are not considered firearms by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, and sellers are not required to conduct a background on buyers.
The lawsuit alleges that Polymer80 sold “ghost gun kits without serial numbers and without taking reasonable steps to ensure that purchasers are legally allowed to purchase or possess firearms, despite knowing that their deadly products are especially attractive to criminals and would likely and foreseeably end up in the hands of dangerous persons prohibited from legally owning firearms under federal and state law.”

