News

The legal U.S. gun market continues to fuel criminal violence across the Americas – not only in Mexico and the Caribbean but ...
The Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that a lawsuit by the Mexican government against U.S. gun makers cannot go forward. In a unanimous decision by Justice Elena Kagan, the justices held […] ...
The Mexican government claimed U.S. gun manufacturers have “knowingly” sold their products to the country’s drug cartels.
Mexico said American-made weapons are responsible for its gun violence, but U.S. laws bar suits against gun makers.
Officials in Mexico have confirmed they have an arrest warrant pending for former middleweight boxing champion Julio César ...
A 19-year-old was arrested in the accidental shooting that killed his teen brother, New Mexico officials said. On June 27, ...
The Supreme Court tossed Mexico's $10-billion lawsuit against U.S. gun makers, but the case forced U.S. officials to acknowledge that thousands of guns are smuggled into Mexico from the United States.
Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., the former champion boxer from Mexico, has been detained by ICE and faces expedited removal from U.S.
The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that Mexico can't pursue a lawsuit to hold American gunmakers liable for Mexican drug cartel ...
Mexico’s government had argued that negligent gun sales have fuelled its struggles against cartels and criminal groups.
In Smith & Wesson v. Estados Unidos Mexicanos, Mexico sued seven American gun manufacturers, claiming that their products are ...
The Mexican government had sought to hold American gun manufacturers legally accountable for rampant cartel violence.