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Mother Takes Aim At Top Gunmaker (NY)

Josey1Josey1 Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
edited June 2002 in General Discussion
Mother Takes Aim
At Top Gunmaker
Kin of Wendy's massacre suing

By PATRICE O'SHAUGHNESSY
Daily News Staff Writer

hey make unlikely combatants, a grieving immigrant mother from Queens and a second-generation West Coast mogul who boasts of providing "millions of firearms" to lower-income groups.


Joan Truman Smith of Queens, whose daughter was killed in the Wendy's massacre, is suing the manufacturer of the gun used in the slaying.
But Joan Truman Smith - a persistent voice for justice in the murder of her daughter Anita Smith in the Wendy's massacre two years ago - is taking on the man she says also played a role in the stunning crime.

She has filed a federal lawsuit against Bruce Jennings, whose family holds an empire built on the manufacture of small-caliber Saturday night specials, as well as the sale of cheap .38-caliber and 9-mm. pistols that are used in hundreds of crimes in New York every year.

Anita Smith was one of five Wendy's workers who were methodically executed during a robbery May 24, 2000, allegedly by two men who used a Bryco/Jennings Model J-38 .38-caliber semiautomatic pistol, serial No. 1032592.

"These guns, especially this type of gun, go to a lot of criminal hands," Truman Smith said. "The manufacturer doesn't care about lives, just money."

Also named in the suit before Judge Jack Weinstein in Brooklyn Federal Court are Jennings' distribution company and the Ohio-based wholesaler, Acusport, and retailer, Atlantic Gun and Tackle store, which bought and resold the gun before it was stolen and taken to New York.

The suit contends that Jennings' companies saturate the market through high-volume outlets that encourage sales to traffickers, and that their products are used in crimes disproportionately to other brands of firearms.


Anita Smith, victim
"Each entity in the distribution chain of the Wendy's gun has a bad history," said Elisa Barnes, the lawyer representing Truman Smith. "Thousands of crime guns have been traced to the wholesaler and the store, and the gun was sold to a straw purchaser."

Jennings once told PBS' "Frontline" his family had sold "upwards of 10 million guns."

Over the years, the gun trade has furnished him with plush homes in California and Nevada, a private plane and luxury cars.

"We have supplied millions of firearms legitimately to the vast population of the lower-income groups. And by supplying these firearms at affordable prices, we've filled the void that the other American manufacturers had failed to do so for many years," Jennings told "Frontline."

"They're making the guns to bring into our neighborhoods to kill us," Truman Smith said. "They're not making guns for black people, poor people; they're making them for money."

Jennings' lawyer said through an assistant that he would not comment on the lawsuit.

Gunning for Profits

The Jennings clan has long been the scourge of gun-control advocates, and their products the bane of urban cops.


Bruce Jennings, whose family has built an empire manufacturing firearms, faces lawsuit by mother of massacre victim.
"Bruce Jennings is kind of a prototypical gun manufacturer," said Dennis Henigan, legal director of the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence. "He's essentially shown no regard whatsoever for how his guns are used."

Jennings' late father, George, founded now-defunct Raven Arms, which churned out small, easily concealed .25-caliber pistols selling for $50 to $75 and filled a void left by a 1968 federal law prohibiting shoddy imported guns.

Jennings started his own company, Bryco Arms, and later started B.L. Jennings Inc., a wholesale business that bought and resold the Bryco guns. The family's other sister companies - Davis, Lorcin, Phoenix Arms - are dubbed the "Ring of Fire" companies because they were located on a volcano belt in California.

Jennings does not hold an active federal firearms license in his name. Bryco and B.L. Jennings Inc. have active licenses, but when asked for the names of the responsible persons on the licenses, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms spokesman Joseph Green said they are not public record.

Barnes contends that Jennings - who is ineligible to hold an active license because of a domestic violence conviction - still controls the companies through shell corporations in his children's names.

In 1993, according to ATF, Bryco Arms produced 251,633 handguns. In 1997, that had dropped to 47,688, but it has been climbing back up. In 2000, Bryco manufactured 116,664 pistols, the bulk of them .38-caliber and 9-mm. firearms, which sell much more cheaply than their rivals. Similar caliber weapons by SigSauer, for example, sell in stores for $600 to $700.

The Wendy's gun cost $169.95 in the store and was resold for $250, but a weapon like that normally fetches $500 on the street, ATF agents said.

The profit potential increases the chances the weapon will enter the illegal market and be used in a crime.

Last year, five of the top 10 crime guns were made by Ring of Fire companies. Of 5,972 crime guns submitted for tracing to ATF's New York office, 534 were Bryco .38-caliber and 9-mm. weapons and 863 were pistols made by Lorcin, Raven and Davis.

They are the weapons of choice for criminals ages 17 to 24, ATF figures show. And among that age group, Bryco semiautomatics have the fastest "time to crime," being recovered in a crime within three years of legitimate sale.

It took 14 months until the Wendy's gun was used on Anita Smith and her co-workers.

A Family in Tears

"If I'm crying, that's how it's going to be," Truman Smith warns a visitor in her West Indian accent, frequently wiping tears as she speaks of her daughter, who was 22 and due to start courses at York College in September 2000.


John Taylor, faces trial
Truman Smith hugs her two sons, Michael Smith, 13, and Shakeem Smith, 8, close as she talks. Michael wrote a poem about the family that says in part: "Some times we cry. We can laff, we can be sad, our tears can not lie."

Truman Smith's surviving daughter, Michelle Smith, 22, "doesn't like to talk about it; they were very close," her mother said.

Truman Smith has vowed she'll be in court for as long as it takes to see defendant John Taylor convicted of capital murder. Craig Godineaux pleaded guilty and got life.


Craig Godineaux, confessed
"I was against the death penalty, until it was at my front door," she said. "My child was begging for her life."

The murder weapon remains locked away in the Queens district attorney's office, awaiting Taylor's trial in September. Truman Smith has never seen it but decided she wanted to hold its manufacturer responsible.

"The law's got to change, how these guns get into people's hands got to change; there has to be change in the community," she said.

Verdict Overturned

Barnes brought a case three years ago against the country's major handgun manufacturers, Hamilton vs. Accu-tek et al., and a Brooklyn Federal Court jury found that 15 defendants marketed or distributed handguns negligently.

The state Court of Appeals overturned the decision, saying manufacturers don't have a duty to make sure the guns don't reach criminal hands.

Andrew Arulanandam, a spokesman for the National Rifle Association, would not comment on Truman Smith's suit but said, "These are careless lawsuits aimed at bankrupting a legitimate American industry by holding them responsible for the criminal actions of others."

But Henigan said manufacturers can be held liable for how the guns are sold because they also restrict dealers regarding prices and display of their products.

"Cases that were dismissed on pleadings 10 or 15 years ago are now going much further in the courts," Henigan said. "The law is developing."

Joshua Horwitz of the Educational Fund to Stop Handgun Violence said Truman Smith's case satisfies what was lacking in the Hamilton case - identification of the gun and the whole supply chain - and "has a lot of potential."

Truman Smith sees the case in simpler terms.

"Take this picture, show it to the gun manufacturer," she said, holding a photograph of Anita Smith.

Her daughter is in a cream-colored coffin, her lustrous black hair over one shoulder, a red-tinged yellow rose resting on the other.

http://www.nydailynews.com/2002-06-11/News_and_Views/City_Beat/a-153939.asp




"If cowardly and dishonorable men sometimes shoot unarmed men with army pistols or guns, the evil must be prevented by the penitentiary and gallows, and not by a general deprivation of a constitutional privilege." - Arkansas Supreme Court, 1878

Comments

  • twinstwins Member Posts: 647 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Tragic, but I wonder if she is going to sue Wendy's for selling fatty foods too. Heart disease you know.

    I can't believe the Jennings actually did not explode in the perp's hands.

    Mine ( a J22) gives you a 50/50 chance that the slide will come completely off the gun when fired.

    Gotta love frivolous, money grabbibg lawsuits.
  • CS8161CS8161 Member Posts: 13,596 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    I wish these damn guns would stop pulling their own triggers and killing innocent people. Hey, maybe its the animals who pull the triggers that should be blamed.....nah....that would make too much sense!

    Chris8161
    Admit nothing, deny everything, demand proof!
  • simonbssimonbs Member Posts: 994
    edited November -1
    Sure am glad they have that whole assault weapon ban and high cap mag ban. Totally stopped crime in its tracks with that one. All those dangerous .38s with their high-cap cylinders, bayonet lugs, and flash supressors are off the streets. What a relief.

    I'm not afraid of the dark...the dark is afraid of me!
  • mudgemudge Member Posts: 4,225 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    Pardon me if this sounds a bit unfeeling, but.....If they hadn't identified the weapon used, who would she be suing? If her daughter had been run down by the getaway car, or stabbed to death or beaten to death with a baseball bat, who would she be suing?
    Saxon's right....This whole thing sounds a lot like: "My daughter was killed by a robber, but don't hold him responsible. He hasn't got any money. The entity that's responsible is whoever has the deepest pockets. Only if you give me a gazillion dollars will I be mollified."
    Just the "same old, same old". Shakespeare was right!!

    Mudge the cynic

    I can't come to work today. The voices said, STAY HOME AND CLEAN THE GUNS!

    Edited by - mudge on 06/12/2002 16:17:37
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