HR-3740-119
Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.
What it does
This bill would repeal the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA), a 2005 federal law that broadly shields firearms manufacturers, sellers, importers, dealers, and trade associations from civil lawsuits when their products are used in crimes. It would also remove the legal immunity that currently protects Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) firearms trace data from being used in civil litigation, making that data subject to discovery, admissible as evidence, and usable in civil and administrative proceedings.
Who benefits
Victims of gun violence and their families who would gain new legal avenues to sue firearms industry members. Personal injury and wrongful death attorneys who could bring previously barred civil cases. State and local governments that have sought to sue gun manufacturers over public costs of gun violence. Researchers and litigants who would gain access to ATF trace data showing how firearms move from legal sale to criminal use. Courts and juries who would have more complete evidentiary records in firearms-related civil cases.
Who is hurt
Firearms manufacturers, importers, and retailers who would face civil liability exposure they currently do not have. Trade associations representing the firearms industry. Firearms dealers — including small, independent gun shops — who could be named as defendants in lawsuits even when they followed all applicable laws. Consumers who may see higher prices if litigation costs are passed on. Taxpayers who may bear costs if increased litigation burdens the court system. Insurers of firearms businesses who would face new and uncertain liability exposure.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the PLCAA grants the firearms industry a uniquely broad immunity from civil liability that no other product manufacturer enjoys — car makers, pharmaceutical companies, and alcohol producers can all be sued for negligent distribution or design. They contend that removing this immunity would not expose law-abiding sellers to frivolous suits, but would allow courts to hold accountable those who knowingly supply illegal markets or engage in negligent sales practices. They point to ATF trace data showing that a small number of dealers account for a disproportionate share of crime guns, arguing that civil litigation — and access to that data — is a necessary accountability mechanism.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the PLCAA was enacted precisely because courts were being used to impose backdoor firearms regulation through litigation, circumventing the democratic process. They contend that firearms dealers who comply with all federal and state laws should not bear civil liability for the independent criminal acts of third parties — a principle that applies in most other industries through standard tort law. They further argue that opening ATF trace data to civil discovery could compromise ongoing criminal investigations, chill voluntary cooperation between dealers and law enforcement, and expose sensitive law enforcement methods to public disclosure.
Constitutional context
The PLCAA was enacted under Congress's Commerce Clause authority, and its repeal raises no direct constitutional barrier — Congress may remove statutory protections it previously granted. However, the bill's interaction with the Second Amendment is relevant: post-Bruen (2022), courts apply a text-history-tradition framework to firearms regulations, and some litigants may argue that using civil liability as a regulatory mechanism must also be evaluated against that framework, though this theory has not been definitively resolved.
Checks and balances
The judicial branch would gain significant authority, as federal and state courts would become the primary venue for evaluating firearms industry conduct; Congress retains the ability to re-impose liability limits or set evidentiary rules, and the Executive Branch (through ATF) would face new obligations to produce trace data in civil proceedings.
Historical precedent
The Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (2005) was itself enacted in response to a wave of municipal lawsuits against gun manufacturers in the late 1990s and early 2000s, several of which were dismissed or settled before the PLCAA foreclosed further litigation.