The U.S. Supreme Court turned away the Constitutional challenge that was brought by gun rights activists in California, imposing a ten-day waiting period for the purchase of firearms. Ring of Fire’s Mike Papantonio and Peter Mougey discuss this issue.

Transcript:

Mike Papantonio: The U.S. Supreme Court turned away the Constitutional challenge that was brought by gun rights activists in California, imposing a ten-day waiting period for the purchase of firearms. That’s the least you can do. Give them ten days. It was intended to guard against impulsive violence. Husband gets mad at wife, says, “Well, I’ll teach you,” goes out and buys a gun. The ten-day cooling off period, it makes perfect sense. What I love is the Supreme Court turned that away. They said, “Okay, we’re not going to mess with that law. We’re not going to look at that law. Frankly, it’s the least we could be doing when we talk about gun laws. What’s your take?

Peter Mougey: Well, what’s scary to me is that Justice Thomas, one of the Supreme Court Justices that turned down the decision dissented from the court case, and he said that he wrote this dissent that the Second Amendment is the disfavored right in this court. Now, it’s just …

Mike Papantonio: Yeah.

Peter Mougey: … mind boggling …

Mike Papantonio: Can you imagine?

Peter Mougey: … to me how in the world …

Mike Papantonio: How in the world right?

Peter Mougey: My daughter is in one of the state universities, and they actually showed up in force in front of the president’s office at the university to champion that there was some cooling off period. Can you imagine? Who in the world would not be in favor of a ten-day waiting period? What in your right … Here we have a Supreme Court Justice saying it’s a right. We’re not taking away the right.

Mike Papantonio: Well, yeah …

Peter Mougey: We’re not taking away the guns. We’re just saying, “Hey, just give it ten days before you go buy one of these au- …

Mike Papantonio: Here’s the … How about this? Let me add some coal to this fire. Let me tell you something that most people don’t understand, and they wonder, “Well, why don’t more people bring lawsuits against these gun manufacturers?” What most people don’t understand is these gun manufacturers have immunity. The immunity is extraordinary. The immunity says basically that we can’t go after gun manufacturers the same way that we do other manufacturers of other product, and people are always …

If you think about it, the way we bring about social change in this country, it’s very rarely legislatively. It’s hardly ever the media that accomplishes it. It usually is taking people to court, suing them, taking their money away, and say, “You know what? If you’re going to conduct business like this, we’re going to see you.”

So, friend of ours, Perry White, brings up in New York, brings up a lawsuit, and the lawsuit had to do with the fact that you had a manufacturer of the gun that was made for no other purpose just to go out and commit murder, and that’s what it was about. It was cheap. You could get it easily and, as a matter of fact, he was even finding documents that showed that that was part of the reason they wanted to produce this gun. So, what does he do? He brings a lawsuit against the manufacturers and Congress, during the time that the manufacturing lawsuit is pending, passes a law that honestly states that you can’t sue a gun manufacturer for that type of thing. People are completely unaware of this.

You understand the only time I’ve seen a lawsuit that’s worked against the gun manufacturers is with Remington. Remington had a barrel that was exploding. Okay, well, you know, that’s different. That’s not just as pure gun defect. That’s a …

Peter Mougey: Product failure.

Mike Papantonio: … product failure, so that’s different from the kind of lawsuit that Perry was trying to bring and say, “Look, we ought to be able to sue this company because we know what they’re doing. They’re just creating something to kill somebody with, and we want this thing off the market. It’s called Saturday Night L- …

Peter Mougey: Saturday Night Special.

Mike Papantonio: … Saturday Night Special, yeah. What’s your take on that?

Peter Mougey: It’s … I don’t …

Mike Papantonio: How do you change things without lawsuit?

Peter Mougey: You have to. I mean, quite frankly, the reason why the Judicial Branch was created is to give a voice to the small people. What we have driving this country is, we have packs, we have big money, corporations. They’re driving public policy. They’re driving new legislation. In order to get things done, it has to be through the judicial system. I’ll tell you. I hate to go back to the story again, but I mentioned this one of the last times we got together is the opiate epidemic. This has gone on for 15 or 20 years. Nobody did anything. The DEA’s sitting there. Everybody’s sitting there. All of a sudden … It’s not even on the front page of the press, and I know you’ve hit this point before. Why? Because all of these big companies, big pharma spending hundreds of millions of dollars …

Mike Papantonio: Advertise.

Peter Mougey: … in advertising doesn’t make it in the front … What hits … What’s driving the change right now? The fact that plaintiff lawyers, Judicial Branch, have filed 400, 500, 600 lawsuits, and now, it’s on the front page of the press, and where are we driving the change? Through the Judicial System.

Mike Papantonio: Okay, and you see how many times … If you’re watching this, I want you to look and tell me if you can ever find the media saying the obvious, and that is, that without our ability to bring lawsuits against these companies and take their money away … The media doesn’t even get the connection. They don’t even unders- … They do, but they won’t talk about the fact the only place you get anything done is in a courtroom, especially when you’re dealing with criminals like we have to deal with every day.

The point is this. Legislation’s not going to change anything. The media, they could write front page every day. It’s not going to change anything. The only thing that changes something is when you take these freaks into a courtroom and they get hit for a billion dollars, and then they say, “You know what? This is risky business. We can’t do it.”

Peter Mougey: When you’re with the common man, at the end of the day, you’re wondering if your state is one of those states that has judges running for office or you see these Supreme Court Justices being nominated, well, that doesn’t bo- … What does that impact mean? Actually, the judicial officers, the courts, the judges are probably the biggest necessary stalwart against corporate America to ensure that the common man, the regular person’s being protected by big companies because they’re the ones that, at the end of the day, …

Mike Papantonio: A jury trial, yeah!

Peter Mougey: Absolutely. That’s it.

Mike Papantonio: A jury trial’s the only place you can do this.

Peter Mougey: That’s the last line of defense.

Mike Papantonio: Peter Mougey, thank you for joining me. I’m Mike Papantonio here on Ring of Fire.

Mike Papantonio is an American attorney and television and radio talk show host. He is past president of The National Trial Lawyers, the most prestigious trial lawyer association in America; and is one of the few living attorneys inducted into the Trial Lawyer Hall of Fame. He hosts the international television show "America's Lawyer"; and co-hosts Ring of Fire Radio, a nationally syndicated weekly radio program, with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and Sam Seder.