-
Wawrinka falls in first round of Monte Carlo Masters
-
Ex-England rugby international Lawes to leave Brive
-
Fit-again Mbappe at Real Madrid for clashes like Bayern tie: Arbeloa
-
Swimmers McKeown, O'Callaghan and Chalmers dominate at Australian Open
-
Bucha: When the Russian killers came...
-
Iran, a Terrorist State with No Right to Exist
-
African players in Europe: Semenyo scores as City rout Liverpool
-
Israeli strikes kill Iran Guards intel chief as Trump deadline looms
-
Saving energy in everyday life or a complete rip-off?
-
US sprint star Richardson wins Australia's Stawell Gift in record time
-
Rockets down Warriors in Curry return, Flagg carries Mavs past Lakers
-
Artemis mission approaches lunar loop for first flyby since 1972
-
Israeli rescuers search for missing in building strike, two dead
-
Defiant Iran ramps up attacks after Trump warning
-
Saudi oasis town adjusts to life in the firing line
-
Pogacar stays humble with Monument history beckoning
-
Real Madrid hoping Champions League magic halts Bayern juggernaut
-
Sputtering Arsenal face test of character in Sporting clash
-
'Not the Cairo we know': Energy shock from Iran war dims Egypt nights
-
Tokyo, Seoul shares gain, war sends oil higher
-
Artemis mission headed for first lunar flyby since 1972
-
South Korea president says regrets 'reckless' drones sent to North
-
Coughlin captures third LPGA title at Aramco Championship
-
What to know about the Artemis 2 mission's Moon flyby
-
Mystique of the green jacket endures as Masters looms
-
In El Salvador's mass trials, 'the innocent pay for the guilty'
-
Trump makes stark threat to Iran after US airman rescued
-
TrustNFT Releases White Paper on Corporate Costs of Email Impersonation, Documenting $2.9 Billion in Annual Losses and Growing Brand Liability Risk
-
Commonwealth Wholesale Corporation Signs Lease at Central Port Logistics Center Building 4 Strategically Located Near the Port of Savannah
-
Datavault AI CEO Nathaniel T. Bradley to Deliver Flagship Keynotes on Breakthrough RWA Tokenization at CONV3RGENCE London and AssetRush × Zurich 2026
-
HarrisQuest Launches Lou, a Voice-Enabled AI Analyst Built Inside The Harris Poll's Brand Tracking Platform
-
Fortitude Gold Declares April 2026 Monthly Dividend
-
Revelation Biosciences Announces Formation of Acute Kidney Injury Advisory Board
-
Arrive AI Secures Tenth U.S. Patent, Positioning as the Critical Infrastructure Layer for Autonomous Delivery at Scale
-
National Study of 2,300+ Women Finds Social Connection Shapes Volunteer Experience Amid Competing Work, Caregiving, and Life Demands
-
Prof. Abdul Al Lily Announces the Release of The Naughty AI CEO, Exploring the Future of AI-Driven Leadership
-
Hillcrest Closes Shares for Debt Offering
-
Elektros Positions Itself at the Center of High-Stakes EV Infrastructure Opportunity Through Strategic Engagement with Major Global Automotive Leader
-
ReElement Technologies Announces April Conference and Event Schedule
-
Greenpro Capital Corp. Successfully Acquires Stake in AI Forekast Limited, an Augmented Intelligence Provider
-
Ondas' 4M Defense Wins Competitive Tender for Large-Scale Border Demining Program with Opportunity Expected to Exceed $50 Million
-
Sunshine Biopharma Reports Fiscal 2025 Revenue of $36.3 Million, a 4.1% Increase Over Prior Year
-
MDCE's Snapshot Recipes App Scales Marketing Strategy Beyond Initial Podcast Deals with Expanded iHeart Campaign
-
SMX Announces Launch of Its Digital Material Passport Platform, Enabling Real-World Asset Tokenisation and Global Material Traceability
-
Bora Biologics Successfully Completes 2,000L Engineering and Scale-Up Run in San Diego, Reinforcing Commercial-Scale Readiness
-
Avino Announces Normal Course Issuer Bid for Common Shares
-
Revolve Signs Interconnection Agreement for 130 MW EL 24 Wind Project in Mexico
-
Building the Moon's Future: Helio Positioned at the Center of America's Lunar Strategy for the Dawn of the Artemis Era
-
Trumps FDA CBD Enforcement Shift Signals a Turning Point - Why MMJ International Holdings is the Sector's Opportunity
-
Amphastar Pharmaceuticals to Present at the 25th Annual Needham Healthcare Conference
Sandy Hook families settle with gunmaker for $73 mn over school massacre
Families of nine victims of the Sandy Hook school shooting have reached a $73-million settlement with US gunmaker Remington, in a landmark deal for a country traumatized by campus massacres.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs said the settlement marks the first time a gun maker has been held liable for a mass shooting in the United States.
Twenty-six children and teachers were shot dead at the elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut by 20-year-old gunman Adam Lanza in 2012.
The killings -- the second-deadliest school massacre in US history -- stunned Americans, with many thinking they would mark a watershed moment that would lead lawmakers to tighten gun control.
A "settlement agreement has been executed between the parties," a notice from lawyers for the families said Tuesday.
Lanza was a 20-year-old with known developmental disabilities.
His mother, a gun enthusiast, had bought him an AR-15-style Bushmaster XM15-E2S semi-automatic rifle more than two years before the shooting.
Lanza murdered his mother before attacking the school, and killed himself afterward.
The lawsuit alleged that Remington and the other two defendants are culpable because they knowingly marketed a military grade weapon that is "grossly unsuited" for civilian use yet had become the gun most used in mass shootings.
An AR-15 was also used to kill 58 people at a mass shooting in Las Vegas in 2017, and 17 at a school in Parkland, Florida in 2018.
Remington, the oldest gunmaker in the United States and which has since filed for bankruptcy, had denied the allegations.
The plaintiffs alleged that the gun was marketed immorally and unscrupulously, sold on its war-fighting capabilities to civilians.
Marketing, they charged, popularized the AR-15 in combat and mass shooting-type situations through the type of violent video games that Lanza was known to play.
They specifically cited Remington's marketing of high-capacity magazines, which have only combat utility, for use with the gun.
The gun "was used not by a highly-trained soldier but by a deeply troubled kid, not on a battlefield abroad but in an elementary school at home, and not to preserve freedom, but to eviscerate them," Joshua Koskoff, a lawyer for the Sandy Hook families, told a press conference Tuesday.
Christopher Boehning, another lawyer for the plaintiffs, told AFP the settlement "sends a strong warning signal to other gun manufacturers regarding their role in these unthinkable tragedies."
AFP has sought comment from Remington.
- Popular in mass shootings -
The United States leads the world in mass shootings by civilians, with many schools undergoing live shooter drills as a matter of routine.
But the grief and trauma of Lanza's rampage was underscored by the youth of his victims. He killed 20 six- and seven-year-olds along with six staff members.
Nearly four years later, the shooting was still so visceral that it moved then-president Barack Obama to tears during a speech on gun control.
Hopes that revulsion ignited by the massacre would finally prompt Congress to follow through on wildly popular demands for greater restrictions on weapons, however, fell flat.
Instead, the powerful gun lobby has repeatedly stamped out any efforts to further change the famed Second Amendment to the country's constitution, which allows for the right to bear arms.
But the settlement deal between the Sandy Hook families and Remington could help pave the way for further accountability in such massacres.
The US Congress passed a law in 2005 that explicitly immunized gunmakers when their products are used in crimes.
But the Connecticut Supreme Court said that Remington could still be sued on the grounds that its marketing violated Connecticut's unfair trade practice laws.
"The gun manufacturers knew that they were advertising a dangerous product and they exploited these dangers," Matthew Soto, brother of first grade teacher Vicki Soto, who was among the victims, said at Tuesday's press conference.
Nicole Hockley, the mother of victim Dylan, six, told the press conference that her family had moved from Britain "because of our belief in the American dream."
But that "turned into the American nightmare, where for too many the right to bear arms is a higher priority than the right to life."
"Nothing will bring Dylan back," she said. "The closest I get to him now is by kissing his urn every night, telling him I love him and I miss him."
R.Lee--AT