Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Victims Of Danforth Shooting File Class-Action Lawsuit Against US Gunmaker Smith & Wesson

Darpan News Desk, 17 Dec, 2019 07:11 PM
  • Victims Of Danforth Shooting File Class-Action Lawsuit Against US Gunmaker Smith & Wesson

TORONTO - Victims of a mass shooting in Toronto have filed a class-action lawsuit against U.S. gunmaker Smith & Wesson, alleging the company was negligent for failing to include "smart gun" techology in the handgun that was used in the attack.

 

A statement of claim filed in Ontario Superior Court on behalf of several victims of the shooting on Toronto's Danforth Ave. in July 2018 alleges Smith & Wesson was aware the semi-automatic pistol, which was previously reported stolen from a Saskatchewan dealer, was "ultra hazardous."

 

It alleges the company was aware guns without systems to prohibit their use by people other than their authorized owners posed a likelihood of harm to the public because it made an agreement with the US government in 2000 to incorporate the technology into new gun designs, but then introduced the type of gun used in the attack in 2005.

 

The statement of claim contains allegations which have not yet been tested in court.

 

Smith & Wesson did not immediately respond when asked for comment by The Canadian Press.

 

The shooting in July 2018 left two dead and 13 injured. The shooter killed himself.

 

"It was reasonably foreseeable that the Defendant's handgun products, like the handgun used in the Danforth Shooting, would in the hands of unauthorized users cause substantial harm to, or kill, innocent third parties," the statement of claim says.

 

"Statistics published by Canadian and United States authorities show a high rate of illegal handgun diversion and use of illegally diverted handguns to harm innocent third parties like Class members."

 

The statement notes that while U.S. Congress passed legislation in 2005 that shields gun manufacturers and sellers from litigation resulting from unlawful or unauthorized misuse of a firearm, it says Canada has no such laws.

 

It says it will ask the court to certify three classes for the action: those shot and injured, or killed; other injured; and family members.

 

The claim seeks $50 million in general damages and $100 million in punitive damages.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Transport 2050: Public Proposes 4,000 Big Ideas For Next 30 Years Of Metro Vancouver Transportation

Transport 2050: Public Proposes 4,000 Big Ideas For Next 30 Years Of Metro Vancouver Transportation
With input from every jurisdiction in the region, the engagement results will help shape the priorities identified in Transport 2050 when released later next year. This round of engagement had a record-breaking 31,700 responses and over 4,000 ideas submitted.  

Transport 2050: Public Proposes 4,000 Big Ideas For Next 30 Years Of Metro Vancouver Transportation

Man Killed In Shooting Near Playground In Surrey Identified As 21-Year-Old VERRON NAND

A man shot and killed in a residential area of north Surrey has been identified by Mounties as 21-year-old Verron Nand.

Man Killed In Shooting Near Playground In Surrey Identified As 21-Year-Old VERRON NAND

WATCH: Trump Calls Trudeau ‘Two-Faced’ After Hot-Mic Video Showing PM And NATO Leaders Joking About U.S. President Goes Viral

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau escaped an international summit with his relationship with U.S. President Donald Trump apparently intact in the wake of ill-timed comments that threatened to ignite tensions between the two leaders.  

WATCH: Trump Calls Trudeau ‘Two-Faced’ After Hot-Mic Video Showing PM And NATO Leaders Joking About U.S. President Goes Viral

Trudeau's Plane Damaged, Now Backup Plane Grounded In London, U.K.

The RCAF says that plane, a CC-150 Polaris, is being repaired but is temporarily "unserviceable."

Trudeau's Plane Damaged, Now Backup Plane Grounded In London, U.K.

B.C. Bans Logging In Sensitive Border Area After Urging From Seattle Mayor

B.C. Bans Logging In Sensitive Border Area After Urging From Seattle Mayor
Forests Minister Doug Donaldson says B.C. will no longer award timber licences in a 5,800-hectare plot called the Silverdaisy or "doughnut hole" in the Skagit River Valley.

B.C. Bans Logging In Sensitive Border Area After Urging From Seattle Mayor

Annual Surrey Toy Drive Remembers Boy Who Wanted Every Sick Kid To Have A Christmas Gift

The Surrey RCMP is hoping to make the holidays a little brighter for sick kids and their families by inviting the public to come out and support the annual Keian’s Holiday Wish Toy Drive.

Annual Surrey Toy Drive Remembers Boy Who Wanted Every Sick Kid To Have A Christmas Gift