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Dingell Reintroduces Legislation to Address Safety Defects in Firearms

WASHINGTON, DC - Today, Congresswoman Debbie Dingell (MI-12) reintroduced the Defective Firearms Protection Act, which would allow the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to address safety defects in firearms similarly to any other consumer product by potentially issuing safety warnings and issuing recalls if necessary. Currently, firearms are excluded from the definition of a consumer product, which prohibits the CPSC from addressing safety issues in firearms.

“The Consumer Product Safety Commission can order a recall on thousands of defective products from bicycles to lightbulbs, yet guns that can be fired with the safety still engaged and without anyone pulling the trigger remain on the market,” said Rep. Dingell. “The fact that faulty guns can remain on the market without oversight poses a huge danger to public safety. This legislation will ensure that defective and unsafe guns are addressed immediately so we can prevent deadly accidents.”

In 2016, a 28-year-old Georgia man named Jarred Brown was killed when the gun he was carrying fired in its holster, sending a bullet through his femoral artery. Following his death, Jarred’s family learned that the gun was part of a class-action lawsuit against the manufacturer which asserted that because of design and manufacturing defects, the gun could fire unintentionally when bumped, dropped or when the safety is on. Despite offering to repair or replace nine different handguns following the settlement, the company denied any negligence and wrongdoing.

Dingell’s legislation aims to help prevent such accidents by removing barriers in current law that prevent the CPSC from addressing defective pistols, revolvers or firearms.

For a copy of the bill text, please click here.

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