Newman Ferrara with Congregations of Catholic Sisters File Suit Related to Smith & Wesson’s Marketing and Sale of AR-15 Assault Rifles (NASDAQ: SWBI)
05 Décembre 2023 - 6:02PM
Business Wire
Newman Ferrara LLP today announced that a coalition of four
congregations of Catholic Sisters represented by the firm filed a
stockholder derivative lawsuit naming officers and directors of
Smith & Wesson Brands Inc. (“Smith & Wesson” or the
“Company”) for wrongdoing related to the marketing and sale of
AR-15-style assault weapons. The suit, filed in the Eighth Judicial
District Court, Clark County, Nevada, alleges that the defendants
breached their fiduciary duty to the Company and its stockholders
by knowingly and intentionally violating federal, state, and local
laws, thereby exposing the Company to significant liability.
“Much like the pharmaceutical companies being hammered by civil
judgments and fines after enjoying years of profits from the sale
of dangerous opioids, Smith & Wesson’s Board willfully ignores
the potentially ruinous exposure the Company faces from its
marketing and sale of weapons designed specifically for mass
killing,” says Newman Ferrara partner Jeffrey Norton. “We are proud
to partner with these congregations of Catholic Sisters who have
long sought corporate responsibility through their shareholder
activism.”
In connection with the lawsuit, the
congregations of Catholic Sisters released the following joint
statement:
As Catholic Sisters and women of faith who
believe in the sanctity of life, our hearts ache at the exponential
rise in gun deaths and mass shootings in our country that have
ravaged the lives of so many children, women, men, their families,
and communities. AR-15-style rifles, like those manufactured by
Smith & Wesson, have been the weapon of choice for killers
responsible for the deadliest mass shootings in American history.
By design, they inflict the greatest number of casualties with
maximum bodily harm in the shortest amount of time and are easily
modified for automatic fire. These rifles have no purpose other
than mass murder. They are not the sporting rifles that members of
our own families and other responsible gun owners value.
As Smith & Wesson stockholders – and
long-time proponents of corporate responsibility in the
environmental, social and governance policies of companies in which
we invest – we have sponsored resolutions that provide shareholders
with an understanding of the company’s practices and exposure to
risk and liability regarding the manufacture of AR-15 rifles. The
most recent is a resolution calling for a third-party Human Rights
Impact Assessment of the company’s practices in light of the
significant and costly human rights risks the company faces. While
the board recommended voting against the proposal at the September
2023 shareholder meeting, 26.7% of shareholders supported it.
Today, with the help of a team of lawyers
from the New York law firm Newman Ferrara LLP, we filed a
derivative complaint against the members of the Board and executive
officers for breach of their fiduciary duties in prioritizing
short-term profit over long-term risk. The company is intent on
marketing and selling AR-15 rifles in whatever manner results in
the most sales – even if the marketing is illegal and attracts a
dangerous category of buyers, facilitates an unrelenting and
growing stream of killings, and causes the company to face an
ever-increasing and substantial likelihood of liability that
threatens its long-term existence.
We call on Smith & Wesson to return to
the practices of its first 153 years of existence when it held
itself as a successful beacon of responsible gun ownership and did
not manufacture, market, or sell military-grade, mass-killing
assault weapons. We pray for an end to the AR-15 mass shootings
that have stolen the lives of so many innocent people and
devastated communities across the nation.
The congregations of Catholic Sisters who, as stockholders,
joined in filing the derivative complaint against Smith &
Wesson officers and directors are: Adrian Dominican Sisters
(Adrian, Michigan), Sisters of Bon Secours USA
(Marriottsville, Maryland), Sisters of St. Francis of
Philadelphia (Aston, Pennsylvania), and Sisters of the Holy
Names of Jesus & Mary, U.S.-Ontario Province (Marylhurst,
Oregon). Members of the four congregations, each founded in the
1800s in response to the needs of the times, have served in
educational, healthcare, pastoral, social justice, environmental
and other ministries throughout the United States and in other
places around the world.
Further details about the lawsuit are provided in the Verified
Stockholder Derivative Complaint available at
https://www.nfllp.com/cases/. All media inquiries should be
directed to Newman Ferrara attorneys Jeffrey Norton
(jnorton@nfllp.com) or Benjamin Baker (bbaker@nfllp.com).
Newman Ferrara maintains a multifaceted practice based in New
York City with attorneys specializing in complex commercial and
multi-party litigation, securities fraud and shareholder
litigation, consumer protection, civil rights, and real estate. For
more information, please visit the firm website at
www.nfllp.com.
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Newman Ferrara LLP Jeffrey M. Norton jnorton@nfllp.com 1250
Broadway, 27th Fl. New York, NY 10001 (212) 619-5400
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