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Israel’s Mossad spent years orchestrating Hezbollah pager plot | 60 Minutes
After nearly a year of war between Israel and the Iranian-backed terrorist group Hezbollah, Lebanon was sent reeling in September when thousands of pagers and walkie-talkies belonging to Hezbollah members exploded.
Two recently retired senior Mossad agents, who were among those spearheading the years-long operation, detailed the inside story of how they built the devices and got them into Hezbollah hands, shifting the course of Israel’s escalating war with the Iran-backed group. The walkie-talkie and pager plots had a profound ripple effect: weakening Iran by leaving its proxy empire in ruins, with Hezbollah crushed in Lebanon and the Assad regime toppled in Syria.
“We want them to feel vulnerable, which they are,” said Michael, who agreed to speak with 60 Minutes while masked and using a false name. “We can’t use the pagers again because we already did that. We’ve already moved on to the next thing. And they’ll have to keep on trying to guess what the next thing is.”
Weaponizing walkie-talkies
Mossad’s walkie-talkie operation was about waging war through deception and trickery, in line with the spy agency’s motto. Work began on weaponizing the walkie-talkies more than a decade before Israel set them off in September.
“The walkie-talkie was a weapon, just like a bullet or a missile or a mortar,” Michael said.
The walkie-talkie battery, made in Israel at a Mossad facility, included an explosive device, Michael disclosed. The walkie-talkies were designed to go into the chest pocket of a tactical vest for soldiers.
According to Michael, Hezbollah bought more than 16,000 of the exploding devices, some of which were eventually used against them on Sept. 18.
“They got a good price,” Michael said.
The price couldn’t be too low because Israel didn’t want Hezbollah to be suspicious. Mossad also needed to hide its identity as the seller and ensure the walkie-talkies couldn’t be traced back to Israel. So they set up shell companies to infiltrate the supply chain.
“We create a pretend world. We are a global production company: We write the screenplay, we’re the directors, we’re the producers, we’re the main actors,” Michael said. “And the world is our stage.”
From walkie-talkies to pagers
The walkie-talkies were designed to go into armored tactical vests used in battle, but Mossad wanted to plant devices that Hezbollah members would have on them at all times. So, in 2022, the agency began development on boobytrapped pagers, according to former Mossad agent Gabriel, who agreed to speak with 60 Minutes while masked and using a false name. Gabriel said Mossad had learned that Hezbollah was buying pagers from Gold Apollo, a company in Taiwan.
The Gold Apollo pagers were sleek, shiny and could fit into pockets. Mossad needed a larger pager to fit explosives inside, Gabriel said.
Using dummies, Mossad conducted tests with the pager inside a padded glove, held next to the dummy’s face, to calibrate the grams of powdered explosive needed to be just enough to hurt the fighter, but not the person next to him, Gabriel said. The plan was to only hurt Hezbollah members with pagers, not people nearby.
“We test everything, triple, double, multiple times in order to make sure there is minimum damage,” Gabriel said.
The devices had no intelligence capabilities and could not be used for tracking, according to Mossad. They could only be be used as miniature bombs.
“This is a very stupid device by nature. This is the reason they’re using it. There’s almost no way how to tap it,” Gabriel said.
Mossad also tested the pager ring tones. They wanted a sound that was urgent enough to compel someone to take it out of their pocket, Gabriel explained. The spy agency also tested how long it takes a person to answer a pager: on average, 7 seconds.
Convincing Hezbollah to buy the pagers
Gabriel remembers the day he showed the pager off to Dadi Barnea, the director at Mossad.
“And he was furious,” Gabriel said. “He was telling us, ‘There is no chance that anyone will buy such a big device. It’s not comfortable in their pocket. It’s heavy.'”
The director sent Gabriel back to the drawing board, but Gabriel spent the next two weeks successfully convincing his boss of the pager’s merits.
Those merits were later touted in fake ads on YouTube, where the pagers were touted as being robust, dustproof and waterproof, with a long battery life. They posted fake online testimonials, too.
“It became the best product in the beeper area in the world,” Gabriel said.
Mossad did such a good job promoting the pager that people outside of Hezbollah wanted to buy it, Gabriel said.
“Obviously we didn’t send to anyone,” he said. “We just quote them with expensive price.”
Mossad set up shell companies, including one in Hungary, to dupe Gold Apollo into working with it, Gabriel said. The spy agency fully manufactured the pagers and had a licensing partnership with Gold Apollo. It had to all look legitimate to Hezbollah.
“When they are buying from us, they have zero clue that they are buying from the Mossad. We make like the ‘Truman Show,’ everything is controlled by us behind the scene,” Gabriel said. “In their experience, everything is normal. Everything was 100% kosher.”
To further the plot, Mossad hired the Gold Apollo saleswoman Hezbollah was used to working with, who was unaware she was working with Mossad. According to Gabriel, she offered Hezbollah the first batch of pagers as an upgrade, free of charge. By September 2024, Hezbollah had about 5,000 pagers in their pockets.
Setting off the pagers and walkie talkies
The question for Israel was when the sleeping bombs should be activated. There were hints Hezbollah might be getting suspicious of the devices, so Mossad head Dadi Barnea gave the go ahead, triggering the Sept. 17 pager plot. At 3:30 p.m. pagers started beeping all over Lebanon.
Mayhem ensued as explosions went off. Hospitals filled up with the wounded. Limbs and fingers were torn off. People were left blooded, blinded and even with holes in their stomachs. For the most part, the explosions worked as planned, injuring only the people with the pagers, the former Mossad agents said. Several videos reviewed by 60 Minutes show explosions wounding individual people, while leaving those next to them unscathed.
“A day after the pagers exploded, people were afraid to turn on the air conditioners in Lebanon because they were afraid that they would explode,” Michael said. “So there was real fear.”
One day after the pager attack, Mossad finally activated the walkie-talkies that had been dormant for 10 years. Some went off at the funerals of those killed by the pagers.
In all, about 30 people were killed, including two children, in the two attacks. Around 3,000 were injured.
Did Mossad’s plan succeed?
The aim of the walkie-talkie and pager plot wasn’t to kill people, Gabriel said.
“If he’s just dead, so he’s dead,” Gabriel said. “But if he [is] wounded, you have to take him to the hospital, take care of him. You need to invest money and effort. And those people without hands and eyes are living proof, walking in Lebanon, of ‘don’t mess with us.'”
Two days after the pager attack, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, known for his fiery oratory, gave a subdued speech. He looked defeated, Gabriel said.
“He already lose the war. And his soldier look at him during that speech. And they saw a broken leader,” Gabriel said. “This was the tipping point of the war.”
In the ensuing days, the Israeli Air Force hit targets across Lebanon, killing over 1,000 people, many of them civilians. On Sept. 27, Israel dropped massive bombs on Nasrallah’s bunker, assassinating him. The Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire took effect at the end of November.
“But I think after this tipping point of the beeper operation and then the walkie-talkie and then IDF attack, [it] put Hezbollah in a situation, a very, very difficult situation: no chain of command, no spirit in their soldiers, asking, begging, for a ceasefire,” Gabriel said.
Michael agreed that wind was taken out of Hezbollah’s sails after the pager operation. He’s hoping it will have an effect on Hamas and the hostage situation in Gaza.
“Because they’re looking at their sides and they’re seeing no one next to them,” Michael said. “They are completely isolated now.”
CBS News
Damming the “iron river”: Mexico’s legal battle to stop gun trafficking from the U.S.
There’s been a lot of talk about stopping the flow of illegal immigration and drugs from Mexico. But few people are talking about another crisis at the border…guns. Specifically, American guns.
An estimated 200,000 to half million U.S. firearms are smuggled into Mexico every year —part of what’s known as the “iron river.”
Mexico says those American guns are responsible for much of the cartel violence that’s plagued its country…. and now… it’s taking an unusual approach to try and stop it…. it’s suing.
The government of Mexico has filed lawsuits in U.S. courts against a handful of gun stores and one of the largest gun manufacturers in America.
It believes damming that “iron river” might also fix some of the problems that plague the U.S.
Jonathan Lowy: If you think fentanyl overdoses are a problem, if you think migration across the border is a problem, if you think the spread of organized crime is a problem in the United States, then you should care about stopping the crime gun pipeline to Mexico. And you need to stop it at its source. Because all those problems are driven by the supply of U.S. guns to the cartels.
Jonathan Lowy is an American attorney who’s been battling the gun industry in court for 25 years.
Mexico asked Lowy to help devise its strategy to cut off the gun pipeline after one of the deadliest chapters in the country’s history…that culminated with this….
2019, Mexican armed forces captured one of the most wanted drug lords in the world…Ovidio Guzmán López, the son of the former Sinaloa cartel boss-known as El Chapo.
In their custody was the man, U.S. prosecutors say was largely responsible for the massive influx of fentanyl in the United States.
But what should have been a turning point in the war on drugs…turned into a deadly, five-hour gun battle with 600 cartel gunmen. That is a 50-caliber belt-fed rifle…sourced from America. The cartel doused soldiers with gunfire, took hostages, and blocked entrances to the city – burning vehicles.
Outgunned, and hoping to end the bloodshed, Mexico’s president at the time….Andrés Manuel López Obrador… ordered Guzmán to be released.
This past March, we spoke to then-President López Obrador in Mexico City. Homicides and cartel violence soared during his six-year term. We were surprised who he said was, partly, to blame.
Sharyn Alfonsi: Where is the cartel getting their guns?
President López Obrador: From the United States. We have confiscated in the time that I’ve been in government 50,000 guns of high power of high caliber. 50,000 guns. And 75% of them, from the United States.
Which is why he said…his government was pursuing two civil lawsuits in S.S. courts seeking $10 billion for the damages U.S. guns have caused in Mexico.
The first, filed in 2021, included U.S. gun manufacturer Smith & Wesson and one of their wholesalers.
The other filed a year later…against five U.S. gun stores for what mexico claims are – quote “reckless and unlawful business practices” (that) supply dangerous criminals …”
Sharyn Alfonsi: Is it the U.S.’s responsibility to stop guns from getting in the hands of the cartel? Or is it the Mexican government’s responsibility to keep the guns out?
President López Obrador (In Spanish/English translation): : Of both. Of both governments. But there has to be cooperation. You cannot sell weapons to just anybody.
Like the U.S., Mexico’s constitution grants citizens the right to bear arms…. but unlike the U.S., that right comes with a long list of restrictions.
There’s only one gun store in Mexico…in the middle of a heavily guarded military base in Mexico City…we were allowed in.
But before customers can enter, they have to show proof they’ve passed psychological tests, drug screens and extensive background checks.
The store sells about a thousand guns a month. Mostly, shotguns, small caliber rifles, and handguns… what civilians can’t buy here are the weapons the cartel favors. Those are not legally sold anywhere in Mexico.
Tim Sloan: Cartels’ favorite weapons are weapons of war. Belt Feds, .50 caliber rifles– guns that you can shoot from a mile away. The more expensive, the more powerful, the sexier they think they are.
Sharyn Alfonsi: It’s a trophy?
Tim Sloan: It is a trophy.
Tim Sloan worked for the ATF… the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives…for 22 years. His last assignment was running the ATf’s four field offices in Mexico – during some of the bloodiest years on record.
Part of his job was tracing the guns recovered at crime scenes. In 2019, one of those scenes was inside a cartel ranch near Guadalajara.
Tim Sloan: There was um dead bodies everywhere. There was a 14-year-old girl choppin’ up bodies. And so there were 55 gallon drums with body parts in ’em. It’s something that the human mind can almost not comprehend or–or fathom. And all the weapons in that house came from the United States. All of them. Every person there was murdered by a firearm purchased in the U.S. And so it was– it made a very lasting impression on me.
Sloan says most of the guns the ATF traced in Mexico were sold directly to traffickers or to so-called “straw purchasers”… someone who buys a firearm on behalf of another person. In this case, Americans buying guns that ultimately, end up in the hands of the cartel.
Sharyn Alfonsi: What did you learn during your time about how the cartel was getting these guns from the United States into Mexico?
Tim Sloan: Well, I mean, it’s pretty easy, right? So it’s straw purchasers. You know, you’re– you’re offerin’ a 23-year-old girl in Arizona 4,000, 5,000 dollars just to go into a store and buy a gun for you. She’s gonna do that. A lot of people are gonna do that, especially if they have any addiction problems, but no criminal record.
Sharyn Alfonsi: Can you send a 24-year-old to go buy an AK47?
Tim Sloan: Oh, as many as they want. Five, five-hundred. They can buy as many as they want as long as they’re not prohibited.
Sharyn Alfonsi: And how do they get them into Mexico?
Tim Sloan: Well, that’s the easy part. Just drive across the border.
That porous border…works both ways. Over seven years, the ATF traced 50,000 American guns recovered in Mexico to gun dealers across the United States.
But Mexico’s lawsuit names just five dealers… from one state.. Arizona. In Mexico City, attorney Alejandro Celorio spearheaded the lawsuits for the Mexican government.
Alejandro Celorio: We believe they’re liable for actively facilitating the trafficking of firearms that empower the cartels, the fentanyl crisis. A cartel without firearm is– is just a gang.
Sharyn Alfonsi: The five gun shops that you’ve named in Arizona, how did you choose those five gun shops?
Alejandro Celorio: It’s based off who do we believe are the– the bad actors in this dynamic.
It’s difficult to know which gun dealers could be, “bad actors” because U.S. law prohibits the ATF from publicly releasing specific gun trace information.
But 60 Minutes reviewed internal ATF and Mexican law enforcement documents. According to the documents… 566 guns recovered in Mexico over a four-and-a-half-year period…. were traced back to the Arizona gun dealers named in Mexico’s lawsuit.
And nearly 200 of the guns came from one dealer, Ammo AZ…near Phoenix. Veerachart ‘Danger’ Murphy is the store’s owner.
Murphy: We sell guns here legally.
Murphy declined to be interviewed by 60 Minutes but after Ammo AZ was named in Mexico’s lawsuit…he posted this response online.
Murphy: If we were actually doing something illegal, ATF FBI would have already shut us down. And I would be in jail.
The ATF has said a crime gun trace does not necessarily indicate gun dealer wrongdoing.
Jonathan Lowy: If you’re a dealer and you have reason to know that that person is a straw buyer or gun trafficker, it’s your legal obligation not to supply them with guns.
Jonathan Lowy, who is Mexico’s co-counsel, has litigated gun cases in more than 40 states.
Sharyn Alfonsi: The gun shop owners we spoke to said, “Look, I’m– running the background checks, I’m filling out the paperwork. I’m doing everything that I’m supposed to do. Isn’t that enough?”
Jonathan Lowy: Absolutely not. The dealer’s main responsibility, in my view, is to pay attention to indicators to see if the person standing in front of them, on the other side of the counter, is a potential criminal or supplier to the criminal market.
Sharyn Alfonsi: The gun retailers say it’s really hard to know sometimes if somebody’s a straw buyer, right? That they come in with a good cover story and you have to believe them.
Jonathan Lowy: It’s pretty obvious. I mean, you see these multiple sales of– of AR-15s, you see these large cash payments, you see these persons comin’ back to the store every few days or every few weeks. I mean, these are not normal buying patterns.
There are more than 75,000 licensed gun dealers in the United States, twice as many as U.S. post offices. Jonathan Lowy says most of those dealers are acting responsibly.
Jonathan Lowy: About 90% of gun dealers sell zero-crime guns. I mean, that is a great mark for the gun industry. That shows that if you pay attention to these obvious indicators of trafficking and straw buying, you can actually stop supplying crime guns. The problem is these bad actors. And there’s no good reason why manufacturers don’t say, “Look, if you’re sellin’ our guns, use best practices.
Which is why Mexico filed its other lawsuit…against gun manufacturer, Smith & Wesson.
Under U.S. law, gunmakers have typically been shielded from liability when one of their guns is used in a crime.
But Mexico is arguing the manufacturer is “aiding and abetting” gun trafficking to the cartels. In court, Smith & Wesson called that allegation “not true. ” They did not respond to our request for comment.
Sharyn Alfonsi: How can you say manufacturers are responsible for anything when there are so many steps in the process between the time that they make it and it goes to the retailer, and then maybe it’s sold to somebody else or resold? How can you trace it back and say, “It’s the manufacturers…”
Jonathan Lowy: When manufacturers make the decision, “We’re gonna sell guns through dealers no matter what their record is, no matter how many crime guns they’re sellin.'” You know, that’s on them.
Sharyn Alfonsi: You say they know that the guns are going to the gun stores that are bad actors. How do they know?
Jonathan Lowy: Well, manufacturers, and dealers, and distributors all get trace data. That is when law enforcement recovers a gun in crime, they determine its commercial history. And every seller in every point of the chain knows that that’s a gun that they sold, that was recovered in [a] crime.
If Mexico’s lawsuit is successful, it could open the door for more lawsuits foreign and domestic – against the gun industry.
Earlier this year, gun manufacturers successfully petitioned the Supreme Court to review the case.
They argued they could face years of costly litigation by another country that is “…trying to bully the industry into adopting a host of gun-control measures.”
Three years after the deadly battle that ended with his release….fentanyl drug lord Ovidio Guzmán López was finally recaptured in Sinaloa in 2023.
His arrest sparked another gunfight that left 10 soldiers dead.
The violence continues today. In the last four months, cartel in-fighting has killed more than 500 people in Sinaloa.
According to documents obtained by 60 Minutes…47 guns were seized after Guzmán’s capture… including an AK-47-style- rifle traced back to one of the defendants in Mexico’s lawsuit…Ammo AZ.
Produced by Katie Kerbstat. Associate producer, Erin DuCharme. News associate, Mary Cunningham. Edited by Joe Schanzer.
CBS News
Mexico fights to dam “iron river” sending guns from U.S. to cartels
During one of the deadliest chapters in its history, Mexico’s government devised a new strategy to curb gun violence; it filed two lawsuits.The first, in 2021, included U.S. gun manufacturer Smith & Wesson and one of their wholesalers. The second, filed a year later, against five U.S. gun stores, claimed they engaged in “reckless and unlawful business practices” that supply dangerous criminals.
An estimated 200,000 to half million U.S. firearms are smuggled into Mexico every year. Mexico asked American attorney Jonathan Lowy to help cut off the gun pipeline, known as the “iron river.”
“If you think fentanyl overdoses are a problem, if you think migration across the border is a problem, if you think the spread of organized crime is a problem in the United States, then you should care about stopping the crime gun pipeline to Mexico,” Lowy said. “And you need to stop it at its source. Because all those problems are driven by the supply of U.S. guns to the cartels.”
Mexico’s gun laws
Like the U.S., Mexico’s constitution grants its citizens the right to bear arms. But unlike the U.S., that right comes with a long list of restrictions.
There’s also a big difference in the number of gun dealers. In the U.S., there are more than 75,000 active gun dealers, twice as many as U.S. post offices. While in Mexico, there’s just one gun store. It’s located in the middle of a heavily guarded military base in Mexico City.
Before customers can even enter, they must show proof they’ve passed psychological tests, drug screens and extensive background checks. The store sells about 1,000 guns a month, mostly shotguns, small caliber rifles and handguns.
Cartel gun violence in Mexico
The high caliber guns the cartels favor are not sold legally to civilians in Mexico. However, the cartels have no trouble getting them elsewhere.
On Oct. 17, 2019 Mexican armed forces captured one of the most wanted drug lords in the world, Ovidio Guzmán López, the son of the former Sinaloa cartel boss known as El Chapo. What should have been a turning point in the war on drugs turned into a deadly, five-hour gun battle. Hundreds of cartel gunmen, outfitted for combat, doused soldiers with gunfire, took hostages and blocked entrances to the city with burning vehicles.
Outgunned, and hoping to end the bloodshed, Mexico’s president at the time, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, ordered Guzmán released. This past March, 60 Minutes spoke with then-President López Obrador. Homicides and cartel violence soared during his six-year term and he said the U.S. was partly to blame.
“We have confiscated, in the time that I’ve been in government, 50,000 guns of high power, of high caliber,” he said. “Fifty thousand guns. And 75% of them from the United States.”
Three years after the deadly battle, Guzmán was recaptured in Sinaloa in 2023. His arrest sparked another gunfight that left 10 soldiers dead.
According to documents obtained by 60 Minutes, 47 guns were seized after Guzmán’s capture, including an AK-47-style rifle traced back to one of the gun dealer defendants in Mexico’s lawsuit, Ammo AZ.
How guns from the U.S. get into Mexico
When a gun is recovered at a crime scene, it’s the job of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) to trace it. Tim Sloan was ATF’s attaché in Mexico from 2019-2022. As attaché he ran the ATF’s four field offices in Mexico. In 2019, an incident at a cartel ranch near Guadalajara made a lasting impression on him.
“There was dead bodies everywhere…There were 55 gallon drums with body parts in ’em,” said Sloan. “And all the weapons in that house came from the United States. All of them.”
Sloan says most of the guns the ATF traced in Mexico were sold directly to traffickers or to so-called “straw purchasers,” someone who buys a firearm on behalf of another person
“You’re offering a 23-year-old girl in Arizona $4,000, $5,000 just to go into a store and buy a gun for you,” Sloan said. “She’s going to do that. A lot of people are going to do that, especially if they have any addiction problems, but no criminal record.”
If buyers do not have a criminal history, in certain states, they can buy as many guns as they want. After that comes the easy part, “just drive across the border, ” explained Sloan.
Why Mexico is suing five gun dealers in Arizona
The ATF traced 50,000 American guns recovered in Mexico from 2015 to 2022 to gun dealers across the United States. Mexico’s lawsuit names just five dealers, all from one state: Arizona. Alejandro Celorio, the attorney who spearheaded the lawsuits for the Mexican government, said he believes those dealers are liable for facilitating the arms trafficking that empowers the cartels.
The five gun shops named in the suit were selected based on who Mexico believes are “the bad actors in this dynamic,” Celorio said.
It’s difficult to know which gun dealers could be these so-called “bad actors” because U.S. law prohibits the ATF from publicly releasing specific gun trace information. But 60 Minutes reviewed internal ATF and Mexican law enforcement documents. According to those documents, 566 guns recovered in Mexico over a four-and-a-half-year period were traced back to the Arizona dealers named in Mexico’s lawsuit. Nearly 200 of the guns came from one dealer: Ammo AZ, located near Phoenix and owned by Veerachart “Danger” Murphy.
Murphy declined to be interviewed by 60 Minutes, but after Ammo AZ was named in Mexico’s suit, he posted a response online.
“If we were actually doing something illegal, ATF, FBI would have already shut us down. And I would be in jail,” he said in his online post.
The ATF has said a crime gun trace does not necessarily indicate gun dealer wrongdoing.
Lowy, who has litigated gun cases in more than 40 states and is now co-counsel in Mexico’s case, said dealers are legally obligated not to sell guns to someone they suspect is a straw buyer or a trafficker.
“The dealer’s main responsibility, in my view, is to pay attention to indicators to see if the person standing in front of them, on the other side of the counter, is a potential criminal or supplier to the criminal market,” Lowy said.
Gun dealers who 60 Minutes spoke with say they’re running the needed background checks, filling out the required paperwork and doing what they’re supposed to do. They say it’s challenging to know sometimes if somebody’s a straw buyer, but Lowy disagrees.
“It’s pretty obvious,” he said. “I mean, you see these multiple sales of AR-15s, you see these large cash payments, you see these persons coming back to the store every few days or every few weeks. I mean, these are not normal buying patterns.”
Most gun dealers in the U.S. act responsibly, Lowy said.
“That shows that if you pay attention to these obvious indicators of trafficking and straw buying, you can actually stop supplying crime guns,” Lowy said. “The problem is these bad actors. And there’s no good reason why manufacturers don’t say, ‘Look, if you’re selling our guns use best practices.'”
It’s why Mexico filed its other lawsuit, which included gun manufacturer Smith & Wesson and one of its wholesalers.
Why Mexico is suing Smith & Wesson
Under U.S. law, gunmakers have typically been shielded from liability when one of their guns is used during a crime. But Mexico is arguing the manufacturer is “aiding and abetting” gun trafficking to the cartels. Smith & Wesson called that allegation “not true.” Smith & Wesson did not respond to a request for comment from 60 Minutes.
“When manufacturers make the decision, ‘We’re going to sell guns through dealers no matter what their record is, no matter how many crime guns they’re selling,’ You know, that’s on them,” Lowy said.
According to Lowy, gun manufacturers, dealers and distributors get trace data, though the ATF has said a crime gun trace does not necessarily indicate gun dealer wrongdoing.
Lowy explained, “Every seller in the chain knows if a gun they sold was recovered in a crime.”
If Mexico’s lawsuit is successful, it could open the door for more lawsuits, foreign and domestic, against the gun industry. Earlier this year, gun manufacturers successfully petitioned the Supreme Court to review the case. They argued they could face years of costly litigation by another country that’s “trying to bully the industry into adopting a host of gun control measures.”
During his interview with 60 Minutes, then-President López Obrador said it was the responsibility of both the U.S. and Mexican governments to stop the gun trafficking.
“But there has to be cooperation,” he said. “You cannot sell weapons to just anybody.”