Gun Trafficking to Mexico

Military-style weapons are smuggled in huge numbers from the United States civilian market to criminal organizations in Mexico and other Latin American countries. These weapons enable transnational organizations to wage brutal wars for the control of lucrative criminal trade through the Western Hemisphere. These violent criminals commit murder, kidnapping, and extortion, and traffic in everything from drugs to human beings.

New semiautomatic assault weapons are trafficked across the border from the United States because it is the easiest and cheapest place in the world to purchase them, thanks to weak gun laws and a deliberate strategy by the U.S. gun industry to design and sell military-style weapons to civilians. The government of Mexico recovered and submitted more than 99,000 firearms to the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) for tracing in the years 2007 to 2011. Of those, the vast majority — more than 68,000 — were sourced to the United States.

Mexican Government’s Lawsuit Against U.S. Gun Manufacturers

Read the Complaint Filed by the Mexican Governments Lawsuit Against U.S. Gun Manufacturers

Read the Amicus Brief Filed by the Violence Policy Center and Other Gun Violence Prevention Organizations

Read the Amicus Brief Filed on Appeal by the Violence Policy Center and Other Gun Violence Prevention Organizations

Publications and Ongoing Projects

Cross-Border Gun Trafficking: An Ongoing Analysis of the Types of Firearms Illegally Trafficked from the United States to Mexico and Other Latin American and Caribbean Countries as Revealed in U.S. Court Documents | En español

Gun Running Nation: How Foreign-Made Assault Weapons are Trafficked from the United States to Mexico and What to Do About It (a joint report released with the Washington Office on Latin America – July 2015)
View the press release

Indicted: Types of Firearms and Methods of Gun Trafficking from the United States to Mexico as Revealed in U.S. Court Documents (April 2009)
View the press release

Iron River: Gun Violence and Illegal Firearms Trafficking on the U.S.-Mexico Border (March 2009)
View the press release

Explainers

Why Military-Style Guns Flow From the United States to Mexico | En español

Additional Resources

FIREARMS TRAFFICKING: U.S. Efforts to Disrupt Gun Smuggling into Mexico Would Benefit from Additional Data and Analysis, U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), February 2021

Firearms Trace Data from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives

The Way of the Gun: Estimating Firearms Traffic Across the US-Mexico Border (The Igarapé Institute)

Photo Credit: AP Photo/Gregory Bull