The Bushmaster AR-15 rifle "has little utility for legitimate civilian purposes. The rifle's size and overwhelming firepower, so well-adapted to the battlefield, are in fact liabilities in home defense. But there is one tragically predictable civilian activity in which the AR-15 reigns supreme: mass shootings," the lawsuit reads.
The civil action names manufacturer Bushmaster Firearms, firearms distributor Camfour and Riverview Gun Sales, the store where the rifle was bought in 2010, as defendants in the civil action suit for damages which was filed with the Superior Court in Bridgeport, Connecticut by the families of nine of those killed and an injured teacher.
The Hartford Courant reported last week that 11 families of those killed in the shooting had opened the estates of their deceased children; according to probate court records, this is a necessary legal step before a lawsuit can be made.
Sunday December 14 marked two years since the massacre, in which 20-year-old Adam Lanza opened fire in the elementary school, killing 20 children and six educators.