Back to top

New Bill: Representative Derek Schmidt introduces H.R. 9298: Stopping Harmful and Outrageous Torts Act

We have received text from H.R. 9298: Stopping Harmful and Outrageous Torts Act. This bill was received on 2026-06-11, and currently has 5 cosponsors.

Here is a short summary of the bill:

This bill would expand and strengthen legal protections for gun manufacturers, sellers, and related trade associations by making it harder to sue them over harms caused by the criminal or unlawful misuse of firearms, ammunition, or related products by someone else.

What the bill changes

  • Requires dismissal of pending cases: Any covered lawsuit already pending when the law takes effect would have to be dismissed immediately.
  • Broadens the definition of covered products: The bill defines “qualified products” to include firearms, antique firearms, ammunition, and parts or accessories such as magazines, clips, and optical devices, as long as they moved in interstate or foreign commerce.
  • Expands who is protected: Legal protections would apply to manufacturers, sellers, trade associations, and also their owners and employees. “Sellers” would include licensed importers, dealers, ammunition sellers, and others selling covered products at wholesale or retail. Manufacturers are specifically excluded from the definition of seller, but are separately covered elsewhere in the bill.
  • Limits lawsuits based on misuse by others: A “qualified civil liability action” would cover claims seeking money damages or other relief that arise from the criminal or unlawful misuse, alteration, or modification of a covered product by the buyer or a third party.
  • Preserves some exceptions: The bill keeps several types of claims outside the immunity, including:
    • claims against a transferor convicted under federal or equivalent state law for unlawful transfer of a firearm;
    • claims for negligent entrustment or negligence per se against a seller;
    • claims where the manufacturer or seller knowingly violated certain federal firearms, tax, export-control, or equivalent state laws, and that violation directly caused the harm;
    • breach of contract or warranty claims;
    • claims for death, physical injury, or property damage caused directly by a design or manufacturing defect when the product was being used lawfully or in a reasonably foreseeable way; and
    • enforcement actions brought by the Attorney General under the federal firearms or tax laws.
  • Creates a rule for criminal misuse: If a firearm is discharged because of a volitional act that meets the elements of a criminal offense, that act would be treated as the sole proximate cause of resulting harm for purposes of these claims.
  • Bars foreign governments from bringing these claims: Foreign states and their agencies would be prohibited from suing covered manufacturers, sellers, or trade associations over harms tied to unlawful misuse or modification of a covered product.
  • Allows more cases to move to federal court: If a defendant says a state-court case is covered, the defendant could remove it to federal court. The federal court would have jurisdiction if the defendant makes a colorable claim that at least one claim is covered.
  • Raises pleading requirements: Plaintiffs would have to plead specific facts showing that an exception applies, including facts about intent and proximate cause.
  • Provides immediate appeals: Defendants could immediately appeal a denial of a motion to dismiss based on the bill’s protections.
  • Allows attorney’s fees for successful defendants: If a defendant wins by relying on the bill’s immunity, the defendant would be entitled to reasonable attorney’s fees and court costs.
  • Preempts conflicting state and local laws: The bill would override state and local laws or regulations that try to impose liability on covered manufacturers, sellers, or trade associations for harms arising from criminal misuse, alteration, or modification of a covered product.

Practical effect

In plain terms, the bill would make it more difficult to bring or keep lawsuits against gun companies and related sellers when someone is harmed by the criminal or unlawful use of a firearm or similar product by another person. It also shifts many of those disputes toward federal court and gives defendants stronger procedural tools to get cases dismissed early.

Relevant Companies

  • AXON — Axon is primarily known for law-enforcement equipment and software, but it also offers some weapons-related products and could be indirectly affected by changes in liability rules for firearms-related businesses.
  • SWBI — Smith & Wesson Brands is a firearms manufacturer that could benefit from broader civil immunity and more limited exposure to lawsuits.
  • RGR — Sturm, Ruger & Company is a firearms manufacturer that could be directly affected by the bill’s expanded protections against certain lawsuits.
  • MGOL — MGO Global is not a firearms company and likely not directly impacted; no clearly relevant public company found beyond core firearms makers, so this entry may be less directly applicable.

Representative Derek Schmidt Bill Proposals

Here are some bills which have recently been proposed by Representative Derek Schmidt:

  • H.R.9298: Stopping Harmful and Outrageous Torts Act
  • H.R.9108: To amend title XVIII of the Social Security Act to adjust the eligibility for the rural emergency hospital designation under the Medicare program.
  • H.R.8352: Criminal History Access Act of 2026
  • H.R.8276: Quindaro Townsite National Historic Landmark Act
  • H.R.8065: Restoring Executive Branch Authorities to Oversee Offices of the United States Attorneys Act of 2026
  • H.R.7752: Kelsey Smith Act

You can track bills proposed by Representative Derek Schmidt on Quiver Quantitative's politician page for Schmidt.

Representative Derek Schmidt Net Worth

Quiver Quantitative estimates that Representative Derek Schmidt is worth $3.6M, as of June 19th, 2026. This is the 201st highest net worth in Congress, per our live estimates.

Schmidt has approximately $1.4M invested in publicly traded assets which Quiver is able to track live.

You can track Representative Derek Schmidt's net worth on Quiver Quantitative's politician page for Schmidt.

2026 Kansas's 2nd Congressional District Election

There has been approximately $4,240,861 of spending in Kansas's 2nd congressional district elections over the last two years, per our estimates.

Approximately $868,264 of this has been from outside spending by PACs and Super PACs. Some of the groups who are spending money in this race include:

The rating for this race is currently "Solid R".

You can track this election on our matchup page for the 2026 Kansas's 2nd congressional district election.

This article is not financial advice. See Quiver Quantitative's disclaimers for more information.

Read full article here »

In-Depth Zacks Research for the Tickers Above

Normally $25 each - click below to receive one report FREE:

Axon Enterprise, Inc (AXON)

Sturm, Ruger & Company, Inc. (RGR)

Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc. (SWBI)