Jury awards over $100M to family of Kentucky teen in ghost gun lawsuit
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Topics in This Edition
Summary
The segment covers a wrongful-death lawsuit filed by the mother of 18-year-old Henry Willis of Louisville, Kentucky. Willis purchased a Polymer80 Glock-style ghost gun build kit online from Husky Armory on July 6, 2023, assembled it, and died by suicide on July 30, 2023. A jury awarded more than $100 million in damages. The report includes statements from Willis's mother and the family's attorney emphasizing the need for background checks and age restrictions on such sales.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately reports verified details from the July 2026 verdict in a case where the defendant did not appear in court. It correctly identifies the purchaser's age, the date of purchase, the product's nature, and the outcome as the largest verdict against a gun dealer. Viewer context missing includes the precise $4.2 million compensatory plus $100 million punitive breakdown and that the company defaulted by failing to defend. Framing highlights regulatory evasion without overstating causation beyond the lawsuit allegations. Reporting relies on named family representatives and court proceedings rather than anonymous sources.
Key Moments
18-year-old Henry Willis bought a Polymer80 ghost gun kit and magazine online from Husky Armory on July 6, 2023
Confirmed in lawsuit filings and multiple AP and local reports; kit arrived by mail and was assembled
Willis died by suicide days later using the assembled handgun
July 30, 2023 death confirmed in court documents and family statements
Jury ordered Husky Armory to pay over $100 million in the wrongful-death case
July 2026 verdict of approximately $104 million ($4.2M compensatory + $100M punitive) reported across outlets; largest against a gun dealer
Company sold the kit without required background checks or age verification for those under 21
Core allegation upheld by verdict; federal rules bar unlicensed sales of such kits to minors