The parents of children murdered during the Columbine High School shootings in the United States have launched a multibillion dollar lawsuit against the makers of violent computer games, blamed for inspiring the massacre.
Eidos, a computer games company, has been named as a co-defendant in a $US5000 billion lawsuit filed by parents of the victims shot dead by two students who went on the rampage with guns at the school near Denver, Colorado, in April 1999.
Eidos, which distributes the popular Tomb Raider game, has been named alongside companies that include ID Software, Paramount, Sega, Sony and Virgin Interactive, whose games are all alleged to have caused the shootings in which 15 people died.
The parents allege that games, such as Eidos' Final Fantasy VII, led to the massacre, and that the creators of those games "knew or should have known that copycat violence would result from the use of their products and materials".
It is the second such case brought against computer games companies. In April last year, a judge dismissed a claim in Kentucky, over another school shooting in December 1997, in which three people died. He ruled that the games companies "owed no legal duty of care ..." because the killer's actions were "unforeseeable", and also that to restrain the content of games would violate the United States' First Amendment - which guarantees freedom of speech.
The games most obviously on trial include two of the most popular "shoot-em-ups", namely Doom and Quake. In both the player is behind a gun or rifle and attempts to kill opponents. Other games under scrutiny include Mortal Kombat, Redneck Revenge and Resident Evil.
- INDEPENDENT
Massacre families to sue creators of violent games
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