Heavy Vetting: Scott Jennings Says Dems Scrutinized Graham Platner’s Past But Signed Off...
Racist Race: Jasmine Crockett Still Angry with Dem Party for Backing and Electing...
MS NOW’s Chris Hayes and Rachel Maddow Say They Knew All Along That...
Young Washington Beats Supergirl at the Box Office Over the Holiday Weekend; Excuses...
'Immigrant' Mahmoud Khalil’s Independence Day Wish Is Freedom and Justice for Everyone (Bu...
Lyndsey Fifield Has a Question for Ruben Gallego and Dems After Their Sudden...
Judge Cites Trump Admin’s Hostility to Nonwhite Immigrants in Unfreezing Benefit Applicati...
Ro Reversal: Dem Khanna Overlooked Platner’s Nazi Tattoo but Ends Endorsement Over Latest...
Donna Brazile: Accused Rapist Graham Platner Just Needs Time to Heal
The Odyssey’s Lupita Nyong'o Would Ask Homer Why He Gave Women So Little...
Minnesota Mayor Observes America's 250th by Meeting With Somalia's President at His Palace
Platner’s Backers Hit Delete: The Great Endorsement Purge Begins
Essence Calls Cover Girl Ketanji Brown Jackson ‘The People’s Champion’
Marjorie Taylor Greene: Last Soldier Standing for Graham Platner (And Getting Paid for...
Vindicated: Left Ignores Conservative Woman’s Assault Claims Against Platner — Until a Dem...

Orlando the 'tipping point' in decision to drop assault-style weapons from Coast Guard exchanges

Here’s a small story from what’s billed as the smallest daily newspaper in the United States, but it shows just how far the ripple effects of the Orlando terrorist attack have reached.

Advertisement

The Kodiak Daily Mirror reported Thursday that four Coast Guard exchange stores that previously sold “assault-style weapons” will be dropping the guns from their inventory. The Coast Guard base in Kodiak, Alaska, is the largest in the Pacific. Exchanges are located in Ketchikan, Alaska; Chesapeake Bay, Va.; and Mobile, Ala.

In what’s perhaps the most interesting bit of the story, the stores, unlike many legislators, actually have a concrete (if debatable) definition of “assault-style” weapons; that is, semi-automatic guns with at least a 20-round magazine capacity.

CEO John Riley told the Kodiak Daily Mirror that the stores were for several months considering dropping the guns from inventory, but the Orlando mass shooting was the “tipping point” that closed the deal.

Advertisement

“We notified the chain of command that, based on all of the sales and profit numbers and the amount of scrutiny we come under and the work that goes with it, it just doesn’t justify continuing to carry a small percentage of our overall business,” Riley said.

The decision meant that 11 guns were taken off the exchange shelves in Kodiak out of an inventory of 182.

Last week, Academy Sports & Outdoors removed rifles based on the AR-15 platform from all of its stores’ displays and advertisements, although the guns were still available for sale.

 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement