Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Firearms advertisin­g under scrutiny in U.S.

AR rifle ads fall under scrutiny after high-profile mass shootings

- LISA MARIE PANE AND RYAN J. FOLEY

The ads leap out from the pages of almost any gun magazine: Soldiers wearing greasepain­t and camouflage wield military-style rifles depicted as essential to the American way of life. A promotiona­l spot by the Mossberg brand boasts of weapons “engineered to the specs of freedom and independen­ce.”

The ad campaigns by major gun makers continue unabated after mass shootings at a Las Vegas country music concert and a Texas church, and the slick messages are big drivers of sales ahead of Black Friday, by far the heaviest shopping day each year for firearms.

But the marketing tactics for the semi-automatic weapons known as AR rifles are under new scrutiny following the recent attacks. Gun-control activists say the ads risk inspiring the next shooter, while gun-rights advocates insist the weapons are being blamed for the works of deranged individual­s.

“Guns are not sold on the basis of being just tools,” said gun industry expert Adam Winkler, a professor at the University of California Los Angeles School of Law and author of a book about the Second Amendment. “They’re being sold as an embodiment of American values.”

The advertisem­ents have become a focal point in the court case against a gun company over the 2012 massacre at a Connecticu­t elementary school where gunman Adam Lanza used a Bushmaster AR-15-style rifle to kill 20 children and six adults. Bushmaster has advertised its AR weapons with the slogan “consider your man card reissued.”

Relatives of the Sandy Hook victims alleged in a lawsuit that the maker of the Bushmaster was negligent by marketing military-style weapons to young people who may be unstable and intent on inflicting mass casualties. The lawsuit against Remington Arms was dismissed because of broad immunity granted to the gun industry, but the Connecticu­t Supreme Court is weighing whether to reinstate it.

“They used images of soldiers in combat. They used slogans invoking battle and high-pressure missions,” Joshua Koskoff, a lawyer for the families, told justices at a hearing. “Remington may never have known Adam Lanza, but they had been courting him for years.”

Most mass shootings — defined by federal authoritie­s as involving four or more deaths outside the home — are carried out with handguns. But this year, gunmen have used AR-style firearms in mass shootings in Las Vegas, Texas and Northern California. They were also used in the 2016 Orlando nightclub shooting and in 2015 in San Bernardino, Calif.

The rifles are involved in only a small percentage of gun deaths each year. Of the approximat­ely 13,000 gun deaths excluding suicides that happen annually in the United States, about 300 involve the use of rifles — both AR-style and more traditiona­l long guns.

An estimated eight million ARstyle guns have been sold since they were introduced to the public in the 1960s. The name refers to ArmaLite Rifle, a nod to the nowdefunct company that designed the first one. The industry calls them “modern sporting rifles” or “tactical rifles.”

About half are owned by current or former members of the military or law enforcemen­t, according to the National Shooting Sports Foundation, which represents gun makers. Their marketing, coupled with the lifting of a decade-long ban and the return of many veterans who used them on deployment­s, have helped drive their popularity. Gun sales levelled off this past year after nearly a decade of record-breaking numbers, but the industry is banking on the allure of the AR — and its many accessorie­s — to keep it going.

“The reason these guns have become so popular is because they’re like an iPhone 10,” Winkler said. “They’re smooth, sleek, coollookin­g.”

Once the domain of smaller gun dealers, the weapons are now widely sold by big retailers such as Wal-Mart. Those companies are also selling more weapons to first-time gun buyers, said Rommel Dionisio, who has watched the industry closely as managing director of Aegis Capital Corp.

Sales of military-style rifles plummeted in 2017 compared with a year earlier, when people were stocking up amid fears that a Hillary Clinton presidency would lead to stricter gun laws. Donald Trump’s surprise election victory erased those fears but left the gun industry with an oversupply and weak demand.

American Outdoor Brands, which includes Smith & Wesson firearms, reported in September that quarterly revenue in its long guns category dropped by 64 per cent from the prior year due to lower demand for its modern sporting rifles. The company reported shipping 51,000 long guns in that period compared with 111,000 the prior year.

Against that backdrop, many gun companies have cut prices, offered rebates and slowed their manufactur­ing. Some makers of AR-15 rifles dropped prices earlier this year to as low as US$399 — a level that would have been unheard of a year before.

“It really is a buyer’s market out there right now,” Sturm, Ruger & Company Inc. CEO Christophe­r Killoy told analysts on a recent conference call.

Those deals come with a steady dose of ads that highlight the patriotic notions of carrying an AR.

“That’s what they’re emphasizin­g, that these are sort of a lifestyle weapon,” Winkler said. “This is a weapon you buy if you’re a patriotic guy who loves the idea of those military shooters, someone who would use your guns to defend your nation.”

 ?? DOMINICK REUTER/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? The slick ads by major gun makers are typically big drivers of sales ahead of Black Friday. Gun-control activists are raising alarm over the potential of such ads to inspire the next shooter, while gun-rights advocates say the problem is deranged...
DOMINICK REUTER/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FILES The slick ads by major gun makers are typically big drivers of sales ahead of Black Friday. Gun-control activists are raising alarm over the potential of such ads to inspire the next shooter, while gun-rights advocates say the problem is deranged...

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