The Day

RETAILERS DICK’S, WALMART TAKE HARDER LINE ON GUNS

Sporting goods giant makes sweeping changes to gun sales

- By DAMIAN J. TROISE AP Business Writer

New York — Dick’s Sporting Goods and Walmart took steps Wednesday to restrict gun sales, adding two retail heavyweigh­ts to the growing rift between corporate America and the gun lobby.

Dick’s said it will immediatel­y stop selling assault-style rifles and ban the sale of all guns to anyone under 21. Its CEO took on the National Rifle Associatio­n by demanding tougher gun laws after the massacre in Florida.

Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, followed late Wednesday saying it will no longer sell firearms and ammunition to people younger than 21. It had stopped selling AR-15s and other semi-automatic weapons in 2015, citing weak sales.

New York — Dick’s Sporting Goods will immediatel­y stop selling assault-style rifles and ban the sale of all guns to anyone under 21, the company said Wednesday, as its CEO took on the National Rifle Associatio­n by demanding tougher gun laws after the massacre in Florida.

The strongly worded announceme­nt from the nationwide store chain came as students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., returned to class for the first time since a teenager killed 17 students and educators with an AR-15 rifle two weeks ago.

“When we saw what the kids were going through and the grief of the parents and the kids who were killed in Parkland, we felt we needed to do something,” Chairman and CEO Ed Stack said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

The change in sales practices, and the emphatic words from Stack, put Dick’s out front in the falling-out between corporate America and the gun lobby.

Several major corporatio­ns, including MetLife, Hertz and Delta Air Lines, have cut ties with the NRA since the Florida tragedy, but until now, none were retailers that sold guns.

The announceme­nt drew hundreds of thousands of responses for and against on the company’s Facebook page.

Dick’s Sporting Goods had cut off sales of assault-style weapons after the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. But sales had resumed at its smaller chain of Field & Stream stores, which consisted of 35 outlets in 16 states as of October.

On Wednesday, Stack said that would end, and he called on lawmakers to act now.

He urged them to ban assault-style firearms, bump stocks and high-capacity magazines and raise the minimum age to buy firearms to 21. He said universal background checks should be required, and there should be a complete database of those banned from buying firearms. He also called for the closing of the private sale and gun show loophole that enables purchasers to escape background checks.

“We support and respect the Second Amendment, and we recognize and appreciate that the vast majority of gun owners in this country are responsibl­e, law-abiding citizens,” Stack said in a letter. “But we have to help solve the problem that’s in front of us. Gun violence is an epidemic that’s taking the lives of too many people, including the brightest hope for the future of America — our kids.”

The NRA has pushed back aggressive­ly against calls for raising age limits for guns or restrictin­g the sale of assault-style weapons. Calls to the NRA were not immediatel­y returned.

Stack also revealed that Nikolas Cruz, the 19-year-old arrested in the Florida attack, had bought a shotgun at a Dick’s store within the past four months.

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