The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Corporate America: New steps to curtail sales of firearms

- By Lisa Marie Pane

GAINESVILL­E, GA. » With Gary Ramey’s fledgling gun-making business taking off in retail stores, he decided to start offering one of his handguns for sale on his website.

That didn’t sit well with the company he used to process payments, and they informed him they were dropping his account. Another credit card processing firm told him the same thing: They wouldn’t do business with him.

The reason? His business of making firearms violates their policies.

In the wake of high-profile mass shootings, corporate America has been taking a stand against the firearms industry amid a lack of action by lawmakers on gun control. Payment processing firms are limiting transactio­ns, Bank of America stopped providing financing to companies that make AR-style guns, and retailers like Walmart and Dick’s Sporting Goods imposed age restrictio­ns on gun purchases.

The moves are lauded by gunsafety advocates but criticized by the gun industry that views them as a backhanded way of underminin­g the Second Amendment. Gun industry leaders see the backlash as a real threat to their industry and are coming to the conclusion that they need additional protection­s in Congress to prevent financial retaliatio­n from banks.

“If a few banks say ‘No, we’re not going to give loans to gun dealers or gun manufactur­ers’, all of a sudden the industry is threatened and the Second Amendment doesn’t mean much if there are no guns around,” said Michael Hammond, legal counsel for Gun Owners of America. “If you can’t make guns, if you can’t sell guns, the Second Amendment doesn’t mean much.”

The issue has already gotten the attention of the Republican who is chairman of the Senate Banking Committee. Sen. Mike Crapo of Idaho sent letters criticizin­g Bank of America and Citigroup, which decided to restrict sales of firearms by its business customers, over their new gun

Taking a somewhat different stance, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said Saturday’s endorsemen­t to increase oil production was based on “fundamenta­l principles, on research done by our teams, by teams of our friends and colleagues, the OPEC secretaria­t.”

“Twitter is not one of the instrument­s we base our decisions on,” Novak added, referring to Trump.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A 9mm handgun produced by Honor Defense, a gunmaker in Gainesvill­e, Ga., is displayed.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A 9mm handgun produced by Honor Defense, a gunmaker in Gainesvill­e, Ga., is displayed.

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