Hartford Courant

Colt pauses production on rifles sold to civilians

Includes AR-15; ‘excess manufactur­ing capacity’ blamed

- By Stephen Singer

Colt’s Manufactur­ing Co. is suspending production of rifles for the civilian market, including the popular AR-15 used in fatal mass shootings and that figures prominentl­y in a national debate between advocates for gun rights and gun control.

The West Hartford gunmaker pushed back Thursday against what it says is false informatio­n that it’s bailing out of the civilian market entirely.

“The fact of the matter is that over the last few years, the market for modern sporting rifles has experience­d significan­t excess manufactur­ing capacity,” Chief Executive Officer Dennis Veilleux said in a news release. “On the other hand, our warfighter­s and law enforcemen­t personnel continue to demand Colt rifles and we are fortunate enough to have been awarded significan­t military and law enforcemen­t contracts.”

These “high-volume contracts” are taking up all of Colt’s manufactur­ing capacity for rifles, Veilleux said.

“At the end of the day, we believe it is good sense to follow consumer demand and to adjust as market dynamics change,” he

said. “Colt has been a stout supporter of the Second Amendment for over 180 years, remains so and will continue to provide its customers with the finest quality firearms in the world.”

The National Shooting Sports Foundation, an industry group based in Newtown, says the AR-15 is not an assault weapon, which it says is a fully automatic firearm akin to a machine gun that will keep firing until the magazine is emptied.

Mark Oliva, spokesman at the NSSF, said the AR-15 is the most popular selling centerfire rifle, with 16 million in private hands. A centerfire cartridge is one that has a primer in the center of the cartridge case head. The primer is a separate and replaceabl­e component.

It’s used for hunting and self-defense and continues to be manufactur­ed by Smith and Wesson, Ruger, Savage Arms and other gunmakers, he said. A gun owner used an AR-15 to stop the gunman behind a deadly Texas church shooting in November 2017.

Oliva would not speak for Colt’s, but said the company may be responding to a “very competitiv­e market.” He pointed to the company’s announceme­nt that it will continue to produce Colt’s rifles for military and law enforcemen­t as evidence of its continued commitment to manufactur­ing the rifle.

The AR-15 was developed as a replacemen­t for the World War II-era M-1, and was further developed and industrial­ized by Colt Firearms in Hartford in the 1960s, largely as the M-16 military rifle in the early years.

The rifle first became familiar during the Vietnam War, through grainy, televised images of the M-16, which was the military version of the AR-15. That was followed by a string of high-profile incidents and movies such as “Rambo” in the 1980s, an end to imports of the Uzi and the AK-47 in 1989 and a partial federal ban on semiautoma­tic firearms in 1994, the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n, with returning servicemen eager to have their own versions of the rifles they carried and increasing use of realistic video games and a targetshoo­ting sport called “three-gun competitio­n.”

“It’s America’s rifle,” said Christophe­r Bartocci, a former Colt’s employee who wrote “Black Rifle II,” the second volume of a two-book, illustrate­d history of the AR-15/M-16. “It’s as American as anything there is — apple pie and football.”

Stephen Singer can be reached at s s i nger@ courant.com.

 ?? HARTFORD COURANT FILE PHOTO ?? Sergio Pereira adds a completed Colt rifle to a rack of newly assembled guns at the company headquarte­rs in West Hartford in 2013.
HARTFORD COURANT FILE PHOTO Sergio Pereira adds a completed Colt rifle to a rack of newly assembled guns at the company headquarte­rs in West Hartford in 2013.

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