Halted gun sales infuriate customers

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Rockrivr1

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By Sasha Talcott, Globe Staff | September 11, 2005

BATON ROUGE, La. -- As fearful residents rush to stock up on guns, Wal-Mart, one of the region's biggest suppliers, abruptly stopped selling them at 40 stores scattered throughout the Gulf Coast.

The move infuriated some Wal-Mart customers in this fiercely progun region, some of whom said the big chain left them without protection as the violence increased after Hurricane Katrina.

''We had a lot of chaos," said Donald Goff, who was sitting in a white pickup outside a local Wal-Mart store. ''They should be open to sell guns. They should not be doing this to people."

Smaller stores are eagerly filling the void. Spillway Sportsman, near Baton Rouge, sold 172 guns in one three-day period after the hurricane, when normally it might sell 15. One mother came in to buy her first gun after she and her two children, ages 9 and 12, witnessed a slaying on the streets of New Orleans, said Scott Roe, Spillway's owner.

''Her comment was, 'I was a card-carrying, antigun liberal -- not anymore,' " Roe said. ''She said, 'I'm going back home, and I am not going back unarmed.' "

A Wal-Mart spokeswoman, Karen Burk, attributed the company's decision to pull guns from the shelves to ''some very fluid circumstances and changing situations" in the region. She did not elaborate far beyond that. ''We're trying to take care of our customers and community and be a responsible retailer at the same time," Burk said.

In addition to its decision to stop gun sales at 40 stores, Wal-Mart also has placed severe restrictions on gun sales at some other stores in the area. Executives ordered the guns removed from their glass display cases and put into a vault instead. At those stores, customers who want to purchase a gun must select it through a catalog.

Burk said the retailer has no date set to return guns to the stores.

Wal-Mart's decision to stop gun sales also earned it praise from several customers, who said police would protect them from any trouble.

''Why can't we get along? This is a time of crisis," said Mike White of Kenner, La. He said people who need guns for legitimate reasons, such as hunting, would not be buying now.

Gun sales have become a hot-button issue for Wal-Mart, the nation's largest retailer. Filmmaker Michael Moore blasted the store's gun sales in his documentary ''Bowling for Columbine." In January, the company agreed to pay $14.5 million to settle a lawsuit filed by California's attorney general that accused it of violating state gun laws.

But in post-Katrina Louisiana, a lot of anger erupted when the retailer took guns off its shelves.

Isiah Smith said looters stole cars in his neighborhood and broke into homes as he fled from Laplace to Baton Rouge to escape the storm.

He said Wal-Mart should not have stopped gun sales. ''People have to protect themselves," he said.
 
I threw some comments up over at Alphecca.

I am just going to cut and paste them here to save time.

First was this comment:
It certainly sounds disturbing, but given Wal Marts long history of
selling guns and resisting the boycots of the gun grabbers - I think
maybe we should wait a bit to allow Wal Mart the opportunity to
explain what happened.

This report IS coming fromt he Boston Globe - not really the most
accurate unbiased source.

I'm not saying it happened this way or not - but I could envision that
the 40 stores they are talking about where sales were stopped probably
includes the 40 stores around New Orleans that have been shut down
(and hence sales of everything stopped) in light of the flooding,
looting,and lack of power. It seems to me if there is a significant
risk of the store losing power and being overrun by looters (and its
being closed down anyway) then Wal Mart is probably justified in
locking the guns up in a safe overnight.

Just my $0.02

Then I threw up this comment:

Just remember - the gun grabbers are desperate for any little victory (and the Anti Wal Mart folks are even more desperate) - and if they can drive a wedge in between gun buyers and Wal Mart they will jump at the opportunity.

Finally, since no one seemed to understand the problems with the report (and to me what seemed like a lack of an actual story) I put up these comments:

I agree its very disturbing and worth looking into - I am simply questioning the extent to which this is actually occurring. The Boston Globe story wasn't clear - and it certainly didn't indicate they stopped selling them in Baton Rouge. Instead, they stopped selling them only "at 40 stores scattered throughout the Gulf Coast." The story mentions Baton Rouge - but only to the extent that a local seller was interviewed about his greatly increased sales volume.

Basically, the story tells us nothing. We know that a lot of Wal Mart stores are still shut down because of storm damage/lack of electricity/flooding/lack of employees. Do these also include the stores that this story refers to? I don't know, the story isn't clear.


The story - that I was able to see - never actually mentions that sales have been stopped or impeded in Baton Rouge.

If you go to the Wal Store Finder - there are actually 11 Wal Marts in the New Orleans area. I assume all these are still closed. There are another 10 located along the Mississippi Coast near Gulfport, MS and 10 along the Gulf Coast of Alabama near Mobile, AL (all of which I also assume to be closed, if they in fact are still actually standing). If you go inland in either Mississippi or Alabama - where the destruction is far worse than what occurred in Louisiana - there are scores more.

I suspect this is really just a reporter making up a story where none exists. He didn't say the stores were shut in Louisiana, but only along the Gulf Coast - ie: Mississippi and Alabama.

Until I see otherwise, I just don't see where the alarm should be (other than the Globe's bad reporting).
 
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