By
A
Colorado gun-accessories company garnered national media coverage when it
announced plans to move most of its manufacturing and sales operations to
Wyoming and Texas.
The
reports highlighted that the company was pulling up stakes to protest the
state’s new gun safety laws, which Colorado passed last year.
What did
the coverage leave out? The fact that the company, Magpul Industries, manufactured the magazine
shooter Adam Lanza used when he gunned down kids and adults in the Newtown,
Connecticut massacre.
During
the gun-safety debate in the Colorado Legislature, Magpul threatened to take
its 200 jobs and flee Colorado if gun-safety laws were put in place.
The
company’s executives testified at the same legislative hearings as Jean
Dougherty, sister of the slain Newtown psychologist Mary Sherlach. Colorado
Republican lawmakers, meanwhile, helped set up Magpul as the face of Democratic
“over-reach” on the gun legislation. Those state legislators said this
legislation was unpopular, even though polls showed otherwise.
The
Republican State Senate leader scolded Democrats for backing legislation that
would drive away the company. He pointed out that Magpul magazines were used by
Navy Seals in their killing of Osama bin Laden.
At the
time, it wasn’t known that a Magpul magazine was also used at Newtown, even
though the chances were good, because Magpul makes the most popular brand of
30-round magazine sold nationwide.
After a
law limiting magazines sold in Colorado to holding 15 bullets or fewer, Magpul
stepped up its political activities, leading a major fundraising event for the
recall campaigns against two Democratic State Senators who voted for the new
gun laws.
At one
fundraiser, the company sold over 15,000 magazines for $10 each, with all the
money from sales going toward the recall effort. Eventually, both lawmakers
were voted out of office in the recall election.
It was a
highly unusual political ride for a private company, especially one with such
an obvious vested interest in the outcome. Obviously, companies get involved in
politics, especially on the money side, but to take such a high-profile
lobbying position at the state level, including involving itself in a recall
campaign? That’s rare, if not unprecedented.
But
things turned sour for Magpul at the end of last year, when Connecticut police
reported that a Magpul magazine was used at Sandy Hook.
Magpul’s
response? Silence.
After
rushing to every microphone in Colorado during the legislative battle, Magpul
had nothing to say to reporters about its connection to the Newtown shooting,
even when photos of its magazines, used by the shooter, were released in
December.
Then,
Magpul jumped back into the news last week, when it announced its departure
from Colorado.
But even
though the company was exacting revenge for a gun law that might have prevented
a gunman from having a 30-round magazine had it been in place in Connecticut or
nationally, reporters didn’t mention that Magpul’s bullet holders were used at
Sandy Hook.
To be
fair, journalists could have mentioned that the U.S. military uses Magpul
magazines against our enemies, as well as the fact that mass murderers use them
at home.
How is
this information not an integral part of the Magpul story?
A former
media critic for the Rocky Mountain News, Jason Salzman is
board chair of Rocky Mountain Media Watch and author of Making the
News: A Guide for Activists and Nonprofits. BigMedia.org. Distributed
via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)