SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 2026

- AWARDS & HONORS -

Anthony Imperato, Founder and CEO of Henry Repeating Arms, received the Law Enforcement Supporter of the Year award from New York State Fraternal Order of Police Memorial Lodge 100. The honor recognizes Imperato's decades-long commitment to supporting law enforcement through personal efforts and Henry Repeating Arms' "Guns For Great Causes" program, which has supported organizations including the National Fraternal Order of Police and National Fallen Officers Foundation.

Darton Archery's TriTech 33 has been named "Bow of the Year" by Archery Talk after extensive testing. The bow features three innovations: Perfect-Tune™ Adjustable Limb Pocket System, Perfect Timing Adjustable Yoke Hangers, and Micro Adjust Roller Guard, making it the world's most tunable bow.

- COMPETITION -

Federal Ammunition sponsored shooter Varick Beise won the Open Division Championship at the 2026 MagPul Texas 3-Gun Championships held April 10-12 at Reveille Peak Ranch near Burnet, Texas. The event featured 10 stages with 150-200 rounds per platform in challenging hill country terrain.

- COURTS -

Gun Owners of America and Gun Owners Foundation announced a major legal victory as the Department of Justice requested dismissal of its appeal regarding the ATF's Biden-era "Engaged in the Business" rule. The preliminary injunction obtained by GOA, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill, Utah Attorney General Derek Brown, and Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch remains in effect.

Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC) filed its reply brief with the First Circuit Court of Appeals in Granata v. Campbell, challenging Massachusetts's ban on modern handguns. The plaintiffs, including FPC members and The Gun Runner, LLC retailer, argue the ban unconstitutionally violates Second Amendment protections.

- EVENTS -

RSR Group announces its 2026 Spring E-Show running April 21-24 as a virtual trade event featuring manufacturer booths, exclusive dealer specials, new products, and daily prize giveaways on www.rsrgroup.com.

- GIVEAWAYS -

Silencer Central launched "100 Days of Silence," awarding 200 suppressors over 100 consecutive days from April 17 through July 25, 2026, with a total prize value exceeding $200,000. The campaign features two daily giveaways with sponsors including Wilson Combat, Weatherby, Ruger, Kimber, and BANISH Suppressors, celebrating the elimination of the $200 NFA tax stamp.

- HUNTING -

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks has completed drawings for deer and elk permits and nonresident combination licenses. Applicants can check results online through MyFWP or by calling 406-444-2950. Upcoming deadlines include May 1 for moose, bighorn sheep, mountain goat and bison applications.

- INDUSTRY UPDATE -

Night Fision, a premium sight systems and optics-mounting solutions manufacturer, is actively seeking U.S.-based export partners to expand distribution across international commercial, law enforcement, and military channels. Director of Sales Pat Murphy stated the company has seen steady global demand growth for its handgun sight systems and optic mounting solutions.

- ORGANIZATIONS -

TrueTimber and Palmetto State Armory partnered with the South Carolina Waterfowl Association to expand Camp Woodie camperships through an in-store campaign from December to March. The initiative provided deserving youth access to SCWA's flagship summer camp program, which serves over 1,500 campers annually with outdoor education focused on firearm safety, wildlife conservation, and natural resource stewardship.

Whitetails Unlimited is sponsoring Midway USA Foundation's 2026 Days of Clays events with $5,000 contributions at Minnesota, Iowa, and South Carolina locations. The funds will support youth shooting teams and be matched by Midway USA Foundation, helping preserve the future of youth shooting sports.

- PRODUCT NEWS -

Taurus USA has released a threaded barrel option for its 22TUC micro-compact pistol, a lightweight .22 LR firearm weighing just 10 ounces and made in the USA. The new variant maintains the platform's tip-up barrel design and 9+1 capacity while offering suppressed shooting capability for personalization.

Beretta launches its Training Gear Collection debuting at booth #2623 during the NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits, April 17–19 in Houston, Texas. Developed with elite shooters, the collection features performance apparel including the Sonoran Softshell Vest, Cloak 2L WP Jacket, Apollo Merino Hoodie, and Champion's Edge T-Shirt, designed for tactical shooters and competitive athletes.

Check-Mate announced a collaboration with EAA Corp. and Girsan on the next-generation Witness2311® XXX Series pistols, featuring a newly engineered slim-profile magazine with 16-round capacity. The launch will be unveiled at the NRA Annual Meeting 2026 in Houston, with Check-Mate and EAA Corp. hosting a special event at Booth 3031 on April 17.

SDS Arms introduces the Spandau Arms S2 12-gauge 21" shotgun in TrueTimber Strata camo, featuring an inertia-operated system, Benelli/Mobil choke tubes, and fiber optic front sight. Designed for turkey hunting and spring season, the shotgun combines lightweight handling with reliable performance and customization options.

Kinetic Development Group (KDG) reports sustained growth in its Stribog accessory lineup and is developing new rail systems for expanded Stribog variants including 10mm and .45 ACP models. The company is also engineering solutions for another major firearm manufacturer, with Director of Sales & Marketing Chris Bardugone emphasizing KDG's commitment to delivering purpose-built solutions.

FN America, LLC launched the FN PUREVIEW, a pistol-mounted red dot sight using advanced holographic technology powered by ImageGuide. The lightweight optic is compatible with FN 509, FN 510, FN 545, and FN Five-seveN models and will be showcased at the 2026 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits in Houston.

Springfield Armory unveiled the Model 2020 Heatseeker .308 Pistol, featuring a compact 12" barrel and 22.5" overall length with bolt-action precision and AR-style modularity. The pistol utilizes a Sharps Bros 1913 Heatseeker Chassis, stainless steel barrel, and adjustable TriggerTech trigger, priced at $1,999 MSRP.

Springfield Armory has launched the 1911 Garrison Target pistol in .45 ACP and 9mm with fully adjustable rear sights, forged steel construction, and match-grade barrels. Both models feature hot salt blued carbon steel, wood grips, and are priced at $999 MSRP.

Henry Repeating Arms has expanded its H1 rimfire lever-action platform with five new models including the H1 Western Rifle, H1 Western Frontier Rifle, H1 Sporter Rifle & Carbine, H1 Bandit Rifle, and H1 X Model. Available in .22 S/L/LR, .22 Magnum, and select .17 HMR configurations, the expansion represents the most significant release in the H1 platform's history.

The Chair Blanket, founded by Chris and Tiffany McCasland, launches a Realtree EDGE Camo Edition featuring a reversible waterproof and fleece chair cover. The brand, which appeared on ABC's Shark Tank and has sold over 70,000 units, partners with Realtree to expand into hunting and outdoor environments.

Heritage Manufacturing announces the expansion of its Rough Rider® revolver line with a new .32 H&R Magnum centerfire chambering, marking the first centerfire option for the iconic platform traditionally offered in .22 LR and .22 WMR.

- SHOWS -

WATCHTOWER Defense will showcase its American-made firearms, including the APACHE COMMANDER and RAIDER series, at the First Annual GEAR Summit April 24–26 at Merus Adventure Park in Amarillo, Texas. The Gun Owners of America-led event features live-fire ranges, hands-on demonstrations, and over 100 manufacturers across 5,500 acres.

Franchi invites attendees to Booth #2813 at the 2026 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits in Atlanta and Houston (April 17-19) to showcase new products including the Momentum Utility Lite Elite (MULE), .400 Legend chambering in Momentum models, and 15 new Affinity 3 and Affinity 3.5 configurations featuring refined ergonomic designs.

Langdon Tactical Technology will exhibit at the 2026 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits in Houston, Texas, April 17–19, showcasing custom firearms including the Beretta 92 Elite LTT II, Beretta 80X .32, HK VP9 CC, and LTT IMPACT rifle, plus Langdon Skunkworx accessories.

WE Knife will display its latest EDC, tactical, and hunting knife designs at the 2026 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits in Houston, Texas, April 17-19 at Booth #4247. The event will feature new models showcasing premium materials, precise engineering, and innovative designs from WE Knife and its brands CIVIVI and SENCUT.

Benelli USA will exhibit at the NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits 2026 in Houston at Booth #2813, featuring its Advanced Impact shotgun barrel system, Super Black Eagle 3, Ethos, and Lupo bolt-action rifle. The company will highlight its Art of Performance Series demonstrating engineering innovation and precision manufacturing.

Steiner eOptics will exhibit at Defense Services Asia 2026 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, April 20-23, 2026, within the Beretta Defense Technologies booth #271. The company will showcase its electro-optic solutions including aiming lasers, night vision systems, and combat ID beacons to global military and defense professionals.

Mark 7 Reloading will showcase its industry-leading reloading equipment at the 2026 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits in Houston, Texas from April 17-19 at booth #2930. The event features over 14 acres of exhibits with firearms, gear, and accessories from leading brands, offering NRA members free admission and educational seminars.

PTR Industries will exhibit at the 2026 NRA Annual Meeting in Houston, TX (April 17-19) at booth #3837, displaying roller-delayed blowback firearms, the new integrally suppressed 9SDM, braced variants, factory SBR variants, and award-winning VENT suppressors.

Lapua will exhibit at the 2026 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits in Houston, Texas, April 16-19, showcasing new MaxRange Target Bullets and TRX polymer-tipped solid copper bullets and ammunition designed for long-range precision shooters and hunters.

Stoeger Industries will showcase new firearms at the 2026 NRA Annual Meetings & Exhibits, including the STR-45 Combat pistol, STR-9 Thinline+ compact handgun, V7000 over/under shotgun, and M3000 Sporting model. The company emphasizes rugged, reliable performance at competitive pricing across its booth #2813.

- SPONSORSHIPS -

Rapid Air Worx has been named an official sponsor of the 6th Annual AirGun Oregon Extreme Air Gun Challenge, taking place May 14–17, 2026, at the Ashland Gun Club. Cameron Kerndt won last year's long-range event using a Rapid Air Worx rifle, demonstrating the company's competitive performance.

- STATE PARKS -

Platte River State Park's Stone Creek Falls Trail has reopened following a $840,000 renovation project led by Venture Parks regional superintendent Michael Townsend. The improvements include ADA-accessible features, a paved parking lot, new pedestrian bridge, observation deck, and modern restroom, funded by the Recreational Trail Program, Tyler Vanderheiden Memorial Run donation, and Nebraska Outdoor Recreational Development Act dollars.

- TELEVISION -

Major League Fishing's Bass Pro Shops REDCREST 2026 Championship airs Sunday on GAME & FISH TV, featuring 35 elite anglers competing for a $300,000 top prize from Table Rock Lake. The final 10 anglers will compete in a one-day shootout, with the event available free on multiple streaming platforms including Roku, Prime Video, and Fire TV.

Less than a year after enacting a sweeping ban on Modern Sporting Rifles (MSRs) mislabeled as “assault weapons, Rhode Island’s Democratic leadership is back — this time targeting possession of commonly owned firearms.

At a recent House Judiciary Committee hearing, lawmakers pushed 18 gun control bills in a single slate. The package goes well beyond sales restrictions. It includes legislation aimed at unconstitutionally dismantling the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA) through so-called “public nuisance” liability schemes, along with gun rationing, ammunition background checks, mandatory training requirements and liability insurance mandates.

The PLCAA-targeting bill is particularly aggressive. It would force firearm industry members to implement vague, undefined “reasonable controls” over the manufacture, sale, distribution and marketing of lawful products — a framework designed to invite litigation and expose lawful businesses for the criminal misuse of their products by third parties. The precise claims the bipartisan PLCAA says cannot be brought against members of the industry.

The antigun mask is off. Rhode Island’s MSR bill is not just unconstitutionally denying the sale of an entire class of commonly owned firearms. It’s a full-on gun grab. The same lawmakers who assured Rhode Islanders just last year they were “not coming for anyone’s guns” are now advancing legislation to do just that; to ban possession of firearms already legally owned before the prior law even takes full effect.

That is not a policy evolution. It is an agenda reveal, confirming what Second Amendment advocates and industry have warned for years — policies framed as limited “common sense” restrictions on future sales do not remain limited. They expand into the criminalization of lawful ownership. Put more simply, it’s gun confiscation.

Avoiding the Truth

For years, gun control advocates have relied on a familiar talking point — that proposals would only affect future sales and leave current owners untouched. Rhode Island’s legislation exposes that claim as incomplete, at best.

A possession ban does not regulate commerce. It confiscates lawfully-possessed property, directly impacting individuals who followed the law when they purchased their firearms.

The MSRs, or “military-style weapons” as the antigun legislators purposefully mislabel them, are among the most commonly owned firearms in the United States and are widely used for lawful purposes, including target shooting, hunting and personal protection. They are semiautomatic firearms — one round fired per trigger pull — not automatic firearms, which have been tightly regulated under federal law for decades. Precision in terminology is not optional in this debate.

One Inevitable Outcome

Lawmakers advancing possession bans cannot avoid the next question: what happens to the firearms already in circulation?

There are only a few possible answers — mandatory surrender, forced transfer, registration schemes or criminal penalties for noncompliance. Each option would require lawful owners to surrender, under threat of criminal penalty, property they legally acquired.

That is not speculation. It is the unavoidable mechanics of the possession ban funnel, and it places the burden squarely on those who followed the law — not those who ignore it.

At the same time, these policies have a ripple effect across the firearm industry. Manufacturers, distributors and firearm retailers — already operating under one of the most heavily regulated frameworks in the country — are left navigating shifting compliance obligations and states that are increasingly hostile not just to the sale of firearms, but now to mere possession.

This progression is not theoretical. Just look north to Canada.

What began as a prohibition on certain firearms has moved into the next phase of requiring owners to surrender their property as a government-run confiscation effort. The process has already been marked by delays, uncertainty and mounting budgetary and logistical challenges — not to mention aggressive pushback from law-abiding Canadian citizens. Now in Canada, the government is sending the police to the doors of law-abiding citizens to confiscate and arrest them.

That is the reality policymakers inherit when they move beyond regulating sales and into banning possession. The policy does not end with a prohibition. It begins a process of forced surrender. We have seen this movie before in Australia.

Never ‘Just a Ban’

The most misleading aspect of this debate in Rhode Island is how it is described to the public. Calling these proposals “just a ban on future sales” is inaccurate. Rhode Island’s legislation demonstrates why. When possession is prohibited, the policy is no longer prospective — it is retroactive.

That has direct implications for constitutional analysis. The Second Amendment protects the right to keep and bear arms, and the courts have consistently examined whether firearms in common use for lawful purposes fall within that protection. The U.S. Supreme Court said in the 2008 Heller decision that the government couldn’t ban an entire class of firearms. Supreme Court justices have complained that the Court hasn’t addressed challenges to state bans on MSRs and standard capacity magazines. Justice Brett Kavanaugh admitted that the Court should do so — and soon.

It also has real-world consequences for millions of Americans who own these firearms legally and responsibly. If allowed to take root in one state, this constricting infringement on Second Amendment rights could spread and infect other states.

Rhode Island lawmakers have moved the debate past its talking points and into reality. If possession is banned, what happens next is no longer theoretical. It means lawful owners must surrender their property, remove it from the state or become criminals overnight.

That is the policy choice in front of them, and it deserves to be debated honestly — not softened with language that suggests it stops at the point of sale.

The evidence is clear that forcible disarmament is the ultimate goal of gun control.

– Larry Keane

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