SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES TUESDAY, MAY 26, 2026

- APPAREL -

ScentLok launches an expanded sock lineup featuring premium technical apparel designed for outdoor enthusiasts and active individuals. The collection includes the Everyday Sock, Everyday Work Crew Sock, Everyday Work Boot Sock, Ultra Fresh Crew, and Ultralight No Show, all incorporating ScentLok's proprietary Silver Alloy™ technology for moisture control and odor prevention.

- ARCHERY -

The National Field Archery Association's Rushmore Rumble will return to ATA Show Week in 2027 at the Indiana Convention Center in Indianapolis. The tournament attracted over 900 archers in 2026 and will take place January 8-10, 2027, offering competitors a national stage alongside industry business and consumer experiences.

- BIRDING -

Nature photographer Mike Forsberg and International Crane Foundation's Andy Caven are biking 2,500 miles following whooping crane migration through the Great Plains, with a stopover at Oklahoma's Salt Plains State Park on May 27. The journey highlights conservation efforts for the rarest crane species, which has recovered from just 15 wild birds in 1938 to over 500 individuals today.

- COMPETITION -

Korth Group highlights the ramp-up of competition shooting, training, and range events across Canada, featuring opportunities in Silhouette, Benchrest, Precision Rifle Series, NRL Hunter, and Shotgun Competition with recommended products from Leupold, Ruger, ELEY, and other industry partners.

- CONSERVATION -

The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission celebrates World Fish Migration Day by removing fish passage barriers in the Little River Watershed. The AGFC, ADA Natural Resources Division, and Weyerhaeuser have removed four low-water crossings and secured a $2.2 million National Fish Passage Program grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to restore stream connectivity and reintroduce leopard darters.

- COURTS -

The Indiana Supreme Court denied the City of Gary's petition to extend a 26-year-old lawsuit against firearm manufacturers, ending the frivolous public nuisance case. NSSF praised the decision as upholding the rule of law and the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, though the organization warns that gun control groups continue pursuing legal strategies against the firearm industry.

- FISHING -

Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders proclaimed June 12-14 as Free Fishing Weekend in Arkansas, allowing anyone to fish without a license. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission will host family fishing derbies at four hatcheries: Joe Hogan, Andrew Hulsey, William H. Donham, and Charlie Craig, with registration required for youth 18 and under.

- FISHING TOURNAMENTS -

Grayson Goss and Wally Wolcott of Hot Springs Lakeside High School won the Arkansas Game and Fish Foundation's eighth annual Commissioners' Cup presented by Xpress Boats with 18.39 pounds. The statewide bass fishing competition on Lake Hamilton awarded scholarships up to $3,000 and over $10,000 in gear to top finishers.

- HUNTING -

Conservation First USA's Big Game Super Draw offers hunters 17 special permit-tags for Arizona species including elk, pronghorn, bighorn sheep, bison, Coues' whitetail, mule deer, and turkey. Tickets are $10 each with a June 30 deadline, and 100 percent of proceeds benefit the Arizona Game and Fish Department's wildlife and habitat projects.

- INDUSTRY UPDATE -

Chattanooga Shooting Supplies announced the promotion of Robin Richardson-Peel to Sales Manager after seven years with the company. Richardson-Peel brings over 40 years of shooting sports industry experience, including previous work with Ellett Brothers, and is recognized for exceptional customer service and leadership.

- JOBS -

The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (RMEF) is hiring a Social Media and Content Manager based in Missoula, Montana. The role involves creating engaging content across RMEF's digital platforms, managing social media channels, and supporting the organization's conservation mission and hunting heritage outreach.

- ORGANIZATIONS -

Women For Gun Rights state leaders Susan Myers, Theresa Inacker, and Sandy Hickerson participated in Missouri's HB 1866 school safety bill signing with Governor Mike Kehoe and engaged with Atlantic County Sheriff Joe O'sonoghue on emergency preparedness and Stop the Bleed training initiatives in New Jersey.

Gun Owners of America endorsed Representative Jimmy Patronis' Firearm Freedom Act to repeal the Hughes Amendment, which banned post-1986 machine gun sales. GOA Senior Vice President Erich Pratt called the 40-year-old restriction an egregious infringement on Second Amendment rights.

The Powell's Hunting Preserve hosted 27 Auburn University students and professors Steve Ditchkoff and Dylan Thomas for the SCIF-Sables University Program's culminating event, made possible by the Holland and Carolyn Powell Foundation for Hunting-Conservation & Preservation. Students toured the 6,000-acre facility and learned about wildlife enterprise management careers.

- PARTNERSHIPS -

The Second Amendment Foundation (SAF) and Nine Line Apparel have partnered to release an exclusive "Free the Cans" T-shirt collection. A portion of proceeds will support SAF's lawsuits seeking removal of National Firearms Act registration requirements for silencers and short-barreled rifles. Pre-orders are available through June 8.

- PRODUCT NEWS -

Moultrie announces the EDGE 3 and EDGE 3 PRO trail cameras are now available in First Lite Specter camouflage. These cellular cameras feature Moultrie AI for automatic buck detection, on-demand photo and video capabilities, and integration with the Moultrie app for hunt planning and remote feeder control via Moultrie Connect.

DeSantis Gunhide® announced new holster options for the Diamondback SDR-A, including the Mini Scabbard® ($83.99) and Nemesis® ($34.99) models. Both holsters offer secure retention and concealment features designed for various carry methods.

Springfield Armory launched three new Aimpoint COA-equipped pistols: the 1911 DS Prodigy 4.25" 9mm ($1,955), 1911 TRP .45 ACP ($2,424), and 1911 Operator .45 ACP ($1,623). Each features factory-milled A-CUT interface and Aimpoint's closed-emitter red dot sight, offering approximately $200 in savings versus separate purchases.

- PROMOTIONS -

Outdoor Edge, a Denver-based knife and tool manufacturer, is partnering with GovX to offer military members, veterans, and first responders exclusive discounts on products including the Razor APX Hunting Knives and ErgoMax culinary lines. Will Morgan, director of marketing at Outdoor Edge, highlighted the company's commitment to recognizing those who serve through this collaboration.

- SHOWS -

Bear & Son Cutlery will exhibit at the 2026 BLADE Show, June 5–7 in Atlanta at Booth #5, showcasing new Slidelock Folders, Locking Farmhand series, 250th Anniversary models, and butterfly knives. The Alabama-based manufacturer will display its full lineup of American-made knives including folders, balisongs, bowies, and specialty blades.

GATCO Sharpeners will exhibit its sharpening systems and kitchen cutlery at the 2026 BLADE Show in Atlanta, Georgia, June 5–7. The company will showcase guided sharpening systems, pocket sharpeners, and kitchen knives featuring 440 stainless steel blades with teal or black Zytel® handles at Booth #5.

Bear Edge Knives will exhibit at the 2026 BLADE Show (June 5–7) in Atlanta, showcasing new models including the 4 1/2" Tan G10 Assisted Opener, 4 3/4" Dark Gray Aluminum Assisted Opener, and 4" Light Grey Aluminum Folder, featuring affordable, feature-packed designs with modern styling.

Bear OPS will showcase new tactical knives at the 2026 BLADE Show in Atlanta, Georgia, June 5–7, featuring the Load Out I, Nekama II, Nekama I Pin-Up Art Bomber series, Kataktώ I automatic, and butterfly knives at Booth #5.

- SPONSORSHIPS -

Mike's Country Meats has renewed its national sponsorship with Whitetails Unlimited. The Tigerton, Wisconsin-based beef jerky company, known as the #1 beef jerky in Wisconsin, will continue supporting WTU events and the organization's conservation mission.

- STATE AGENCIES -

Gov. Greg Gianforte appointed Vern Gagnon to the Region 5 seat on the Montana Fish and Wildlife Commission in March. Gagnon, Dean of City College at Montana State University Billings, is a licensed fishing guide and owner of Reel Therapy Charter Fishing with expertise in Fort Peck Reservoir and the Missouri River.

- TELEVISION -

The High Road with Keith Warren releases a new episode featuring Timber Creek Outdoors, showcasing their firearm accessories manufacturing in Camp Creek, Oregon. Host Keith Warren and CEO Tyler Tiller hunt mule deer in Oregon's high desert, with Keith taking a 700-yard shot using a Timber Creek Outdoors chassis gun.

CC Bar Whitetails, owned by Hank and Shauna Corbell, has released a new video showcasing their operation's achievement in breeding whitetail deer with proven genetic resistance to Chronic Wasting Disease. The Texas-based operation has become a national model for sustainable deer farming, with other breeders now seeking their guidance and genetics.

- WILDLIFE -

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks completed 2026 spring aerial surveys in Region 6 showing a 32% increase in mule deer densities from 2025, with fawn-to-adult ratios 21% above long-term averages. Region 6 wildlife manager Scott Thompson attributes the recovery to mild winter conditions and notes that continued moisture could sustain population growth across northeast Montana.

The state of New Jersey has once again shown the problems an anti-gun administration can cause for not only peaceable gun owners, but manufacturers and gun dealers alike. In its most recent attack, the state sued Glock, Inc., under the state’s public nuisance law. As part of that lawsuit, the Attorney General recently sent subpoenas to gun dealers in the state demanding production of customer records regarding sales of Glock pistols to New Jersey residents for the last 10 years.

It is not immediately clear why New Jersey needs these records, given the state already maintains a de facto registry for handguns through its pistol permitting system. It could be the Attorney General wants to make these records public, as under New Jersey law, and in a small nod towards respecting privacy, firearm registration records are exempt from public disclosure under the state's laws.

Regardless of the reasoning for the subpoenas, they are an unconstitutional attack on gun owner privacy. For many people who choose to exercise their Second Amendment rights, their status as a gun owner remains an intensely private matter. Americans have a variety of reasons for wanting to keep their gun ownership to themselves. For some who live in high crime neighborhoods, they may fear the very firearms they own for self-defense could be an enticing target for burglars when they are not home. Others may not want their friends, family, or local community to know they own firearms because they fear the potential social ostracism that may occur in the places where gun ownership remains controversial.

Whatever their reasons for secrecy, our historical tradition supports the idea that Americans have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their status as gun owners. The Second Amendment was crafted both to recognize what the Founders saw as a natural right, but also as a check on potential government tyranny. Given that latter motivation, privacy in gun ownership has always come hand in hand with the right. Today, an assortment of federal and state laws protect gun owner privacy to various degrees and in different ways.

Explaining the intrinsic private nature of the Second Amendment right requires a detour into history, and in particular, an understanding that the Second Amendment was created by people who had just revolted against a tyrannical government. The Founders sought to guarantee the People had a final recourse should the new government they were forming also turn tyrannical. Tench Coxe, a delegate to the Annapolis Convention in 1786 and the Continental Congress in 1788, wrote of Madison’s draft of the Second Amendment that “[w]hereas civil rulers, not having their duty to the people duly before them, may attempt to tyrannize, … the people are confirmed by the article in their right to keep and bear their private arms.”

That understanding persisted throughout the Nineteenth Century as well. In a speech in the House of Representatives, Abolitionist Representative Edward Wade said the “right to ‘keep and bear arms,’ is thus guarantied, in order that if the liberties of the people should be assailed, the means for their defence shall be in their own hands.” Senator Charles Sumner’s “The Crime Against Kansas” speech likewise bristled at the notion that slavery opponents in Kansas should be disarmed of their Sharps rifles by the proslavery government: “Never was this efficient weapon more needed in just self defence, than now in Kansas, and at least one article in our National Constitution must be blotted out, before the complete right to it can in any way be impeached.” Thomas Cooley, a longtime Michigan Supreme Court Justice, similarly wrote that “[t]he right declared was meant to be a strong moral check against the usurpation and arbitrary powers of rulers, and as necessary and efficient means of regaining rights when temporarily overturned by usurpation.”

While more sources exist, there is no need to belabor the point: in addition to enabling personal self-defense, the Second Amendment exists as a last resort check on government power, a failsafe to enable collective defense in the event a tyrant or foreign invader ever usurps our constitutional order. There can be no historical tradition of the government violating the privacy of gun owners when one of the Second Amendment’s main purposes was to be a “doomsday provision” for the People to protect themselves from a tyrannical government.

In the modern era, the federal government itself has recognized gun owner privacy interests. In the 1980s, the Firearms Owners’ Protection Act forbade the federal government from keeping a registry directly linking firearms to their owners, a law still in effect today. Similarly, to prevent the establishment of a de facto registry of gun owners, the FBI is required by federal law to destroy National Instant Criminal Background Check System records of approved firearm purchasers within 24 hours of a "proceed" response. Several states have privacy protections of their own for gun owners, such as Indiana’s “Disclosure of Firearm or Ammunition Information as a Condition of Employment” law, which prohibits both public and private employers from inquiring about or requiring disclosure of employees’ firearm ownership as a condition of employment, unless directly related to job duties.

Those examples, of course, only gently scratch the surface here, and a full examination of the intersection of the right to bear arms, the right to privacy, and to what degree the government’s intrusion on that right is permissible could be the subject of a lengthy law review article. But even this very condensed summation of the relevant historical context shows that Americans have always had the implicit right to keep their status as a gun owner confidential, often even from the federal government itself. That right has been subject only to narrow exceptions. States have increasingly protected this right in the modern era, further entrenching a reasonable expectation of privacy among gun owners. New Jersey's demand for gun store sales records of Glock handguns for the last 10 years is an outrageous attack on privacy in gun ownership, and antithetical to the Second Amendment.

The Second Amendment Foundation is keeping a close eye on the developments in this case to determine what steps might need to be taken to ensure the privacy of New Jersey’s gun owners remains intact.

– Kostas Moros

Kostas Moros is the Director of Legal Research and Education for the Second Amendment Foundation. He has been a practicing attorney in California since 2015, and is a member of several federal circuit courts, as well as the Supreme Court Bar. Aside from his litigation experience, Kostas has authored numerous amicus briefs filed in courts around the country, a law review article on why bans on common rifles are historically baseless, and dozens of articles on gun policy. He maintains a very active presence on X under the handle @MorosKostas.

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