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gun theGrio.com
DELRAY BEACH, FL – JANUARY 05: Brandon Wexler shows a customer one of the weapons that she was picking up at the end of the three day waiting period at the Gunworks store on the day that U.S. President Barack Obama in Washington, DC announced his executive action on guns. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

The coronavirus is not just causing a shortage of toilet tissue, cleaning supplies and bread, it is prompting an increase in gun and ammunition sales from people fearful of the disease’s potential aftermath.

People like Daniel Hill, who had never purchased a gun prior to the coronavirus pandemic. Last week, Hill picked up two guns, a 9-millimeter Taurus handgun, and an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle, from Hyatt Gun and Coin, a gun store in North Carolina, according to The New York Times.

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Hill, 29, who works as a kitchen manager in Charlotte, N.C., told The Times that the unknown aftermath of the coronavirus caused him to fear a potential lapse in public safety —complete with lootings, robberies and “everything shutting down, like in a zombie movie.” Hill said he feared an America that “just won’t have any sense of lawfulness anymore.”

Gun and ammunition dealers say Hill is not alone. Gun stores are reportedly seeing a sharp increase in customers who share Hill’s fears. Some states have sold out of particular models of firearms and other survival prep gear, including in California, New York, Ohio, Washington State, and Alabama. One Twitter photo showed a long line of people outside of a Los Angeles gun shop, waiting to purchase their firearms.

Also like Hill, many of these purchases are from first-time gun buyers.

“We attribute it mainly to the virus scare,” Larry Hyatt, owner of Hyatt Gun and Coin, told The New York Times. He estimates that his store has increased sales by 30 to 40 percent since late February. Hyatt said his store has been selling 300 guns a week since the coronavirus pandemic, but he also attributes the increase to the presidential election and stock market instability.

“People have a little lack of confidence that if something big and bad happens, that 911 might not work. We saw it with Katrina,” Hyatt added. “People haven’t forgotten that a disaster happened, and the government didn’t come.”

Data from the F.B.I. seems to back Hyatt’s claims, that is if an increase in background checks is any indicator. Since January, there has been a significant increase in background checks made using the F.B.I. system —up 36 percent in February compared with February 2019, according to The Times. In fact, outside of two other months, the F.B.I. processed more background checks last month than it had since the agency started performing the checks in the 1990s. And this doesn’t even account for private firearm sales— such as purchases made at gun shows or online— which are currently exempt from federal background checks, so there are no clear numbers of how many purchases are being made.

READ MORE: L.A. County DA’s husband pulls gun on Black Lives Matter activists in video

The F.B.I.’s numbers for March will not be available for several weeks.

Like gun shops, ammunition suppliers are also seeing a sizable increase in sales.

Alex Horsman, the marketing manager at Ammo.com, told The New York Times that in the five years he has worked for the company, he saw the biggest increase in ammo orders placed over the past few weeks.



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