Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Why Sexual Assaults On Porn Actors Go Unreported

James Deen at the 2015 AVN Adult Entertainment Expo in Las Vegas.

David Mcnew / Getty Images

The main government agency responsible for workplace safety has not received or investigated a single complaint regarding sexual assault in California’s adult film industry in the last decade, and a regional manager says the agency does not consider sexual assault a recognized workplace hazard in the porn business.

“I don’t know that in adult film we would expect someone to be assaulted any more than in any other work environment,” Peter Riley, regional manager for the California Occupational Safety and Health Agency (Cal/OSHA) Santa Ana region, told BuzzFeed News. “In convenience stores, schools, and hospitals, often the client, student, or patient does hit or strike an employee, and we expect employers to have protocols in place and conduct regular inspections there.”

The stance of the regulator reflects a dynamic that some compare to the epidemic of sexual assault on college campuses: Victims, for any number of reasons, are reluctant to report incidents to the authorities, and the lack of reported incidents may lead to authorities underestimating their prevalence.

Sexual assault on porn sets has received widespread attention this week after six women made serious allegations against high-profile actor James Deen. Those in the industry say concerns about sexual violence — and about the challenges of reporting incidents to management and authorities — have been long-standing among workers.

Tori Lux, an adult performer who has said Deen assaulted her, wrote in the Daily Beast that “people — including the police — tend to believe that sex workers have placed themselves in harm’s way, and therefore can’t be assaulted.” Workers point to a 2007 case in Philadelphia, where Judge Teresa Carr Deni called gang-rape of a sex worker at gunpoint “theft of services” and dismissed aggravated sexual assault charges.

Asked about whether structures existed for complaints, adult performer Bonnie Rotten told BuzzFeed News: "Not so much of a structure — it’s more of a social structure. Word gets around, it’s like high school."

Another former performer compared the culture to that of sexual assault on college campuses.

“There are strange similarities, where theoretically the assault allegation is going to be handled without going to the police — either because people are hesitant to go to the police or because they don’t think the police will take the situation seriously," said Carol Queen, a former adult film performer and founding director of the Center for Sex and Culture in San Francisco, which provides resources for sex workers.

"And the entity, the college or porn company, might be hesitant about having the police involved and so emphasize the possibility of it being handled in-house,” she told BuzzFeed News.

Bret Hartman / AP

Reporting incidents could also brand workers as troublemakers for porn production studios, meaning “you could risk your career and income and getting jobs,” said Heather Jarvis, community coordinator for the Safe Harbor Outreach Project, an advocacy group for sex workers. Jarvis recalled that Kink.com did not rehire some workers who made allegations of unsafe labor practices at the site in recent years.

"Blacklisting happens," performer Sandy Bottoms told SF Weekly at the time. "It can be unsafe to be a whistleblower."

“People are afraid to speak up because they want to work,” Ashley Fires, another of Deen’s accusers, told BuzzFeed News.

While Cal/OSHA has not received any sexual assault allegations in the industry in the last decade (and so does not consider workplace violence a hazard in the business), the agency does consider sexually transmitted diseases a workplace health and safety issue in porn. Since 2004 Cal/OSHA has received between 35 and 40 complaints related to blood-borne pathogens, which led to investigations and citations for production companies, with fines for serious violations ranging from $25,000 to $70,000.

“Our jurisdiction is health and safety, so exposure to STDs is a health issue, but assaults are a crime and the police investigate crime,” said Riley. Yet in cases of assaults in settings where assault is considered a workplace hazard (such as health care), OSHA may choose to investigate concurrently, Riley clarified, as the agency is empowered to investigate workplace violence.

In cases of on-the-job assault in the industry, performers may report the incident to the production company handling the shoot, to the police, or to OSHA. But sex workers are less likely than the general population to report cases of sexual violence to authorities, as highlighted by the dearth of complaints made to the regulator.

This means the industry is largely self-regulating when it comes to sexual assault, according to interviews with advocates and current and former sex workers.

“We need to think about porn sets ... as work settings — and sex work as work — to ensure that people are protected from sexual violence while engaging in sex work,” said Katherine Koster, the communications director for the Sex Workers Outreach Project (SWOP). “We need to stop conflating sex work and sexual violence, because then when a sex worker steps forward and says they’ve been a victim of sexual violence, people don’t hear them.”

Ethan Miller / Getty Images

According to the most recent research compiled by SWOP, sex workers globally have a 45% to 75% chance of experiencing sexual violence at some point in their careers and a 32% to 55% chance of experiencing sexual violence in a given year. Both the World Health Organization and Amnesty International have recognized violence as a meaningful threat to sex workers.

Statistics on criminal assault cases connected to the adult industry are difficult to come by, and a spokesperson for the L.A. District Attorney’s Office said their data does not categorize sexual assaults based on factors like the job, ethnicity, age, or race of the victim. But even if such data were available, it would not be representative, those in the industry say, given the underreporting of assaults to the police.

Koster said some performers are simply unaware of what, if any, options are available if they are assaulted during filming. “If this happens on set,” one adult film actor asked her, “who do I contact?”

It's a serious question at many porn production businesses, said Nina Hartley, a performer in the industry for 30 years (who also cameos in Boogie Nights). “These companies are so small they don’t have human resources departments.”

And stars today are still unsure of first steps. "Is there a complaint form you fill out?" performer Ashley Fires asked rhetorically. "Is there a human resources department? How do you even go about making a complaint? I don't know."



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Google Accused Of Violating Student Privacy In FTC Complaint

Getty Images

A leading activist group has accused Google of violating students' privacy in its suite of education apps and on its Chromebook laptops, which are now the most popular devices in American classrooms.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) filed a complaint yesterday with the Federal Trade Commission saying that Google is violating a student privacy pledge it signed in January, in which it promised not to collect, store, or use students' data except for educational purposes.

The privacy pledge that is being wielded against Google has been signed by more than two hundred companies, including Microsoft, Apple, and Blackboard. The FTC's ruling on how Google handles students' information could set the stage for similar complaints against other major industry players.

The EFF's complaint alleges that when students are signed into Google's education accounts, data from their non-educational activities is used by Google for business purposes. While data from "Apps for Education" like search and Google Drive is kept only for educational purposes, information gleaned from usage of apps like Google Maps and Youtube is analyzed to help serve up targeted advertising.

Jeremy Gillula, a staff technologist with the EFF, called that data collection an "invasion of privacy" and a clear violation of the privacy pledge.

“When a student navigates to something that is not [part of] Google's apps for education — like Youtube, Blogger, Maps — now they’re logged in and Google tracks that activity and does serve them ads," Gillula told BuzzFeed News, noting that teachers can use Youtube and Google Maps for educational purposes.

“It’s entirely possible that teachers can say ‘Okay kids, open up your Chromebooks and we are going to watch a science video on Youtube.' Youtube is not a Google app for education, but it can still be used for an educational purpose.”

In a statement, a Google spokesperson said that, "While we appreciate EFF's focus on student privacy, we are confident that these tools comply with both the law and our promises, including the Student Privacy Pledge."

The data privacy pledge was created in October of 2014 after a parent-led furor over student privacy essentially drove one nonprofit, called InBloom, out of business. Google initially didn't sign on, but eventually added its name in January.

The pledge's own authors expressed skepticism over the validity of the EFF's complaint. "We do not believe it has merit," said Jules Polonetsky, the executive director of the Future of Privacy Forum. "We don’t believe the complaint raises any issues about data use that are restricted by the Student Privacy Pledge."

The EFF complaint also targets Chromebooks, which have become so wildly popular in classrooms that Google said earlier this year they will soon outnumber all other devices combined, including iPads. The EFF says the laptops' Sync feature — which comes automatically enabled on all devices — allows the collection of students' browsing data for non-educational purposes, albeit anonymously.

Polonetsky said that schools relied on the Sync feature to allow students to share computers and access their accounts from home and school. "Any data collected is not used for behavioral advertising and all other data uses are aggregated and anonymous," Polonetsky said.



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Starbucks Is Now Selling Bagel Balls, The Doughnut Holes Of Bagels

Bantam Bagels

After a few Starbucks outlets in New York City tested demand for tiny cream cheese-stuffed bagel balls this summer, the bite-sized dough globes from Bantam Bagels have rolled into in about 515 stores in the city, as well as a some locations in Philadelphia and Indianapolis.

To grow sales, the giant coffee chain's strategy includes increasing sales of foods like sandwiches, pastries, and meal boxes, which are now about 19% of sales. There are more than 12,000 Starbucks locations in the U.S. Bantam hopes to expand into more of them yet.

NBC / Via Ben King for BuzzFeed

For a better sense of scale, this is how big a bagel ball is. Bantam Bagel co-founder Nick Oleksak has said the idea came to him in a dream.

For a better sense of scale, this is how big a bagel ball is. Bantam Bagel co-founder Nick Oleksak has said the idea came to him in a dream.

Venessa Wong / BuzzFeed News

Bantam, a business started in 2013 with a small storefront in Manhattan's West Village, also sells its products online and has a catering business that delivers to offices and events like weddings.

The market for bagel balls is bigger than you might think. Bantam saw a bump in sales after being featured on Shark Tank in January. So far this year, it has sold more than 2 million bagel balls, with sales of over $2.1 million. As it develops corporate partnerships, Bantam also began offering its bagel balls on Delta flights out of Laguardia Airport about a month ago.

At about 100 calories each, they're a snacker's delight, but they're not cheap. Each bagel ball costs $1.75 at Starbucks — nearly the cost of a normal sized bagel — or you can get two balls for $2.95. That's one way to control how many you eat.

At about 100 calories each, they're a snacker's delight, but they're not cheap. Each bagel ball costs $1.75 at Starbucks — nearly the cost of a normal sized bagel — or you can get two balls for $2.95. That's one way to control how many you eat.

Venessa Wong / BuzzFeed News

Starbucks offers three flavors of bagel balls: french toast, everything, and classic.

Starbucks offers three flavors of bagel balls: french toast, everything, and classic.

Venessa Wong / BuzzFeed News

They each are filled with different cream cheese flavors. French toast gets a buttery, maple cream cheese; everything has veggie cream cheese; and classic gets plain old cream cheese.

They each are filled with different cream cheese flavors. French toast gets a buttery, maple cream cheese; everything has veggie cream cheese; and classic gets plain old cream cheese.

Venessa Wong / BuzzFeed News

They're like the doughnut holes of bagels, although some bagel purists may protest such bold deviations from the cherished norm.



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Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Starbucks Hit By E. Coli Scare

TheDeliciousLife / Via Flickr: thedelicious

A nationwide run of E. coli contamination scares made its way to Starbucks over the holiday weekend.

The coffee chain's holiday turkey sandwiches in California, Oregon, and Nevada were included in a recall of dozens of food items containing celery from Taylor Farms Pacific, which was announced on Thanksgiving Day last week. The same celery was linked to a multistate E. coli outbreak in Costco that sickened 19 people.

Starbucks took the sandwiches off shelves in 1,347 stores in California, Oregon, and Nevada last week, but has not yet heard any reports of its customers getting ill from the product, a spokesperson told Bloomberg News.

The Taylor Farms celery was also used in products sold in 7-Eleven, Target, Walmart, Sam's Club, Safeway, Albertsons, King Soopers, Pantry, Raley's, and Savemart, according to a press release. The affected products include snack trays, diced celery, pre-made salads including chicken salad, tuna salad, macaroni salad and potato salad, and wraps.

Starbucks

The strain of the bacteria, E. coli O157:H7, can be very harmful. In the Costco outbreak, five ill people have been hospitalized, and two have developed a type of kidney failure, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

This is the second E. coli outbreak in recent months. The Mexican fast-food chain Chipotle also was linked 45 people getting sick from the bacteria in six states starting in October.

E. Coli Cases Linked To Chipotle Have Spread To California And New York

Why Is Chipotle Having So Many Food Safety Issues?



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Judge Slams Crackdown On Backpage.com As "Lawless Government Coercion"

Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart.

M. Spencer Green / AP

A federal judge has ruled that efforts by the Cook County Sheriff to crack down on adult classifieds site Backpage.com were unconstitutional, ordering the Sheriff to cease pressuring credit card companies to cut their links to the controversial site.

In a strongly worded opinion released on Monday, Judge Richard Posner of the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Sheriff Thomas Dart was prohibited from using his office to pressure service providers not to work with Backpage.com. In November, the court issued an injunction against Dart.

That injunction was issued again Monday. Dart is also required to notify Visa and MasterCard as well as the Postal Service of the order.

Posner said that Dart's actions, which were part of a long campaign by the Sheriff to vigorously enforce prostitution laws — and go after Backpage specifically — were like "killing a person by cutting off his oxygen supply rather than by shooting him."

In July, Visa and Mastercard confirmed they had cut Backpage from their networks, days after Sheriff Dart sent open letters urging each company to "immediately cease and desist" from working with the site and others like it, which "we have objectively found to promote prostitution and facilitate online sex trafficking."

Backpage has not been convicted of any such crime, in Dart's jurisdiction or any other.

Backpage.com

In a lawsuit filed over the summer, Backpage alleged Dart's letters were a prior restraint on free speech. While Backpage has been a leading destination for advertising escort services since Craigslist got rid of adult personals in 2010 (Craigslist was also pursued by Dart in 2009, unsuccessfully), the site also hosts many legal ads. Posner pointed to "fetishism, phone sex, performances by striptease artists" as content that was still legal on the site.

The decision was hailed by libertarian-leaning legal thinkers from the left and right. Glenn Greenwald wrote that the ruling was "crucial for protecting free speech rights generally" and "highlights how dangerous such extra-judicial pressure campaigns can be, and makes them much more difficult by clearly ruling them to be unconstitutional."

Greenwald said the case had echoes of late 2010, when companies including Amazon, Paypal and Bank of America stopped doing business with Wikileaks after the site's publication of leaked U.S. diplomatic cables, amid pressure from politicians including Senator Joe Lieberman, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee.

Ilya Shapiro, a lawyer at the libertarian Cato Insitute who co-authored a brief supporting Backpage, said the opinion "shows that courts are aware of this and will not countenance this use of power unless there’s something criminal he's actually going after." If Sheriff Dart "sees actual prostitution being transacted through Backpage he can go after those particular targets," Shapiro told BuzzFeed News.

While the decision only has direct effect in the area covered by the Seventh Circuit, Shapiro said that Posner is a respected judge and his reasoning will likely have "persuasive authority" with other judges. "I think that this will nip this sort of behavior in the bud, it was pretty blatant and pretty blunt."

While Visa issued an affadavit saying it wasn't threatened by Dart, Posner pointed to an emails between Visa employees charactertizing Dart's messages as "the subtle messages they’ve been sending us that could easily be taken for blackmail."

Posner noted Dart's letters to Visa and Mastercard were sent in his capacity as sheriff and pointed to legal statues, including money-laundering laws, which Posner said were "intimating that the credit card companies could be prosecuted for processing payments."

The letters were very effective. Dart told BuzzFeed News in July he was "stunned at how quickly Visa and MasterCard moved to say they weren’t going to be involved in that anymore, they were incredible corporate citizens.”

When Visa cut off Backpage, it issued a statement saying that its rules "prohibit our network from being used for illegal activity. Visa has a long history of working with law enforcement to safeguard the integrity of the payment system."

After Dart sent the letter to Visa, a Dart staffer told the company's legal team that it had scheduled a press conference and that they "would need to know tonight if that is the case so that we can ensure the Sheriff’s messaging celebrates Visa’s change in direction as opposed to pointing out its ties to sex trafficking."

Posner read this exchange as evidence "Visa and MasterCard were victims of government coercion aimed at shutting up or shutting down Backpage’s adult section.

"To say effectively 'you have a nice little website there shame if anything would happen to it,' we can’t let public official get away with that," Shapiro said.

After Backpage made its adult ads free, the Sheriff's office told the press "we were ready for this and not concerned. It’s unsustainable for them to maintain all of their lobbying, legal battles and all the money it takes for their server space without any revenue coming in." This, Posner wrote, showed that the Sheriff's office was trying to "to cause irreparable injury to Backpage."

A Visa spokesperson said today that it had no comment on the ruling "and our position has not changed." Mastercard did not respond to a request for comment. Backpage's attorneys did not respond to requests for comments.

The Cook County Sheriff's Office said in its statement: "While we are not surprised by this opinion, we are nonetheless disappointed and respectfully disagree with its conclusions. We look forward to proceeding with this litigation and to doing all we can to protect victims from the horrors of human trafficking."

The sheriff's office could try to take the case to the Supreme Court but it has not indicated its future plans. Dart has been a long-time very public opponent of prostitution and has gained a national profile for his large scale arrests of johns.


Via Backpage.com

Backpage has soldiered on despite being cut off from credit card networks — the website still allows its users to buy "credits" to purchase ads. The credits can be bought with Bitcoin or cash, check, or money orders sent to a post office box in Texas. Posner said that Backpage got $9 million of its $135 million in annual revenue from adult ads.

Posner's ruling overturned an earlier decision by a judge that rejected Backpage's request for an injunction against the Sheriff.

"Unwittingly the judge was suggesting a formula for permitting unauthorized, unregulated, foolproof, lawless government coercion," Posner said. The rights of internet publishers to host content that may be illegal — or offensive — to politicians and law enforcement are usually protected by the Communication Decency Act which generally protects publishers from responsibility for what users contribute to a website.

But Posner said that if Dart's strategy were held up in court, it would offer a way around the law: "coupling threats with denunciations of the activity that the official wants stamped out." But the threats, Posner said, "were not protected by the First Amendment; they were violations of the First Amendment."

Here is Judge Posner's ruling:





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A New Weed Killer Could Be More Toxic Than Previously Thought

Tomassereda / Getty Images

About a year ago, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency approved a new weed killer for farmers called Enlist Duo, declaring it "safe for the environment, including endangered species." Now, the chemical's safe status is not so clear.

Last week, the EPA motioned to revoke registration of Enlist Duo herbicide after learning that its "two active ingredients could result in greater toxicity to non-target plants," or plants that aren't weeds, according to a statement. The product was developed by Dow AgroSciences, a subsidiary of Dow Chemical, which had sales of $7.3 billion in 2014.

"EPA cannot be sure, without a full analysis of the new information, that the current registration does not cause unreasonable effects to the environment," the agency stated in a court document. The court must now rule on the EPA's proposal.

Dow AgroSciences' herbicide is registered for use in 15 states and had a limited launch in the U.S. and Canada this year (it is waiting for China to approve Enlist corn and soybean for import before fully commercializing). Enlist Duo remains registered for use at this time and will only be vacated if the court orders it, a Dow spokesperson said in an email to BuzzFeed News, "an action that would be unprecedented."

Dow said in a press release it "is working quickly with EPA to provide assurances that our product’s conditions of registered use will continue to protect the environment," and believes it can resolve the issue in time for the 2016 crop growing season.

The two active ingredients in Enlist herbicide are glyphosate and 2,4-D.

Like other agricultural products in the market, Enlist is a seed-and-herbicide system. The Enlist Duo weedkiller was one part; the other was the company's genetically modified Enlist Duo corn and soybean crops, which were engineered to survive exposure to the chemicals as they killed "tough weed species."

Such herbicide-resistant crops are a huge business and Enlist stands to be a big new product. In 2015, about 89% of all corn planted and 94% of all soy planted in the U.S. were herbicide-tolerant, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. GMO crops have been available in the U.S. only since the 1990s.

The glyphosate in Enlist Duo is already widely used in weedkillers like Monsanto's Roundup. However, it is becoming less effective as weeds resistant to glyphosate grew in their place (herbicides are not know to cause mutations, however).

To compete with Roundup, Dow AgroSciences developed the Enlist system. It combined glyphosate with 2,4-D — a widely-used but possibly carcinogenic herbicide, according to the World Health Organization — and genetically engineered seeds that could withstand the effects of the new weedkiller.

Before last week's motion, conservation groups had sued the EPA for failing to consider the impact of Enlist on endangered species (like the whooping crane and Indiana bat) in violation of the Endangered Species Act.

Whooping cranes

Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty Images


It wasn't until Dow claimed Enlist had “synergistic herbicidal weed control” properties in a patent application, that it got into trouble.

In plainer terms, this means combining the two ingredients may result in greater toxicity than when applied separately, which was not originally disclosed to the EPA.

This triggered the agency to ask the court to vacate and remand the registration of Enlist pesticide. "Dow had not provided this information to EPA prior to EPA issuing the Enlist Duo registration. EPA has not yet completed its review of the new information," the agency said in a statement last week.

Dow said in an email that after review, "the entire data set indicates that synergism does not exist" in the final formulation of Enlist Duo, and that it won't harm "non-target threatened or endangered plant species" if it's applied at the at the labeled use rates.

The review could result in EPA imposing expanded buffer zones to protect other nearby plants, including endangered species.



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Why Gun Sellers Want Shooting To Be More Fun

Oliver Munday for BuzzFeed News

“In most sports, young athletes spend years honing skills that they’ll never use when they’re older,” the cartoon video begins, panning over a dejected football player, cheerleader, and lacrosse goalie. “But one sport provides a gateway to a lifetime of enjoyment and expertise: shooting sports.”

That’s from the homepage of the USA High School Clay Target League, the independent, nonprofit provider of what it says is America’s fastest-growing and safest high school sport: target shooting.

This co-ed league, open to students in grades 6 through 12, has grown rapidly in recent years, with 8,600 student athletes participating at last count and more than 12,000 estimated to participate next year, according to founder Jim Sable. With after-school practice at gun clubs, shotguns for equipment, and the promise of new lifelong gun enthusiasts, the league also highlights one of the great hopes of the American firearm industry, which is still straightening itself out after a record-breaking sales frenzy in 2013.

Sporting goods retailer Cabela’s, which is a sponsor for the league, mentioned it in September as a positive for sales, and Sable says the sport has breathed new life into gun clubs in his home state of Minnesota.

The gun business needs more young people to become its favorite kind of customer: people who own and shoot guns not just for self-defense or hunting or constitutional principles but for the downright fun of it. After a decade of massive growth, investors expect companies to keep sales at levels that once seemed like temporary highs, and to do that, gun makers and retailers can’t just rely on hunters buying a new rifle every decade and a box of ammo every year.

The industry needs people to buy guns the way nerds buy gadgets or fashionistas buy shoes. These are the kind of customers that predictable, long-term growth is built on, even if it’s not the reason sales of guns and ammo have periodically spiked over the past 15 years.

Those spikes have largely been driven by fear — fear for one’s safety, or fear that the government will tighten gun laws. There was a surge in demand after Sept. 11, 2001, “as a direct result of the terrorist acts,” Smith & Wesson wrote in its 2005 annual report. As Americans turned their attention to personal security, the company went from manufacturing about 10,200 handguns a month pre-9/11 to 28,000 a month a few years later.

More surges followed: in the wake of mass shootings; around the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections; and during the economic downturn, helped by looser concealed carry laws. Demand hit an all-time high in 2013 after a gunman slaughtered 26 people, including 20 children, at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, at the end of 2012 — gun buyers became so convinced that a crackdown was approaching that the industry was hit by “panic buying,” Ed Stack, the CEO of Dick’s Sporting Goods, said on a conference call last year.

Sales have since settled — though at levels double or triple what they were a decade ago — leaving retailers and manufacturers to work their way through an inventory glut. There may be more sales spikes ahead, with a contentious election cycle underway and rising fears of terrorist attacks.

But with pressure from investors to keep sales growing, even from the already-elevated level after the boom decade, the industry is searching for new ideas.

Courtesy USA High School Clay Target League

For companies unable to grow sales outside of the periodic bursts of panic buying, results can be dire. Colt Defense, the iconic gunmaker founded by Samuel Colt in the 1800s, blamed its bankruptcy this summer in part on “a commercial sales bubble in 2013 driven by fears of increased future regulation.”

So how to appeal to an entirely new base of customers? Executives have repeatedly brought up one idea in conference calls and in interviews lately: Make guns more fun.

“The first-time gun buyer, especially today, may be purchasing that first firearm for self-defense,” Mike Fifer, the CEO of Sturm Ruger & Co. said on a call with analysts a year ago. “And some of them will never get beyond that. They'll buy the gun with some apprehension and reluctance and they either won't shoot it at all or hope they never use it. And we're not going to win them over as gun buyers.”

But among those first-time purchasers are people who will “accidentally discover that it's really, really a lot of fun,” he said. “And the minute that happens and then they start seeing what guns their friends have, they got the bug and we got a customer for life and new products are going to win them over.”

That dynamic has the industry focused on recreational shooters over hunters, especially after the sales surge in 2013, which Stack said “really brought shooters into the industry.” While there’s overlap between the two groups, the recreational shooter is the one “going to pistol ranges and shooting in leagues or going to gun clubs and shooting skeet, trap, those kinds of things," he said. They’re also more likely to be whizzing through bullets and buying more guns for more purposes.

The industry is embracing “the beauty of the recreational shooter,” Tommy Millner, the CEO of Cabela's, said at a September conference, noting an increase of women and young people in shooting sports. “The hunter shoots one bullet — that's not great for business. The recreational shooter shoots boxes of bullets. And clearly what we see both from our own friends and from our customers is for a new shooter, a gun is like a potato chip: You're not going to have just one.”

Millner continued: “So you get involved in trap shooting and somebody says, 'Let's go skeet shooting.' Well, you need a different gun to go skeet shooting. And if you're going to go sporting clay shooting, well, you need another gun. And if you're a female handgun target shooter, you may start with a revolver and then your girlfriend has a pistol and you want to shoot that and you like that and you go buy one. So it's been the case with male participants for years, nobody just owns one. And those are really good healthy dynamics for our whole industry, our competitors, ourselves, and our suppliers.”

A young man tries out a Bushmaster BA50 displayed at the 2015 NRA Annual Convention.

Karen Bleier / AFP / Getty Images

The size of the commercial firearms, ammunition, and accessories markets in the U.S., in aggregate, was estimated to be $14 billion in 2013, according to an annual report from Remington Outdoor, one of America’s biggest manufacturers of commercial firearms and ammunition. Most manufacturers and retailers that publicly disclose revenue report less than $1 billion a year from guns and ammo, which is less than Lululemon’s yearly sales and a quarter of what Old Navy pulls in domestically.

Vista Outdoor makes most of its $2 billion in annual sales from shooting sports, a segment where ammo — like its Federal Premium brand — is the top-selling item. It has also reported the rise of the recreational shooter.

"A hunter might shoot a box of shells over two years, but a recreational shooter might shoot hundreds of rounds in a single weekend."

“A hunter might shoot a box of shells over two years, but a recreational shooter might shoot hundreds of rounds in a single weekend,” Vista CEO Mark DeYoung told OutdoorLife in February, acknowledging “a big shift” from hunting to recreational ammo sales. “And that consumer is also in the market for consumables — holsters, slings, optics, and other gear — made by the brands in our portfolio.”

Ammo is nearly as lucrative a business as guns. Remington, which owns brands like Bushmaster, Marlin, and Barnes Bullets, brought in 44% of its $939 million in sales last year from ammunition. (The private company, owned by Cerberus Capital Management, was formerly known as Freedom Group.) Ammo was also a more profitable business for the company, with profit margins of 29% compared to 18% for firearms.

Remington’s Bushmaster brand is best known as a leading maker of AR-15-style semiautomatic rifles, which have surged in popularity in the past 20 years by appealing to younger shooters and those less interested in traditional hunting. The guns, known as modern sporting rifles, are often referred to as “military-style assault weapons,” a designation loathed by enthusiasts who argue any militaristic similarity is cosmetic and that they “function like other semi-automatic civilian sporting firearms.”

A big draw of the AR-15-style rifle is how customizable it is, which is a boon for manufacturers and retailers. A New York Times story about the rifles in 2013 quoted a range officer in North Carolina as saying: “You can take the whole gun apart and replace any part you want to without special tools, without knowing a whole lot. ... They are Legos for guys.” In its latest annual filing, Remington said it’s “made acquisitions that enable us to provide components and parts to customize MSRs, allowing us to generate additional sales to existing customers, with component systems and parts often yielding higher margins than complete rifles.”

In August, Walmart, the country’s biggest seller of guns and ammunition, said it would stop selling modern sporting rifles based on lower consumer demand. In September, Cabela’s CEO noted Walmart won’t sell anything “that looks remotely tactical,” which is “a wonderful gift to us as the second largest seller of firearms in the United States.”

Three variations of the AR-15 assault rifle displayed by the California Department of Justice.

Rich Pedroncelli / AP

Jim Sable told BuzzFeed News he came up with the idea for the high school shooting league in 2001, after watching the average age at his gun club jump to the mid-fifties. He worked with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources on an informal survey of gun clubs around the state and discovered 10% had gone out of business while another 10% were “hanging on by a thread,” with members even older than at his club.

"Why not go to the schools? That’s where the money is."

“A few people said, we ought to start inviting our children, grandchildren, nieces, and nephews, and I said, 'Well, anything we do will be good, but that all by itself is not going to be good enough because we aren’t going to attract the kinds of numbers that we need,'” said Sable, 77, who established the league as a nonprofit in 2011 and emphasized its focus on safety and sportsmanship.

“I always had a story in the back of my mind that I really enjoyed — back in the 1930s and 1940s, there was a bank robber by the name of Willie Sutton, and he had been arrested numerous times. On the last occasion, the people from the FBI that arrested him said, ‘Willie, why in the world do you keep robbing banks like this?’ And he said, ‘That’s where the money is.’

“And so I thought the same philosophy works here: Why not go to the schools? That’s where the money is.”

It was easier than anyone expected. The league’s website says Sable met with his first athletic director the same day the front page of the local newspaper was dominated by the story of a young man who used the service revolver of his retired police officer grandfather to murder him — then went on a school shooting rampage.

Now, the league, which is accident-free, has expanded to Wisconsin and North Dakota, and 18 other states have expressed interest in starting their own chapters, Sable said. As Bloomberg News reported in July, gun-control advocates haven’t opposed trap shooting as a school sport. Sable said students must obtain a state firearm safety certificate and know they can't bring guns on to school property.

Francois Nel / Getty Images

The league may be growing, but hunting and household gun ownership are both on the decline. Last year, a record low of 15.4% of adults lived in households where they or their spouse were hunters, down from a peak of 31.6% in 1977, according to the General Social Survey from NORC, an independent research organization at the University of Chicago. The survey also said just under 35% of adults lived in a household with a firearm in 2014 and 2010, compared with about 50% in 1980.

"Fewer gun owners [are] owning more guns."

“While reliable gun ownership data is difficult to come by, we can safely say that gun ownership is becoming increasingly concentrated,” James Hardiman, an analyst at Wedbush Securities, wrote in an Oct. 12 note recommending Smith & Wesson shares. “Fewer gun owners [are] owning more guns, as guns are primarily marketed to people who already own guns.”

A 2011 survey of more than 10,000 handgun owners found that the average respondent had about seven guns, with 90% responding that they owned more than one, according to the National Shooting Sports Foundation, a trade group. Smith & Wesson CEO James Debney cited the statistic on a 2014 conference call, noting “it just gives you some insight into the collective mentality of people who own firearms.”

That’s not an unusual dynamic — Neiman Marcus recently said that its loyalty program members with “reward status” account for a staggering 40% of its annual revenue, spending 11 times more in a year than other customers. Luxury carmakers like Ferrari have said most of their U.S. sales are to repeat customers.

That collector mentality is reflected in how Sturm Ruger’s business can turn on the bells and whistles of its new pistols, rifles, and revolvers. New product introductions accounted for only 16% of its $542 million in firearm sales last year. In 2013, new products made up 29% of its record $679 million in gun sales, and in 2012, it was 38% of $485 million. Fifer, its CEO, noted last year that gun enthusiasts are “always just looking for an excuse to buy another gun and the best excuse is some cool new features or appearance or special edition.”

Sportsman’s Warehouse, a retail chain that makes almost half of its $660 million in annual sales from hunting and shooting, believes its vast firearm selection will help it steal some business from local mom-and-pop stores, which it estimates command 65% of outdoor activity and sporting goods equipment sales.

“You have a store that you're competing against, some mom-and-pop that has only 25 firearms to choose from, and you walk into that community and you offer 300 different firearms, you're going to get people excited about buying,” CEO John Schaefer said at a September conference. It helps that a lot of industry marketing is centered on the availability of new products, he said.

He continued: “To a lot of our customers, our male customers, buying firearms is akin to females buying shoes. They want to have 20 or 30 firearms. Don't ask me why. They think they're cool. But if you only have 25 to choose from, maybe you buy two. If you have 300 to choose from, over a number of years, you're probably going to end up with 10 or 15 firearms. And we know that because a lot of our customers will talk and they'll brag about having 30 or 40 firearms.”

The firearms reference collection at the Washington Metropolitan Police Department headquarters in Washington.

Jacquelyn Martin / Associated Press

The National Shooting Sports Foundation estimates the average target shooter recruited at 16 years old spends about $75,000 on the sport in their lifetime. Sable noted that even before college, a sixth-grader in the program might start out with a youth model shotgun, hit a growth spurt, and get another gun, then buy yet another gun before graduation.

"They want to have 20 or 30 firearms. Don't ask me why. They think they're cool."

Hunting and shootings sports advocates have been brainstorming ways to appeal to young people in recent years. The Hunting Heritage Trust and the National Shooting Sports Foundation commissioned a survey of 8- to 17-year-olds in 2012 that centered on the influence of peers in youth attitudes toward hunting and shooting. A subsequent report on the NSSF’s website concluded: “The more familiar youth are with individuals their own age who participate in hunting and shooting, the more likely they will be to support and actively participate in these activities.”

That’s in line with what Fifer, the Sturm Ruger CEO, told Shooting Sports Retailer last year — that every shooter needs to introduce 12 new people to shooting each year.

The NSSF report, which found respondents to be more enthusiastic about target shooting than hunting, recommended making a youth ambassador program to help build social acceptance of both sports. A big part of that job is helping their friends discover the fun of shooting.

“Youth ambassadors and others should focus on getting newcomers to take a first step into target shooting through any means, whether a BB or pellet gun, paintball gun, or archery bow,” the report said. “The point should be to get newcomers started shooting something, with the natural next step being a move toward actual firearms.”




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