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In a post-Parkland push to demonstrate corporate virtue and concern, mega money manager BlackRock let it be know that they’d been sending a batch of questions to all of the publicly traded gun manufacturers in which they have a stake…which is all of them. They said wanted to asses how the companies monitor firearm sales, use, distribution and safety. You can read Smith & Wesson’s response here.

Ruger chose to respond in the form of an SEC 8-K filing. Long story short, they vigorously defended their manufacturing, distribution and safety practices. They also let it be known that they have no plans to stop producing modern sporting rifles. As for so-called smart guns, “effective “smart gun” technology does not exist; thus far, those devices advanced as “smart” have proven unreliable, easily defeated, or both.”

Here’s the full text of their response:

Dear Shareholder,

We recently have been approached by some shareholders seeking to meet with the Board of Directors and/or management team to discuss Company business. We welcome the opportunity to demonstrate our long and proven track record of promoting the safe and responsible ownership and use of firearms, commitment to regulatory compliance, and history of innovation. Bear in mind that we are a for-profit, commercial enterprise whose fundamental priority is the financial betterment of our shareholders. We also are publicly traded and must strictly follow SEC Regulation FD, which mandates that we disclose material information to all investors at the same time. We therefore have prepared this letter with these goals in mind. While we do not wish to minimize the impact that the criminal misuse of firearms has had on many Americans, the purpose of this letter is to plainly and directly address the concerns raised by our shareholders.

Company History

Sturm, Ruger & Company, Inc. (“Ruger”) was founded in 1949 by William B. Ruger and Alexander Sturm in Southport, Connecticut. It was a small operation, and the first product the Company produced was a .22 caliber, semi-automatic pistol, dubbed the “Standard Pistol.” That pistol has evolved over the years, but its basic design is still in production today in the form of our popular Mark IV pistols.

Over the years, we have developed hundreds of new products and currently manufacture approximately 40 major product families in the rifle, pistol and revolver categories. We have one of the most diversified product lines in the industry and, throughout our nearly 70-year history, our business model has never changed: we manufacture and sell rugged and reliable firearms, primarily for the commercial (as opposed to military and law enforcement) market.

Our long-standing motto, Arms Makers for Responsible Citizens, exemplifies our corporate culture and is aptly demonstrated by our long history of promoting the safe and responsible ownership and use of firearms. We ran an advertisement in 1955 – more than 60 years ago – entitled A Symbol of Responsibility in which we reiterated that, “[w]ith the right and enjoyment of owning a firearm goes the constant responsibility of handling it safely and using it wisely.” A more recent version of that advertisement and a variety of other materials can be found on our website (ruger.com) in the “Ruger Safety” section. This section is accessed via a prominent link and includes the basic rules of gun handling safety; our Safety Blue Book and another Ruger publication, Firearms Ownership in America – Our Responsibility for the Future; our now-famous “Father’s Advice” ad; a link to the National Shooting Sports Foundation (“NSSF”) website that has a variety of related materials; safety videos, and more.

Safety and Innovation

We pride ourselves on being innovative, and many of our innovations relate to firearms safety. For example, we were the first to invent a way to incorporate a transfer bar into a Colt-type, single-action revolver, which can help prevent accidental discharges if the user neglects to handle the revolver safely. Over the years, we have received numerous safety-related patents and have incorporated an array of safety features and devices into our firearms for customers who desire them. Not all customers desire these safety devices (magazine disconnects, for example), so we offer firearms in a variety of configurations and allow customers to decide for themselves which firearm best meets their needs. Over the past decade, we have seen relatively little safety-related litigation and have managed it effectively.

For decades, we have roll-marked or engraved a warning directly on our firearms reminding consumers to read their instruction manual, which is included with each firearm shipped. The instruction manual contains a variety of warnings and important information, including the basic rules of gun handling safety, a description of the operational characteristics of the firearm, and how to maintain and safely store the firearm.

Product Distribution

We do not sell firearms directly to retailers or consumers. Rather, we utilize a two-tier distribution model and primarily sell to a limited number of independent, federally licensed wholesale distributors of firearms, some of whom we have worked with for decades. We also make modest sales to independent, federally licensed law enforcement distributors and international distributors in other countries, but these sales represent a relatively small portion of our business.
Our sales policy requires the independent, federally licensed wholesale distributors of our products to sell only to federally licensed firearms retailers: (i) having a regular place of business; (ii) with scheduled business hours on premises; (iii) where such business use is permitted by law; and (iv) where products are displayed to the shooting public. As these retailers must have a Federal Firearms License (“FFL”), they are obligated to perform all required background checks and may not sell to prohibited persons.

Before a new Ruger firearm can legally reach a domestic consumer, three federally regulated transactions are typically required (manufacturer to distributor, distributor to retailer, and retailer to consumer). These requirements are the baseline, as many states and local governments have additional regulations (waiting periods, additional licensure requirements, etc.) that must be satisfied before a retailer can transfer a firearm to a consumer. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (“ATF”) has regulatory authority over federally licensed retailers to ensure that firearm transactions are conducted in accordance with all applicable laws.

User Authentication

Despite assertions to the contrary, effective “smart gun” technology does not exist; thus far, those devices advanced as “smart” have proven unreliable, easily defeated, or both. Fundamentally, the advocated purpose of so-called “smart guns” is to prevent unauthorized access to firearms, a goal we have long shared. We have been shipping locks with pistols and revolvers since 1987 – for over 30 years. We began shipping cable locking devices with long guns in 1999 and, since then, we have shipped over 19 million locks. The instruction manuals accompanying our firearms describe how to properly apply the locking devices and remind owners of their responsibility to store firearms safely and responsibly. These devices, if properly used, can help prevent unauthorized access without the complexities and drawbacks of “smart guns.”

Modern Sporting Rifles

We do not plan to discontinue the manufacture or commercial sale of Modern Sporting Rifles. Some of the inquiries we have received suggest a misunderstanding of how Modern Sporting Rifles operate. A Modern Sporting Rifle is designed to fire semi-automatically, which means that the rifle will fire one shot for each pull of the trigger, provided there is a round in the chamber and the safety is disengaged. Although the mechanism is different, this basic operation (one shot for each pull of the trigger) is the same as the Standard Pistol Bill Ruger introduced in 1949. Modern Sporting Rifles are used and enjoyed by law-abiding citizens for a variety of lawful purposes every day, including competition, recreation, hunting, and personal defense, and we support their right to do so. Conversely, we do not believe that these law-abiding citizens should be stripped of their constitutional rights due to the criminal and heinous actions of a few individuals.

According to FBI data, rifles of all types, including Modern Sporting Rifles, are involved in a small fraction of criminal activities. Some estimates suggest that approximately 16 million Modern Sporting Rifles have been sold since 1990. Thus, their legitimate uses by responsible citizens far outnumber their misuses by criminals, who clearly have serious mental health issues that should prevent them from possessing any firearm.

Regulatory Compliance

Firearms are a heavily regulated product with literally thousands of laws governing their manufacture, distribution and sale at the federal, state and local levels. For example, as set forth in the ATF Form 4473, the document by which a background check is initiated for a firearm purchase, an individual “may not receive a firearm if prohibited by Federal or State law.” Form 4473 also details the categories of individuals who are “prohibited” from owning firearms under Federal law, including (but not limited to) individuals who: have been convicted of a crime punishable by more than one year in prison; have been convicted of a misdemeanor of domestic violence; have been “adjudicated as a mental defective” or have ever been committed to a mental institution; or are unlawful users of or addicted to any controlled substance.

We are extremely proud of our ATF compliance efforts and the robust program we have in place. We have a number of FFLs and each licensed premises is subject to impromptu inspections by the ATF. Since 2010, the ATF has conducted five full inspections at our manufacturing facilities (two each in Newport, NH and Prescott, AZ, and one in Mayodan, NC). We are pleased to report that these inspections resulted in no violations. In fact, we conduct our own compliance inspections using ATF protocol multiple times each year at our manufacturing facilities, which include 100% verification of all serialized inventory.

We participate in ATF Access 2000, which allows ATF to conduct electronic traces of Ruger firearms to assist law enforcement. If we receive a separate request from ATF for information on a Ruger firearm recovered by law enforcement, we immediately provide the information and fully cooperate with law enforcement in its investigation.

Support of Industry Initiatives

We have long supported efforts to better enforce existing laws. In particular, we support FixNICS, a program launched by the NSSF in 2013 to encourage states to report to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (commonly referred to as “NICS”) all records that establish someone is prohibited from owning a firearm under current law. To date, 16 states have adopted changes advocated by the FixNICS initiative and the number of disqualifying mental health records submitted to NICS has increased by 170% to nearly 4.5 million, up from about 1.7 million in December 2012. The NSSF continues to work with and encourage a number of states to submit appropriate records to NICS so that prohibited transactions can be identified and prevented.

Through our participation in the NSSF, we also support Project ChildSafe, which has distributed over 37 million gun locks and safety kits to over 15,000 cities nationwide, making it one of the most comprehensive firearm safety education programs in the United States. As another example, we are fully supportive of the Don’t Lie for the Other Guy educational program, which is a joint effort by the ATF and the NSSF, the goal being to assist firearm retailers in the detection and deterrence of “straw purchases.” These are only a few of the ongoing industry initiatives, and information about them and other industry efforts can be found on the NSSF website at NSSF.org.

As a result of these efforts, the firearm accident rate has dropped dramatically and now is at the lowest level since 1903, when record keeping began. According to the National Safety Council’s “Injury Facts – 2017 Edition,” there was a 17% decrease in accidents involving firearms from 2014 to 2015, and firearms-related fatalities account for three-tenths of one percent of accidental deaths from all listed causes. This decrease was the largest percentage decline in any category and occurred during a year of near-record firearms sales.

Conclusion

We note again that we manufacture a lawful product, the ownership of which is constitutionally protected. As explained above, our business model has been consistent since the inception of the Company nearly 70 years ago. We therefore do not believe that our lawful manufacture, distribution and sale of firearms carries any financial or reputational risks outside those set forth in our Annual Report on Form 10-K, many of which are discussed above. One way we could unnecessarily create such a risk, however, is by succumbing to political pressure to do what is expedient. Political expediency flies in the face of our fiduciary responsibility as stewards of the Company for the benefit of shareholders. Moreover, many of the proposals being advanced, while well-meaning, run counter to what our customers actually want.

As evidenced by our track record promoting the safe and responsible ownership and use of firearms, safety innovation, and regulatory compliance, we believe that firearms safety is a laudable and appropriate goal. However, we also believe that proper enforcement of existing laws designed to keep firearms out of the hands of individuals who should not have them is the best approach to addressing gun violence, which is first and foremost a law enforcement issue.

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46 COMMENTS

  1. “Dear Shareholder,

    We recently have been approached by some POS communistic shareholders . . .”

    There, contact Edgar, they need to amend their SEC filing.

  2. Reinforces my recent decision to purchase one of the new Ruger PC Carbines. Ruger makes a fine product and is making the right decision here.

    Now, does it help that their business is so heavily geared toward the commercial market, such that they literally have millions of masters to obey, as opposed to a very few purchasing agents if they were orientated more toward the military and law enforcement markets? Yes. Next question.

  3. A very moderate and well-tempered reply by Ruger. I would have preferred, “hey, Black Rockheads, FOAD,” but this was nice too.

  4. Looks like they’ve learned their lesson. Well done, Ruger. And yes, i understand why there wasn’t a PS- go pound sand, although we would’ve all appreciated it.

  5. I own: Ruger LC9s, Ruger SR9c, and a Ruger SR556.

    I have never had a complaint about any of these pistols, nor the Security Six or the P-85 I used to own.

    I love these guys and their guns and BTW, that SR556 is SWEET.

  6. There are still some people who put Ruger on their personal “banned-for-life” list, thanks to Bill Ruger. I never did and I love my Mini-14s. I prefer to build my ARs but if I ever considered divesting myself of my Minis (I never have) I’m a little less likely now.

  7. Lots of people are getting up in arms over the FixNICS proposition, which I believe to be unwarranted.

    The constitutionality of the NICS background check system is a separate debate, and one that certainly needs to be had, but as long as the NICS background check system is the law of the land, it needs to be implemented. There are many glaring holes in the NICS system. The Texas Church murderer had a felony record, involuntary commitment to a psychiatric facility, and left the Navy under other-than-honorable conditions, all of which would have disqualified him from legally purchasing a firearm, had that information been disclosed to the NICS system. And there are other examples.

    Note, this is not an endorsement of the existence of the NICS background check system. A quote attributed to Abraham Lincoln: “The best way to get a bad law repealed is to enforce it strictly.” The NICS system, while it is the law of the land, needs to be implemented fully and faithfully. Maybe then, people would see the privacy issues it creates and momentum to repeal it would build. But as long as it remains a half-assed system, there will be little political motivation to do anything about it, and people will continue to fall through the cracks, giving further ammo to the anti-gun community who can then truthfully claim that “he bought his guns legally!”

    If the NICS system is fully implemented, it will create right to privacy and possibly due process issues that can then be addressed by the courts, and it will simultaneously remove legal avenues for criminals to purchase firearms. It would give us ammo to pursue its repeal in a court of law, and will also remove ammo from the anti-gunners who will no longer be able to claim that, because a criminal or mass murderer was able to buy their guns legally, that all legal gun owners are legal, until they aren’t.

    If we can continue to build the case that criminals will acquire firearms illegally when they have no legal avenue, it will only help our cause.

  8. Russ in AK,
    That was way too long a solid five paragraphs to get through
    I didn’t read it and I don’t think very many other people did
    Keep it short and write your point in the very first line

  9. Most of my handguns are Rugers even have steel SP 101 357 with vintage SR rosewood grip. It’s a Range revolver since if ever used for evidence in self defense incident, don’t really want it coming back to me without a hard to find and highly priced grip. It’s a collector item which means it will go to my Travis County Leo nephew
    Even though both founders are since gone, company still manufacturers quality weapons. I might just buy one more. A pistol. Great quality you can pass down to your heirs.

  10. I don’t own any Ruger product. But I see that changing real quick. That statement letter is incredibly well written and truly on target wrt what has taken place of late. Bravo Ruger

  11. To Texas Gun Gal up there since the “reply” button seems to be on the fritz…
    I sincerely believe your collection is not complete without at least one Ruger Mk-series .22 pistol. Any of the variants are sure to be a treasured piece – my own is a nearly- new-in-box condition Mk1 Target model made in 1977.
    As for a defensive piece… too many to list but I’ve an empty hole in my heart that needs filling with a SR9c… if that damn car hadn’t crapped out in January and ate up my tax return it would be on my hip right now.
    🤠

  12. Bill Ruger is dead and spinning in his grave while his Company proudly makes AR-15 rifles for the civilian market.
    Bill you created a great company. Now that you are gone it is becoming even greater. I love my P89 and 10/22.
    Rest in Peace.

    ps. I met the Ruger CEO when he toured Nashville Tn and other cities a few years ago. A very impressive man, good guy.

  13. I don’t own any firearms (teehee!) but I “know a guy” that has a few Rugers: LCP 2, LCR 9, LCRx 22, Mini 14, Security 9, and P89. Now it’s time for me, er, that guy to go out and get another Ruger. As someone who has started to really fall in love with revolvers, I, sorry, he, will probably go after a GP100 hopefully in 4″. 😎

  14. Jonathan-Houston. Reply button appears busted.

    Ruger doesn’t do much .gov contracts here in the states. But they have had large contracts world wide, mostly handguns, for military and police. But they still honor their client base here in the US.

    I have Ruger products and have never had a problem with them and would not hesitate to buy more if the need arose.

  15. Last month, I moved to Texas from the Northeast. Last week, I picked up my new Ruger MPR and the 30 round mags.

    Tomorrow, I will be divesting myself of Blackrock funds.

  16. Bought the Security 9 about 1 month ago. This just makes me more interested in picking up the PC Carbine.

    And I have no Black (red commie) Rock funds anymore.

  17. Headline: We’re still making AR’s and Smart Guns Suck.

    This implies that they are making AR’s suck and making smart guns suck. Very poor sentence structure. A better option would be “we’re still producing AR’s and, BTW, smart guns suck.”

    A bunch of donkeys might be called “asses”. If you wanted to evaluate something, you would assess it.

    I don’t usually jump on grammar, but this is particularly poor.

  18. WHAT IS WRONG WITH “REPLY”?

    When lazy “prosecutors” prefer to plea bargain cases so they can get make the cocktail hour, rather than hold a trial/send felons to prison, does it matter what goes into NICS databases? This is particularly true if the “suspect” is of a protected “minority” class or if the offense is combined with a firearms violation. Other than an NRA backed test in Virginia many years agom the feds have never been interested in charging/punishing illegal attempts to purchase on a 4473.

    More theater.

  19. Got my eye on a Redhawk in .45 Colt. Am VERY pleased with the Mk III 22/45, LCP, LC9, LCR .327 Fed Mag, two SP 101’s (on ea in .357 Mag and .327 Fed Mag), and, of course, the ubiquitous 10/22. Because……good, rugged, dependable, well made guns.

  20. I have recently acquired a 10/22 to add to my other firearms, and look forward to trying it out at the range. This is an excellent reply from Ruger to a spurious questioning from a bunch of financial clowns who know nothing other than how to steal money off other people who produce stuff. They are the ugly face of capitalism.

  21. I am a proud Ruger ‘Super Owner”; from a P89DC to a new Mark IV & lots in between. Ruger is my go to company for many reasons; outstanding reliability, accuracy, feeding & any type ammo and 100% American Made product down to the raw materials. If Henry & Ruger can do a total American product, why can’t everyone? I am beyond satisfied with Ruger and the company just continues to make me proud to a Ruger owner.

  22. Was thinking about a standard Ruger LCP II for pocket carry. Now I am going to get one soon, to very soon. May even pick up a Ruger MK IV next year sometime just because of their statement (already have a M&P22C which I really like). Had a Buckmark before, but the MK IV’s takedown system is awesome.

    Also read the pdf on S&W’s response to BlackRock. Already just got a new M&P9C M2.0 but I may end up getting that M&P 380 EZ Shield for others to shoot who are newer to guns also sooner than I thought.

  23. Due to its power and the sheer size and scope of its financial assets and activities, BlackRock has been called the world’s largest shadow bank. -Wikipedia.
    Sounds like people should be very suspicious of their activities.
    I would trust the Strum Ruger Company and their products any day over a company that bows to public sway opinion. Ruger works. Leave them alone.

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