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Walmart to no longer sell certain ammunition, NRA says action won't 'make us any safer'

In the wake of a rash of mass shootings that have left the country reeling, Walmart will stop selling certain forms of ammunition, ask customers to no longer openly carry guns in their stores, and call on President Donald Trump and other lawmakers to pass background checks legislation.

The nation's largest retailer, which previously stopped selling handguns, will now stop selling handgun ammunition as well. And it will no longer make available the types of bullets that while used in hunting rifles can also be fired by military-style weapons.

Additionally, in the more than two dozen states with open carry laws, Walmart is "respectfully requesting that customers no longer openly carry firearms into our stores and Sam's Clubs ... unless they are authorized law enforcement officers,'' said Dan Bartlett, executive vice president of corporate affairs.

That action follows "multiple cases'' in which people entered their stores with visible weapons, upsetting customers and employees, Bartlett said.

Walmart has been the focus of a campaign by gun control activists and others to pressure it to stop selling guns and take other actions in the wake of a wave of mass shootings, including one at a Walmart in El Paso last month that left 22 people dead.

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By asking customers not to openly carry weapons in its stores, Walmart will join other retailers such as Starbucks that have implemented similar policies. Walmart will post signs to inform customers of the change and train employees in the coming weeks.

"We just hope that customers will understand the rationale behind this, that it is not an attempt to question their legal rights,'' Bartlett said. "It's certainly just about the experience we've had in our own stores that have put too many customers, too many associates in a place of extreme discomfort. ... We've had multiple cases of evacuations because of this.''

Following Walmart's announcement, Kroger also asked shoppers to leave guns at home and is encouraging lawmakers to pass laws that will strengthen background checks.

Walmart will also no longer sell handguns in Alaska, the one state where it still allowed such purchases.

Walmart will sell what remains of the handgun ammunition it has offered, along with the .223 caliber and 5.56 caliber ammunition that can be used in military-style weapons. But then it will be focused on guns used by sportsmen. The changes it is making will shrink Walmart's ammunition market share from roughly 20% to between 6% and 9%, Bartlett said. The retailer makes up about 2% of the gun market.


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