HomeBusinessU.S. panel subpoenas Smith & Wesson over assault rifle data

U.S. panel subpoenas Smith & Wesson over assault rifle data

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. House Oversight Committee has subpoenaed Smith & Wesson Brands Inc for information on its AR-15 style firearms sales and marketing after the gunmaker’s chief executive refused to appear before lawmakers last month, it said in a statement.

The panel, led by Democratic U.S. Representative Carolyn Maloney, cited incomplete data and gaps in the company’s metrics in seeking documents from the firearms manufacturer, citing a copy of the letter notifying CEO Mark Smith of the congressional summons.

“This subpoena was made necessary by your unwillingness to voluntarily comply with the Committee’s investigation, including your refusal to testify about your company’s troubling business practices … and your refusal to voluntarily produce key information about your company’s sale of assault weapons to civilians,” Maloney wrote in a letter to Smith.

Representatives for Smith & Wesson did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the subpoena, first reported by the Washington Post.

The panel had summoned Smith along with the CEOs of Sturm, Ruger & Co and privately held Daniel Defense to appear July 27 following a string of mass shootings as U.S. lawmakers grappled for ways to address America’s gun violence.

At the hearing, lawmakers pressed the two CEOs who did appear for details on the marketing of assault-style weapons used in recent shootings at a Texas elementary school, a New York grocery store and a Illinois Independence Day parade.

Maloney on Tuesday said Smith & Wesson’s Smith initially agreed to appear voluntarily but then “abruptly withdrew” five days before the hearing.

The U.S. House of Representatives on Friday passed a bill that would ban assault-style rifles but the legislation is likely to face defeat in the 50-50 divided Senate where it would need 60 votes to move forward.

Congress, however, in June did approve a bipartisan bill with some more modest safety measures including tougher background checks. U.S. President Joe Biden signed it into law June 25.

(Reporting by Susan Heavey;Editing by Andrew Cawthorne, Bernadette Baum and Louise Heavens)

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