Georgia gun shop owner shutters store after mass
shootings targeting children
“I’m not against the Second Amendment," he said,
"but just with my conscience, I can’t sell it because, I don’t know who
it’s going to affect and hurt.”
June 1,
2023, 9:31 PM CEST / Updated June 1, 2023, 10:50 PM CEST
By David K.
Li
A gun store
owner near Atlanta said he is closing his store after his conscience was
burdened by recent mass shootings that targeted young victims.
Jon
Waldman, 43, opened Georgia Ballistics in Duluth in March 2021, and
post-pandemic business has been steady ever since, he said.
But a pair
of recent attacks, one at a Christian school in Nashville, Tennessee, and
another inside an Atlanta hospital, were the final straws for Waldman, who said
that his shop is already closed and that he plans to have all weapons cleared
out by June 15.
"There’s
no guilt about it. I sell to law-abiding citizens," Waldman said Thursday.
He said he
reached the point of worrying that any weapon he sells, even to someone who
will never commit a crime, could end up in the wrong hands.
“I’m not
against the Second Amendment. But just with my conscience, I can’t sell it,
because I don’t know who it’s going to affect and hurt," he said.
"That’s
what eats at me," he said. "If it can happen, it’s only a matter of
time until it does happen."
Two recent
shootings led Waldman to his decision, he said.
A former
student of The Covenant School in Nashville killed three children and three
adults at the campus on March 27, officials said. Police shot and killed the
shooter.
“That
really affected me,” Waldman said. “And then the shooting at Midtown [Atlanta]
— this just has to stop. Dude killed a woman from the CDC who only wanted to
help others. So I just can’t. That was the final straws.”
On May 3, a
24-year-old man opened fire in an Atlanta hospital, killing a woman and
wounding four others, before he was captured, police said.
Waldman
said that if he hadn't already decided to close his shop, another reason
presented itself six weeks ago when a customer wanted to buy 4,000 rounds.
Even 1,000
would have been reasonable, but four times that amount, Waldman said, made him
question his field.
"If
you had ordered 200 to 1,000 rounds, that's fine. Anyone who shoots regularly,
you're going through a thousand rounds in a month," he said.
"But
when you order 4,000 rounds, the kind of stuff that goes through engine blocks,
refrigerators and vests that police officers wear, I just can't sell
that," he said.
Waldman
insisted he's not pushing for greater restrictions on firearm ownership but is
only advocating for more gun safety.
"I am
more of a training and learning advocate," he said. "I am more about
training and safety than I am 'everybody should just have one.' You should be
able to safely have one."
He said too
many gun owners don't pay the same attention to their firearms as to their
cellphones.
“For the
last couple of months, you just see kids, over and over again, getting
shot," Waldman said. "It's kids being randomly shot, and I'm tired of
it. I have a kid. My girlfriend has two kids. I’m a family man. I’m all about
people being armed, but at the same time, they leave their stuff in their cars.
They don’t see their firearms [to be as important] as their phones.”
Shannon
Watts, the founder of the gun violence prevention group Moms Demand Action,
praised Waldman for linking firearms to threats against children.
"This
moral character being displayed by this one Georgia man — prioritizing
children’s lives over gun-related profits — is sorely needed among right-wing
Republican lawmakers in America," Watts said Thursday.
Asked about
Waldman's concerns about young victims, Kris Brown, the president of Brady:
United Against Gun Violence, said too many children are hurt by firearms every
day in the U.S.
"We
hear every day about a child, sometimes as young as 3 or 4 years old, getting
their hands on their parents’ gun and accidentally shooting a loved one, or
themselves," Brown said in a statement to NBC News.
"That’s
because gun owners are for the most part not legally required to safely store
their firearms. Eight kids a day are unintentionally killed or injured by these
instances of ‘family fire.’”
David K. Li
David K. Li
is a senior breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital.

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