Kittery Trading Post threatens to move firearms business to New Hampshire over new gun law (2024)

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Kittery Trading Post threatens to move firearms business to New Hampshire over new gun law (1)byBilly Kobin

Kittery Trading Post threatens to move firearms business to New Hampshire over new gun law (2)

AUGUSTA, Maine — Kittery Trading Post, the gun seller and outdoorsports retailer located by Interstate 95 in southern Maine, said Thursday it will move its firearms business to New Hampshire if a 72-hour waiting period law takes effect.

Thursday’s statement from the family-owned store foundedin 1938 came after Gov. Janet Mills announcedMonday she would let a Democratic proposal to require three-day waiting periods on firearm purchases become law without her signature.

The lawwill not take effect until the summer and does not apply to antique firearm sales nor deals between family members, among other exceptions. Mills has also directed the state’s public safety commissioner and attorney general to monitor legal challenges to similar statutes in states such as Vermontwhile also clarifying how it will affect temporary transfers, such as for guided hunts, and people with pressing self-protection concerns.

But Kittery Trading Post’s statement on how it will “be forced to move our entire firearms business to New Hampshire” came the same week the Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine and Gun Owners of Maine vowed to sue the state over the waiting period law, highlighting the intense debates and fallout over gun control legislation since last year’s Lewiston mass shooting.

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Kittery Trading Post said it annually sells more than $11 million worth of new and used firearms and that 60 percent of its firearms business involves out-of-state residents. If the waiting period law takes effect, it estimateda more than $400,000 loss in sales tax revenue and a loss of 40,000 customers annually.

The companysaid the waiting period measure forces “law-abiding customers” to make two visits over three days to complete a sale, which “means extra time, gas and sundries which further drives up the cost of the transaction for the consumer.”

Kittery Trading Post Vice President Fox Keim told the Bangor Daily News the company and its 350 employees “cater to a diverse clientele and have historically stayed out of politics.”

“This law will impact all categories of business, not just firearms,” Keim said. “We are a multi-generational family destination store and will fight to uphold our values.”

The company did not immediately specify where it would move to in New Hampshire, though it already has a gun exchange facilityjust over the border in Portsmouth.

Mills, a Democrat, also vetoedMonday a proposed ban on bump stocks that allow semi-automatic weapons to fire rapidly like machine guns. Both measures narrowly passed the Democratic-controlled Legislature in April after failing as recently as last year, but the Oct. 25 mass shooting in Lewistonthat left 18 dead and 13 injuredhas led to a sharp change in the gun control debate in a rural state with a strong hunting and gun ownership traditions.

The Army reservist who carried out Maine’s deadliest mass shooting on record had legally purchased his rifle and other gunsmonths before the October rampage, but Sen. Peggy Rotundo, D-Lewiston, who sponsored the waiting period bill, has pointed to the ability of waiting periods to reduce suicidesin a state where more than half of suicides in 2021 involved a firearm.

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“I am confident that the 72-hour waiting period will save lives and save many families the heart break of losing a loved one to suicide by firearm,” Rotundo said earlier this week.

Mills, who has opposed more sweeping gun control legislation in the past and worked closely with Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine leader David Trahan on the 2019 “yellow flag” law,also signed last monthher proposal to extend background checks to advertised gun sales and tweak the yellow flag statute to make it easier for police to take people into protective custody.

The governor’s plan also makes it a felony to sell guns to prohibited people and includes various mental health and violence prevention initiatives, such as the construction of new crisis receiving centers, that made it into the supplemental budget.

Kittery Trading Post has seen gun control advocates protest outside of its store in previous years, including after the 2018 school shooting in Parkland, Florida. In February, nearly four dozen Democratic lawmakers signed lettersasking Kittery Trading Post and Cabela’s to stop selling “military-style, semi-automatic weapons” in the wake of the mass shooting at a Lewiston bowling alley and bar.

Mills is scheduled to speak Friday afternoon at Just-In-Time Recreation during a reopening ceremony for the Lewiston bowling alley.

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Billy Kobin

Billy Kobin is a politics reporter who joined the Bangor Daily News in 2023. He grew up in Wisconsin and previously worked at The Indianapolis Star and The Courier Journal (Louisville, Ky.) after graduating...More by Billy Kobin

Kittery Trading Post threatens to move firearms business to New Hampshire over new gun law (2024)

FAQs

What is the new gun law in New Hampshire? ›

New Hampshire has not passed any meaningful gun safety laws in years, and recently enacted a law that allows people to carry loaded, hidden handguns in public without a background check or permit. In 2021, New Hampshire had the 7th lowest gun death rate among the states.

Who owns Kittery Trading Post? ›

Gary, Philip, Kevin F., and Kim Adams carry on the family tradition as owners of the Kittery Trading Post.

Who Cannot own a gun in NH? ›

There are no state licensing requirements for the possession of rifles, shotguns or handguns. It is unlawful for any person who has been convicted of a felony to own, possess or control any firearm. Persons who are the subject of a court protective order may be required to surrender all firearms and ammunition.

Can I buy a gun in NH if I live in VT? ›

If you want to buy a firearm in New Hampshire, you must show ID. Nonresidents can't buy long guns unless they are eligible to purchase them in their home state. Pistols and revolvers cannot be purchased across state lines.

Can you carry a gun without a license in NH? ›

In 2017, New Hampshire repealed its law requiring people carrying hidden, loaded guns in public to have a license. Anyone, including non-residents, may carry a concealed firearm without a license provided that the individual is not prohibited from possessing firearms under federal or New Hampshire law.

Can you carry a gun in your car in NH? ›

A person may carry a handgun concealed or openly upon his person or loaded and exposed or locked up in a vehicle without a license to carry. To obtain a license to carry, a person must apply to the selectmen or mayor or chief of police of the town where he is a resident.

Can I carry my gun from NH to MA? ›

A: Yes. Under federal law (Title 18 US Code, chapter 44, Section 926A), you may transport a firearm interstate provided that you may lawfully carry in the state of origin and in the state of destination. It further requires that the weapon be unloaded and secured in a separate compartment.

Can you ban guns on private property in NH? ›

A: On private property (including stores, theaters, restaurants, etc.), the property owner can set a “no guns” policy. In NH a “No Firearms” sign posted on private property does not carry the weight of law but they can ask you to leave if you're carrying, and have you arrested for trespassing if you don't leave.

Can you buy a gun in Maine if you live in New Hampshire? ›

If the firearm is a compliant long gun, and your state does not have a waiting period to buy long guns, you may purchase it here in Maine with a 5.5% sales tax. If you are a New Hampshire resident you will have to use our Portsmouth, New Hampshire transfer station to suffice federal requirements.

Is New Hampshire gun friendly? ›

Concealed and open carry

Since February 22, 2017, New Hampshire has been a constitutional carry state, requiring no license to open carry or concealed carry a firearm in public. Concealed carry permits are still issued for purposes of reciprocity with other states.

Is New Hampshire a stand your ground state? ›

New Hampshire is a “stand your ground” state, meaning that a person generally has no duty to flee from an unlawful violent threat so long as the actor is not the initial aggressor, did not agree to a mutual fight, and is not trespassing.

Can I open carry in New Hampshire? ›

Open Carry is legal. New Hampshire also has Permitless Carry. Anyone who can legally possess a firearm can carry open or concealed without any type of permit/license.

Does New Hampshire have the loosest gun laws? ›

New Hampshire's gun laws are amongst some of the most permissive in the United States; while the state has not had a mass shooting event since 1982, its per capita gun death rate, the 9th lowest gun death rate of the 50 states, is double neighboring Massachusetts, which has among the strictest gun laws in the U.S. This ...

Can I bring my gun from New Hampshire to Massachusetts? ›

A: Yes. Under federal law (Title 18 US Code, chapter 44, Section 926A), you may transport a firearm interstate provided that you may lawfully carry in the state of origin and in the state of destination. It further requires that the weapon be unloaded and secured in a separate compartment.

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