OP

Optics Planet, the Northbrook, IL company that employs 1600+ with sales of over $261M just shot themselves in the foot.  With an email, they've cancelled orders for full capacity magazines to civilians otherwise legal to purchase them.  In the email, they cite a recent policy change, saying they no longer sell mags over 10 rounds to the general public.

 

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The Truth About Guns tied the suspiciously timed change in policy to the gun free zone school massacre in Florida last week.  In response, Optics Planet released this statement.  We've parsed it.

When there’s smoke, there’s often fire. But sometimes – smoke is just smoke.

Something's burning to create smoke.  Maybe that's not how it happens in Mother Russia, where founder Mark Levitin emigrated from, but that's how it is here in the US of A.

We fully understand how the email featured in the article on The Truth About Guns suggests that we may have made a decision to limit the sales of magazines over 10 rounds due to the recent tragedy in Parkland, Florida. Before we go any further, we want to make it clear that our condolences go to the families of all of the victims, and that our hearts go out to a community trying to recover after a senseless event.

At OpticsPlanet, we have never used the inflamed tensions and emotions of current events to drive decision making. Our support of the 2nd amendment is made undeniably clear by the products we offer. We are one of the few online retailers who never stopped offering completely legal products such as bump stocks or binary triggers, when many did. We do not raise prices during frenzies. We do, however, follow the laws and make adjustments when legally required.

If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck and looks like a duck, it probably isn't a…

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In this case, insufficient internal communication led to a misread message. We are not offering magazines with capacities greater than 10 rounds to the general public due to our location in Northbrook, Illinois, and local laws that limit our ability to sell these. Being an internet retailer serving fifty states can be complex at times, and frankly, our location in Illinois only adds to this complexity. We may not always like the law, but we need to follow it.

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We own up to the fact that we did not explain this well internally, which led to an unclear message given to the customer, but we can completely repudiate any notion that this is a reaction to any recent event or the political climate. Unfortunately, our loyal customer base is best served by purchasing their magazines from retailers in “free” states. This issue is currently out of our hands. We’re committed to working hard to retain your business for everything else you need.

It’s unfortunate that this issue has created so much confusion, and we apologize for not providing clearer messaging in the first place. We continue to support our passionate customer community as we have for the past eighteen years in every way we can.

They cite a Cook County ordinance that only applies to unincorporated areas of Cook County.  If it applied across Cook County as "recently changed policy" Optics Planet suggests, then 

Midwest Shooting Sports in Lyons, IL
Point Blank Range and Gunshop in Hodgkins, IL
Cabelas in Hoffman Estates
Blackhawk in Alsip
Freddy Bear Sports in Tinley
Eagle Sports in Oak Forest
Maxon's in DesPlaines 
… to name a few

These businesses could not sell modern sporting rifles or full capacity magazines.  Or rent them.

No, a more likely explanation is that Optics Planet is in CYA mode, trying to defer to a higher authority in their ham-handed attempt to not own up to their own unilateral decision not to sell standard capacity magazines to the "general public".  

Well, guess what Mark, and Pavel, and the rest of the Optics Planet crew:  The "General Public" can unilaterally buy stuff elsewhere.

Pro-gun advocacy has never been easier.

thatwaseasy

12 thoughts on “CORPORATE SUICIDE WATCH: IL Optics Planet no longer sells full-capacity magazines to civilians”
  1. Just called OP, closed my account……..was just abvout to order Solomon boots. They won't get that order either. 

  2. That took care of my purchase decision.   No more from them, especially after their silly excuse. 

    Glad I saw this before I ordered that X-sight from them.  It's OK, someone else will have it on sale before long…. or I can order it from the liquidator after Optics starts failing.

    Vendors need to realize… you either support the 2nd Amendment supporters you you don't.  There's no CYA middle ground.

     

  3. Cheaper Than Dirt had a similar "reaction" back in December of 2012. It took me several e-mails and a phone call to get them to stop sending me their junk mail. I've never shopped there again and never will, despite their subsequent donations to 2A causes and their half-hearted apologies. It seems others must be more forgiving…

    It's time to say goodbye to OP. I'll not miss them much as their shipping times suck and they have an infuriating practice to advertise back-ordered merchandise as in-stock.

    1. Yeah it took me 8 months one time to get an in stock optic. Nothing but false promises and the run around until my order arrived.

  4. Optics Planet was never that great anyway.  I had to call their customer disservice once and they were actually very rude to me.

     

    I'm surprised you haven't taken on X-Products yet. 

  5. The ordinance only applies to Cook County, and only applies to long guns (shotguns and rifles). When the FCCL passed in 2013 and became law in 2014, we specifically wrote in language that makes the legislation of concealable handguns the exclusive jurisdiction of the Illinois General Assembly. In plain English, no municipality (including Chicago and Cook County) can make any laws regarding handguns or concealed carry law. 

    So while their decision not to provide rifle or shotgun magazines with a capacity greater than 10 to residents of Cook County is valid, their blanket policy is without merit. 

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