Attacks spark gun and gas mask sales
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Deepa Bharath
NEWPORT-MESA -- It’s all about preparation and protection.
That could be what’s driving sales at local stores that sell guns and
gas masks.
Gun sales at The Grant Boys on Newport Boulevard shot up fivefold
since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon, said Jack Carver, vice president of the Costa Mesa store.
“The increase has been tremendous,” he said. “What sell the most are
handguns, shotguns and the semiautomatic rifles.”
Many who have been coming to his store the last two weeks are clearly
first-time firearm buyers, Carver said.
“It looks like a lot of them had wanted to get a gun, but had been
putting it off for a while,” he said. The terrorist attacks “were like
the last straw that pushed them to do it.”
This is not the first time Carver has seen his sales climb
dramatically upward.
“It happened at the time of the [Los Angeles] riots, Gulf War and
Y2K,” he said. “And it’s happening now. The one common denominator at all
these events has been uncertainty. I guess people are just insecure and
feel the need to protect themselves in case something horrible happens.”
Gas masks are also selling by the thousands at South Coast Army and
Navy on Coast Highway.
On Tuesday afternoon, at least a dozen people inside the small store
and its parking lot were waiting for a new shipment of gas masks to
arrive.
Those in line, several who did not want to reveal their names, said
they just want to “be prepared” in the event of future attacks.
“We don’t know what will happen,” said Glenn Tugonon, a Fountain
Valley resident who came with his wife, Nina, and 3-year-old son, E.J.
“We have to be prepared for anything that flies in the air.”
The Togonons bought masks for themselves Monday, but came back Tuesday
to get one for E.J., whose size was not available then.
Laguna Beach resident Myra Gordon said she wanted to add the mask to
her disaster preparedness kit.
“We’re being told there could be imminent threats,” she said. “The
worst thing that can happen is biological warfare, and a lot of us don’t
know what that’s all about.
“I guess, for most of us, it’s just a fear of the unknown,” she added
The gas masks that sell in surplus stores cost anywhere between $30
and $200 apiece. The Newport store sells Israeli masks, which are the
cheaper variety, as well as Russian, German and American masks. The store
sells them as novelty items and does not guarantee them, said owner
Michael Sherman, who was taking a phone call a minute Tuesday.
“We’ve sold thousands of these since Sept. 11,” he said. “Just today
there were 200 people waiting to buy the masks.”
Sherman, who has owned the store for the last 25 years, said he saw
similar panic during the Gulf War, after which fear seemed to taper and
fade away at some point.
Roxane Cohen Silver, professor of psychology at UC Irvine, said she
has heard of people buying gas masks in Israel, but was surprised to hear
local people lining up outside Army surplus stores.
“But people everywhere are looking for answers,” she said. “It’s just
a way for them to try and gain control over something they can’t
control.”
* Deepa Bharath covers public safety and courts. She may be reached at
(949) 574-4226 or by e-mail o7 [email protected] .
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