Colt's Chief Stands Up For Federal Gun Control
By Henry Goldman
Philadelphia Inquirer staff writer*
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
WEST HARTFORD, Conn. -- Ronald L. Stewart is unique among the nation's 
gun manufacturers.  He favors a form of national gun control.
         Stewart, the chief executive officer of Colt's Manufacturing Co., 
advocates a comprehensive federal firearms law, including the creation 
of a federal gun permit.  And he wants gun owners to be licensed, 
tested and subjected to mandatory safety training.
         These views have made him a pariah in the gun community.
         On gun-friendly web sites, there have been calls for a boycott of 
Colt's handguns and rifles.  "The actions of Colt's officials are 
detrimental to American-style freedoms and liberties!" wrote one 
recent contributor to the GunsSaveLives Internet Discussion List.
         In an interview at the headquarters of the 162-year-old company, 
Stewart said his views were based on the assumption that increased 
government regulation was inevitable.  "I'm just searching for a 
middle-of-the-road position, and that's why I've taken such a beating 
from others in the industry," he said.  "They want me to just go along 
with something that the public increasingly sees as an extreme view."
         For gun manufacturers and distributors, he said, federal 
regulation would be far easier to live with than separate laws for 
each state.  And licensing and testing of gun users, he said, is no 
more onerous, and no less reasonable, than licensing and testing of 
those who drive automobiles.
         "I'm trying to address the question of how do you operate the gun 
safely so that you don't injure somebody," he said. "It doesn't make 
sense to stake out a position that is perceived by the public to be 
anti-safety ...
         "I'm not a gun nut," Stewart said. "I'm not even a member of the 
NRA."
         More often than not, Stewart said, he supports the National Rifle 
Association's positions on issues.  But the NRA, according to chief 
executive officer Wayne LaPierre, has "never been in favor of a 
federal permit and never will be."
         Some of Stewart's critics say his gun-control proposals are 
motivated more to promote Colt than to enhance public safety.
         "I think there are many who feel, rightly or wrongly, he has 
staked out these positions to curry favor with police departments and 
with those in the federal government, who would [be able to] influence 
the success of their product," said Dave Tinker, publisher of 
Firearms Business, a trade publication.  Stewart denies such 
accusations, which were also made by the Coalition of New Jersey 
Sportsmen in a flyer distributed widely at the NRA convention in 
Philadelphia last month.
         But there is no question that Stewart has developed a business 
strategy intended more for insulating Colt from government regulations 
than fighting them.
         In a highly fragmented and competitive market that has been 
stagnant for five years, he hopes to capture an increased share of the 
law-enforcement market -- and ultimately the home-user market -- 
through so-called smart-gun technology while expanding military sales 
overseas.
         While Stewart sees himself as eminently reasonable, others in the 
gun industry depict him as a heretic.
         "He's definitely espousing views about our industry that are out 
of step with opinions held by manufacturers and gun owners, and it is 
a matter of great concern to us," said Georgia Nichols, vice president 
and general counsel of Connecticut-based O.F. Mossberg & Sons, which 
makes shotguns and other firearms.
         In May, Stewart resigned from the board of the American Shooting 
Sports Council, an Atlanta-based trade group, after the council 
attacked the Clinton administration's ban on imported assault weapons.
         What upset Stewart was that the council, in launching its attack, 
said that one reason to permit such imports was that they are no 
different from domestic products such as the AR-15, a semiautomatic 
rifle Colt makes.
         Stewart's declaration of independence from the rest of the 
industry came in December when he wrote a guest editorial in American 
Firearms Industry magazine.  While he attacked the antigun lobby, he 
also endorsed federal regulation.
         Strangely enough, his alienation from the rest of the industry had 
its first public manifestation two months earlier, when he appeared to 
be taking an anti-safety stance.
         There was a ceremony at the White House at which 10 gun executives 
told President Clinton they would voluntarily ship child-safe locks 
with their products.  Since then, 16 more gun-makers have signed on. 
But Stewart was not at the White House and has not signed on.
         "Why is it that everyone else feels that it's a good idea and he 
doesn't?" asked Richard Feldman, director of the American Shooting 
Sports Council, which organized the event. "We've given people what 
they need to help prevent someone, particularly a child, from 
negligently using the gun."
         Stewart, who called the White House announcement "a dog-and-pony 
show," said such locks are unreliable and give a false sense of 
security when used on a loaded gun.  He said he expects lawsuits when 
locked guns accidentally fire.
         The real way to prevent accidents, Stewart said, is the "smart 
gun," designed to prevent a gun from being fired by anyone but the 
intended operator.
         Stewart claims his company is ahead in developing such a gun, 
using a microchip worn on the shooter that will transmit a signal to a 
receiving chip inside the gun.
         One prototype has been tested with mixed results; a second will be 
available by the end of August, Stewart said.  If all goes well, the 
company will be ready to make the guns available to police departments 
for testing within two years, he said.
         Colt sees a big market in law enforcement; 16 percent of all 
shootings of police officers occur when their guns are grabbed out of 
their hands or holsters by criminals.  Currently, Colt has almost no 
share of the police market.
         "It's a technology that you can't ignore, and it has the potential 
not just to save a lot of police lives, but to safeguard weapons 
purchased for home use, keep them out of the hands of thieves or kids, 
people who shouldn't have them," said Paul Bolton, who heads the 
International Association of Chiefs of Police.
         Gun sales to police departments, usually at cost, do not create 
profits, but the prestige of being chosen as a law-enforcement weapon 
creates profitable sales in the commercial market, Stewart said.
         Why are others in the industry so distrustful of Stewart and so 
quick to question his motives?
         One reason is that Stewart, 56, is an outsider, according to 
Tinker, the publisher of Firearms Business.  Stewart became Colt's 
president in 1996, after 22 years at Chrysler and a working lifetime 
in the automobile industry.  He was brought in after the company had 
been in bankruptcy and had been purchased by a limited partnership 
headed by Donald Zilkha, a New York financier.
         Since then, Stewart said, a series of management reforms and cost 
controls have produced a profit of about $10 million on about $100 
million in sales.
         The key to sustained profitability, Stewart said, "will be whether 
we can insulate ourselves from the turmoil that will exist in the 
commercial gun market in the years to come."
         He said the fact that he's an outsider had helped him see 
gun-control issues more clearly than his competitors do.
         "I'm not dealing with the emotions of it," he said. "I can sit 
back and see where it's going.  The gun industry is where the 
automobile industry was in the 1960s -- the same clamor for safety 
regulations.  Seat belts.  Air bags.  We are going to go through a 
period of reform and legislation.  All I'm trying to do is survive and 
prosper in whatever direction this thing takes."
* This article appeared in the Philadelphia Inquirer on July 13, 1998 
and was forwarded to TLE from the  
GunsSaveLives Internet Discussion List 
by Bob Phipps [email protected].