As Halloween approaches, New York Attorney General Letitia James issued a consumer alert reminding businesses and online retailers that they cannot sell realistic-looking toy guns. New York law ...
Walmart agreed to pay a small fine and promised to ensure its third-party resellers are unable to sell realistic-looking toy guns to buyers in New York after an investigation by the office of state ...
Wal-Mart, Sears and Amazon are among a group of retailers that have agreed to keep realistic-looking toy guns off their store shelves in New York as part of settlements. The New York Times is ...
Which toy revolvers are best? Despite being a very old firearm design, the revolver is still a popular template among the makers of toy guns. Revolver-style dart guns are fun items for kids who enjoy ...
Even toy guns can get Walmart in trouble in New York. Attorney General Letitia James says the retail giant is paying a fine for shipping “realistic-looking” toy guns to the state. Ms. James says ...
ALBANY, N.Y. (WSTM) — New York State Attorney General Letitia James has issued a consumer alert, warning companies not to sell realistic toy guns ahead of Halloween. New York law prohibits retailers ...
If passed, New Jersey will join a number of states nationwide who have already enacted similar bans on realistic toy weapons. Democrats in New Jersey want to prohibit ...
Eliseo Way, who complained, thought of Tamir Rice when he complained. Multiple toy guns have been pulled from a Florida convenience store after a concerned customer complained they looked too ...
Monday, the last day of summer vacation, a group of teenage boys were in a field in Briargate playing with their air soft pellet rifles when a handful of cops surrounded them. One officer drew his ...
From Texas Standard: In 2014, a Cleveland police officer killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice, who was playing at a park with a toy gun – a gun that police thought was real. In the intervening years, police ...
Toy guns that look real should no longer be sold in New York. NPR's Joel Rose reports that retailers who were selling realistic-looking toy guns have agreed to halt their sales of the product.