ban-risk-entry
ATA Arms semi-automatic rifle line
Turkish semi-auto rifle line. Sibling to the Sarsilmaz / SAR USA entries from Batch 7. Same regulatory outcome, different brand.
ban-risk-entry
Turkish semi-auto rifle line. Sibling to the Sarsilmaz / SAR USA entries from Batch 7. Same regulatory outcome, different brand.
ban-risk-entry
Sauer's two-tier hunting platform. Sister-brand to Mauser and Blaser in the Lüke & Ortmeier Group. German engineering across the budget-to-premium hunting band.
ban-risk-entry
Mossberg-branded Howa 1500. The third "Howa receiver, different brand" entry on the Index alongside Howa and Weatherby Vanguard.
ban-risk-entry
Marlin's large-bore lever-action. .45-70 Government in a 7-pound carbine — the Canadian bear-defence and guide-gun standard for fifty years.
ban-risk-entry
Spectre's niche commercial semi-auto. Small Canadian market presence. Named in SOR/2024-248 alongside the major Italian flagship segment (Benelli, Beretta).
ban-risk-entry
Poland's other prohibited rifle. PM84 civilian-export carbine joins the Radom Grot (Batch 7) and the Lucznik BRS99 in Poland's complete OIC postmortem.
ban-risk-entry
A single collective entry for the entire WWII / Cold War semi-auto SMG reproduction segment. Twenty-plus platforms, six manufacturers, one regulatory outcome.
ban-risk-entry
The fifth Canadian-manufacturer entry on the postmortem set. Lockhart Tactical's Raven joins Kodiak, Black Creek Labs, Prairie Gun Works, Crusader Arms, Sterling Arms.
ban-risk-entry
The Sterling submachine gun's civilian semi-auto export. Standard British Armed Forces SMG 1953–1989. Distinctive side-magazine layout.
ban-risk-entry
Barrett's bolt-action .338 Lapua precision rifle. Named in SOR/2024-248 alongside the older M82 / M107 .50 BMG semi-auto family from SOR/2020-96.
ban-risk-entry
The Index's first Medium-band entry. Currently Non-restricted; the rubric flags it as structurally in the conversation. Medium ≠ "imminent ban."
ban-risk-entry
Steyr's premium-tier hunting bolt-action — separate division from the Steyr AUG military line. Austrian engineering at the top of the bolt-action ladder.