Gun violence prevention advocates question ammo machines in Alabama
By Sara Güven, Reflect Alabama Fellow, and Richard Banks
Standing between a coin-to-cash machine and a refrigerator of energy drinks, a new vending machine at a Fresh Value grocery store in Pell City, Alabama, offers something more than a quick snack or drink — bullets.
The machine is operated by American Rounds, a Texas-based company. To purchase ammunition, customers agree to terms and conditions on the machine’s large touchscreen, make their selection, and then verify their identity and age by inserting their ID and submitting to facial recognition.
American Rounds CEO Grant Magers says his company’s vending machines are safe. He told NPR recently the devices are 2,000-pound, triple-locked, double-walled steel boxes that operate indoors, and are monitored by security cameras.
He said they are the safest and most secure method of ammo retail sales on the market today.
Alabama is now one of at least four states where AI-powered vending machines sell ammunition. According to a spokesperson for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, it’s perfectly legal, but gun violence prevention advocates said that’s the problem.
“The thing that is shocking is that our federal laws with respect to ammunition sales are so weak in this country that something like this is possible,” said David Pacino, the legal director for Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.
That’s the organization former Arizona Congressperson Gabby Giffords formed after she and 18 other people were shot in 2011. Pacino added, with a vending machine, there’s virtually no way to stop someone prohibited from purchasing ammo from doing so, as long as they are of legal age.
“While it’s illegal for people with certain criminal histories or other disqualifying facts to buy ammunition, there’s no check to make sure that somebody is prohibited, doesn’t buy them,” Pacino said.
In most states, a store clerk selling ammo has the responsibility to stop a sale in certain situations. For instance, if a person is inebriated or seems mentally unstable.
“If you have a human being who is on the other side of that sale, they can have a responsibility and do have the responsibility to make sure at least some of the most egregious forms of misconduct, or the most egregious red flags, aren’t being met,” Pacino said.
Nick Suplina is the senior vice president for law and policy at Everytown for Gun Safety. He liked the technology American Rounds is using, just not on a vending machine.
“Innovations that make ammunition sales more secure, like facial recognition, age verification or potentially tracking serial sales are promising safety measures, but they belong in gun stores, not in the place where you buy your kids milk,” Suplina said.
Alabama Democratic State Representative Phillip Ensler, who has supported gun control bills, said he’s heard from constituents who are concerned about the vending machines.
“Residents feel that these machines send the wrong message and impose potential risks of access to ammunition for people who shouldn’t be able to obtain them,” Ensler said.
Until recently, though, customers didn’t seem to take to the idea of buying ammo in a grocery store.
“Before all this, I hadn’t even seen anybody really buying anything,” said Fresh Value’s co-manager Patrick Embry. “Since the publicity, people are picking it up now,”
Pacino, the legal director for Giffords, said the potential of someone buying ammo who shouldn’t from one of these machines is a huge liability.
“I am thankful and will count my blessings every dying day that I am not a lawyer or a counsel to a company that’s doing something like this. But if I was, I would be horrified by it,” Pacino said.
Italian fashion designer Valentino dies at 93
Garavani built one of the most recognizable luxury brands in the world. His clients included royalty, Hollywood stars, and first ladies.
Sheinbaum reassures Mexico after US military movements spark concern
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum quelled concerns on Monday about two recent movements of the U.S. military in the vicinity of Mexico that have the country on edge since the attack on Venezuela.
Trump says he’s pursuing Greenland after perceived Nobel Peace Prize snub
"Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize… I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace," Trump wrote in a message to the Norwegian Prime Minister.
Trump has rolled out many of the Project 2025 policies he once claimed ignorance about
Some of the 2025 policies that have been implemented include cracking down on immigration and dismantling the Department of Education.
U.S. lawmakers wrap reassurance tour in Denmark as tensions around Greenland grow
A bipartisan congressional delegation traveled to Denmark to try to deescalate rising tensions. Just as they were finishing, President Trump announced new tariffs on the country until it agrees to his plan of acquiring Greenland.
Can exercise and anti-inflammatories fend off aging? A study aims to find out
New research is underway to test whether a combination of high-intensity interval training and generic medicines can slow down aging and fend off age-related diseases. Here's how it might work.
