Gregory Kielma • May 2, 2026

Lake City Strike Enters Week Three—Here’s What It Means

Lake City Strike Enters Week Three—Here’s What It Means

Scott Witner - April 24, 2026 

 

If you’ve bought 5.56 lately, or even just window-shopped, you’ve probably noticed prices creeping in the wrong direction. There’s a reason for that, and it’s parked outside a chain-link fence in Independence, Missouri.


The Lake City Army Ammunition Plant — the single largest producer of small-arms ammunition for the U.S. military, and the source of an estimated 30% of the .223/5.56 sold on the American civilian market — has been mostly idle since April 4.


Roughly 1,350 members of IAM Local 778 walked off the job after overwhelmingly rejecting Olin Winchester’s contract offer, and as of this week, the strike has rolled into its third week with no end in sight.


Lake City matters to gun owners. Olin Winchester runs Lake City. The workers making the brass with the “LC” headstamp you’ve been picking up off the range floor for years are now standing on a picket line. When the plant slows down or shuts down, your ammo gets more expensive.


What the Workers Are Actually Asking For

Strip away the press releases, and the demands are pretty pedestrian: a raise, paid sick leave, and an end to mandatory overtime that workers say has become a way of life rather than an exception.


Vaughn Cochran, who’s been at Lake City for about a decade, told reporters that overtime started as optional and turned into 60-hour mandatory weeks. Take a day off? You still owe the 60. He says he’s worked 13 days in a row, doing 13 straight 12-hour shifts. Travis Bradford, with nearly 20 years on the line, said he’s been on that schedule for 3½ years and has missed family vacations because of it.


The plant runs around the clock, cranking out 5.56mm, 7.62mm, .50 BMG, .300 Win Mag, 9mm, and .223 Remington, and the workers are asking not to be ground into hamburger doing it.


The union also points out, fairly, in our view, that Olin has received more than $53 million in state and local subsidies since 2001, plus another $81 million in loans and guarantees. Winchester’s segment grew sales by $41 million in 2025 and posted $67.7 million in net income, with a $1.43 billion contractual backlog, of which 81% is supposed to be filled in 2026.


What Olin Winchester Says

Olin’s corporate response has been short and to the point. The company told local media it’s “disappointed” the union didn’t ratify the offer, and that the Lake City facility is operating “safely and reliably” with the workers who crossed the picket line.

That’s PR-speak. Behind it, the union claims production has slowed to a crawl, and even outlets sympathetic to management acknowledge that the plant is mostly halted. You can’t replace 1,350 trained machinists with a press release.


Why Civilian Shooters Should Care

Here’s where it gets relevant to your wallet.


Lake City is government-owned, contractor-operated. Olin Winchester runs it under contract with the Army, and a long-standing arrangement allows Winchester to sell excess production — anything over and above military requirements — to the civilian market. That’s where a huge chunk of the M193 and M855 “green tip” you see on retailer shelves comes from. Headstamped LC. Bulk pricing. The bedrock of cheap AR-15 plinking ammo in this country.


When the plant stops, that supply line stops with it.

This isn’t the first time Lake City’s commercial output has been threatened. We’ve covered the Biden administration’s push to cut off civilian sales of M855, the coalition of 20 blue-state AGs who tried to formalize that shutdown, and the 50 congressmen who called it a “politically sanctioned semi-auto rifle ban”. The political fight over Lake City’s commercial role isn’t going anywhere — and now there’s a labor fight stacked on top of it.


Bulk 5.56 was retailing roughly $0.50 to $0.71 per round before the strike. Major brands under The Kinetic Group umbrella had already announced price increases that took effect April 1 — so the strike landed right on top of an already-rising market. Retailers like Target Sports USA have been emailing customers, warning that the spring buying window is closing fast. Bulk Winchester M193 and M855 SKUs are already showing inventory pressure.


This isn’t 2020-style toilet paper aisle panic, at least not yet. Other manufacturers can ramp production if the strike drags on, and as we noted in our coverage of the coming gunpowder squeeze, the underlying ammunition supply chain has been wobbling for a while. But .223/5.56 specifically is exposed in a way that other rounds aren’t, because no other single facility comes close to Lake City’s volume.


The Taft-Hartley Question

There’s a wildcard in this deck. Under Section 206 of the Taft-Hartley Act, the President can seek a federal court order halting a strike on national security grounds. With Lake City being the primary small-arms supplier to the Army, Air Force, and Marines — plus NATO allies — and with the Army already moving forward on the next-generation 6.8mm production line at the same site, there’s a colorable argument that this strike imperils military readiness.


So far, the White House has said nothing. Whether the administration steps in could be one of the bigger variables in how this resolves. And even if it did, it’s not clear the workers would be required to produce anything beyond strict military needs — meaning the civilian market might still get squeezed.


What This Means If You Shoot

The smart play right now is strategic restocking, not panic buying. If you were planning to top off your 5.56 stash this spring anyway, doing it sooner rather than later is rational. Pretending the market isn’t moving is not. But emptying your bank account on $0.75/round bulk because of online doom-posting is how you end up paying $0.60/round for M193 and feeling stupid when the plant restarts and prices settle.


Watch the Kinetic Group brands and Winchester white-box closely — those are the SKUs most directly tied to Lake City output. Federal, CCI, Speer, and Remington run on different lines and shouldn’t be hit the same way, though the whole market tends to rise together when one major player stumbles.


7.62 NATO and .50 BMG shooters should also pay attention. Lake City is a major source for both. .50 BMG in particular has a thin civilian supply on a good day.


Where This Lands

The IAM and Olin Winchester have met a couple of times since the walkout. Both sides say they want to negotiate. Neither has moved meaningfully on wages, sick leave, or the overtime question that started this thing.


The workers say they’ll stay out “one day longer than the company.” Olin says it’s operating fine without them. Somewhere between those two positions is a contract that the rest of us — military, allies, and yes, civilian gun owners — have a stake in seeing signed.The body content of your post goes here. To edit this text, click on it and delete this default text and start typing your own or paste your own from a different source.

By Gregory Kielma May 2, 2026
Convicted Felon Sentenced to 87 Months in Trafficking Nine Firearms, Including to Buyer Who Said He Was ‘At War’ Thursday, April 30, 2026 U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Columbia WASHINGTON - Brandon Smith, 34, a previously convicted felon residing in the District of Columbia, was sentenced today in U.S. District Court to 87 months in prison for conspiring to traffic at least nine firearms to a prohibited buyer over the course of six months, announced U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro. “Brandon Smith was already on supervised probation for a violent felony when he chose to traffic firearms, and he continued even after being told the buyer intended to use them for violence,” said U.S. Attorney Pirro. “Over the course of six months, he arranged the sale of at least nine guns—including one with an obliterated serial number—to a prohibited individual. This was not a momentary lapse in judgment, but a sustained and deliberate effort to arm someone who could not legally possess firearms. My office remains committed to holding accountable those who endanger our communities by trafficking illegal guns.” On Jan. 9, 2026, Smith pleaded guilty before Judge Howell to conspiracy to commit trafficking in firearms. In addition to the 87-month prison term, Judge Howell ordered Smith to serve three years of supervised release. Federal prosecutors had requested a 108-month prison term. According to court papers, beginning in November 2023, ATF opened an investigation after a confidential source reported that Smith, then on supervised probation for a violent felony, was actively advertising firearms for sale by texting photographs of guns to prospective buyers, including individuals with prior felony convictions. During the next six months, Smith sold or arranged the sale of nine firearms to a buyer on six separate occasions. During the transactions, Smith sold his own personal carry firearm on multiple occasions when a supplier failed to deliver, then purchased a replacement for himself afterward. In early January 2024, as Smith and the buyer discussed an upcoming transaction, the buyer told Smith he needed the firearms because he was “at war” after his cousin had been killed. Smith proceeded with the sale. The buyer had also told Smith he was serving a criminal justice sentence at the time of the transactions. Smith acknowledged that he, too, was “on papers.” Smith arranged a total of six transactions from Nov. 30, 2023, through May 30, 2024, resulting in the sale of nine firearms. At least one of the firearms had its serial number obliterated. On Oct. 26, 2024, MPD officers conducted a traffic stop on the 1600 block of 16th Street SE and found Smith in the front passenger seat of a parked vehicle. Officers observed open containers of alcohol and discovered a satchel at his feet. Inside the satchel, in plain view, was a loaded Glock Model 19X 9mm handgun with a round in the chamber and 16 additional rounds in the magazine. The bag also contained a bank card and government-issued identification in Smith’s name. Smith has prior convictions for Simple Assault (2011), Attempted Robbery (2013), and Robbery and Possession of a Firearm during a Crime of Violence (2016), for which he was sentenced to five years in prison. He was serving a term of supervised probation from the 2016 conviction at the time of the firearms trafficking conspiracy. This investigation was conducted by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Washington Field Office, and the Metropolitan Police Department. The matter was prosecuted by Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Brendan M. Horan. Convicted Felon Sentenced to 87 Months in Trafficking
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There is no parole in the federal system. “High-capacity firearms and ammunition, including a machinegun, were removed from the streets of Macon and the defendants were held accountable for their crimes as a result of this ATF-led investigation,” said U.S. Attorney William R. “Will” Keyes. “Our office is working in close partnership with local, state and federal authorities to uphold the law and make every community we serve safer.” “ATF remains committed to identifying and dismantling criminal networks trafficking firearms that fuel violent crime in our communities,” said ATF Resident Agent in Charge Robert W. Davis. “This case underscores our relentless focus on repeat offenders who illegally sell guns and narcotics, putting lives at risk. We will continue working alongside our law enforcement partners to ensure those who threaten public safety are held accountable.” According to court documents and statements in court, ATF agents learned in March 2024 that Alexander, a convicted felon, was illegally selling firearms and narcotics in Macon and opened an investigation. Between April 2024 and April 2025, Alexander was recorded carrying out multiple illegal sales of guns and drugs at locations around Macon, including within 1,000 feet of Mercer University’s campus on April 23, 2024. During that transaction, Alexander distributed over 27 grams of cocaine to an individual in the parking lot of Towne Place Suites, near Mercer University’s campus. Alexander sold over 40 grams of cocaine at different times earlier that month. On May 22, 2024, an individual who had previously told Alexander that he was a convicted felon and that he wanted a gun for drug trafficking, purchased a 9mm pistol with a magazine and three rounds of ammunition during a transaction arranged by Alexander at his Macon home. The following day, an individual bought a loaded 9mm pistol from an associate of Alexander’s, with Alexander receiving a “finder’s fee” for arranging the sale. On September 12, 2024, an individual bought a 9mm pistol in a transaction arranged by Alexander at a gas station in Macon. Later that day, the individual bought a .38 special revolver and over 15 grams of methamphetamine from Alexander at an apartment complex in Macon. On April 23, 2025, Alexander arranged a sale of firearms and methamphetamine to an individual in a restaurant parking lot in Macon. During the transaction, Alexander sold over 80 grams of methamphetamine, and Cato sold three firearms to the individual, including a machinegun. On May 20, 2025, Cato sold seven firearms and a 50-round drum magazine to an individual in a restaurant parking lot in Macon. On June 26, 2025, Thorpe drove Cato to a parking lot in Macon, carrying a dozen firearms, including a Glock switch, which converts a semi-automatic pistol into a machinegun. Cato intended to sell the firearms to an individual. The individual purchased all the firearms from Cato. On July 9, 2025, Cato arrived at a parking lot in Macon to sell a convicted felon firearms and promethazine, a sedative. As ATF agents surrounded Cato’s car, Cato ran into oncoming traffic on Riverside Drive. The agents soon caught and arrested him. Inside Cato’s car were four firearms, two of which had been reported stolen, and 192 ounces of promethazine. In all, ATF seized 30 firearms. Cato is responsible for trafficking 26 firearms; of those 26 firearms, Thorpe is responsible for possessing 12 of them. ATF seized four illegal firearms from Alexander. The firearms included a machinegun, conversion devices, and stolen guns. In addition, ATF seized more than 67 grams of cocaine and more than 100 grams of methamphetamine from Alexander, and 192 ounces of promethazine from Cato. Alexander and Thorpe each have previous felony convictions. Thorpe also had an active warrant from another county at the time of his arrest. It is illegal for a convicted felon to possess a firearm. This case is part of Operation Take Back America, a nationwide initiative that marshals the full resources of the Department of Justice to repel the invasion of illegal immigration, achieve the total elimination of cartels and transnational criminal organizations and protect our communities from the perpetrators of violent crime. The case was investigated by ATF. Assistant U.S. Attorney Hannah Couch is prosecuting these cases for the Government. Updated April 24, 2026