AP photo
Rick Brand, chief operating officer of Amendment II, holds a children's backpack, left, and anti-ballistic insert during a demonstration at the company's manufacturing facility in Salt Lake City Wednesday. Anxious parents reeling after the Connecticut school shooting are fueling sales of armored backpacks for children, as firearms enthusiasts stock up on rifles nationwide amid fears of imminent gun control measures. At Amendment II, sales of children backpacks and armored inserts are up 300 percent.
Read the article: Armor, guns selling fast
