News

When General Motors introduced the Chevrolet Beretta in 1987, the lukewarm-to-warm economically-minded coupe wore the name of ...
An accidentally shot man claimed Beretta and Bass Pro sold a defective handgun, but the Kansas Supreme Court ruled they're ...
The Kansas Supreme Court excused a gunmaker and gun dealer from lawsuit in a shooting that cost an athlete his leg.
Long on display at the NRA National Sporting Arms Museum in Springfield, Mo., Beretta’s impeccably built Rinascimento ...
Welcome to American Rifleman’s Gun Of The Week, and for this episode, we have a straight-pull bolt-action from Beretta to work with on the range. Watch our video above to see it in use on the range.
Bass Pro Outdoor World LLC and Beretta USA Corp. defeated a lawsuit seeking to hold the companies liable for an allegedly defective firearm that was mistakenly discharged.
Johnson’s lawyer said the gun lacked multiple safety features that would’ve prevented the shooting. He sued Beretta and Bass Pro Shops for compensation. The teammate had purchased a Beretta ...
Johnson sued Bass Pro and Beretta, claiming the handgun was defective because it lacked safety features that would have prevented the unintentional discharge of the gun. The court said Bass Pro ...
The suit contended gun manufacturer Beretta and gun retailer Bass Pro Shop should have marketed a firearm with safety features sufficient to prevent his injury. (Sherman Smith/Kansas Reflector) ...
On Friday, the Supreme Court overturned a decision by the Kansas Court of Appeals that would have allowed the shooting victim, Marquise Johnson, to sue gunmaker Beretta and gun seller Bass Pro ...