Bryco to reopen under new name
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Deepa Bharath
A local company will start manufacturing guns again under a different
name.
Paul Jimenez, a former employee of Bryco Arms, which declared
bankruptcy last year, has registered the business under his own name
after successfully buying the company at a court-held auction in
Florida last week.
Jimenez registered the Costa Mesa business as Jimenez Arms on July
29, according to the city’s Business Licensing department. The plant,
located on Clinton Street, will continue to operate there.
Jimenez’s rival bidder was 17-year-old Brandon Maxfield, who was
paralyzed in 1994 after a family friend accidentally shot him while
trying to unload a .38-caliber Bryco handgun.
Brandon wanted to buy Bryco and get rid of about 75,000 guns that
were waiting to be assembled, his attorney Richard Ruggieri said.
But Brandon’s final bid of $505,000 fell short of the $510,000
offered by Jimenez, who made an initial bid of $150,000 to buy the
company. Brandon submitted a bid of $175,000, raised through his
website, https://www.brandonsarms.org. A Florida judge then ordered an
open auction of the company, which took place on Aug. 12.
Jimenez refused to comment on the purchase saying that he is
“still going through things.”
The money from the auction will be used to pay off the debtors and
Brandon, said Ned Nashban, the Florida attorney representing Bryco.
“Obviously, no one’s going to get all their money back,” he said.
“Bryco has nothing left.”
Nashban said Jimenez has offered to sell all the guns in Bryco’s
plant to Brandon.
“They’re outdated frames and are useless to anybody,” Nashban
said. “If [Brandon] wants to make a statement he can still buy them
from Mr. Jimenez and destroy them or whatever he wants to do.”
Bryco Arms filed for bankruptcy less than a month after an Oakland
jury held the company liable for Brandon’s shooting, saying that the
company manufactured a defective weapon. Attorneys convinced jurors
that Bryco’s guns have an inherent flaw because to unload them, a
user must first unlock the trigger lock.
On May 7, 2003, a jury awarded the teenager $50.9 million in
compensatory damages. Bryco has appealed that decision.
Bryco was one of the last remaining members of the notorious “ring
of fire,” a group of Los Angeles-based gun manufacturers that
produced small-caliber handguns. The company was owned by Bruce
Jennings, whose family owned most of the other companies that formed
the so-called ring. Jennings gave the Costa Mesa company to his wife,
Janice, as part of their divorce settlement.
Costa Mesa residents should give Jimenez a chance to prove
himself, said Randy Garell of the Grant Boys on Newport Boulevard,
which sells guns.
“Just because a company used to do business one way, it doesn’t
mean it’s going to be the same way under a new owner,” he said. “They
may change their product line. Every business should be allowed to
stand on its own merit.”
The Grant Boys carried some of Bryco’s products years ago but none
recently, Garell said.
If Jimenez Arms’ guns fit into its inventory, the store will
certainly consider buying from the local company, he said.
“It would save us freight,” Garell said. “And it’s always good to
support a local business.”
* DEEPA BHARATH is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at
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