[h=3][/h]  
 
  
 S & W K-22. 
 
 
 In March 2000 Smith & Wesson was the only major gun manufacturer to sign an agreement with the 
Clinton Administration.[SUP]
[6][/SUP]  The company agreed to numerous safety and design standards as well as  limits on the sale and distribution of its products. Gun clubs and gun  rights groups responded to this agreement by initiating large-scale 
boycotts of Smith & Wesson by refusing to buy their new products and flooding the firearms market with used S&W guns.[SUP]
[6][/SUP][SUP]
[7][/SUP][SUP]
[8][/SUP] After a 40% sales slide,[SUP]
[9][/SUP] the sales impact from the boycotts led Smith & Wesson to suspend manufacturing at two plants.[SUP]
[10][/SUP]  The success of the boycott led to a Federal Trade Commission antitrust  investigation's being initiated under the Clinton administration,[SUP]
[8][/SUP] targeting gun dealers and gun rights groups, which was subsequently dropped in 2003.[SUP]
[11][/SUP]  This agreement signed by Tomkins PLC ended with the sale of Smith &  Wesson to the Saf-T-Hammer Corporation. The new company (Smith and  Wesson Holding Corporation), which publicly renounced the agreement, was  received positively by the firearms community.[SUP]
[12][/SUP]
 [h=3]Acquisition by Saf-T-Hammer[/h] On 11 May 2001, Saf-T-Hammer Corporation acquired Smith & Wesson  Corp. from Tomkins PLC for US$15 million, a fraction of the  US$112 million originally paid by Tomkins. Saf-T-Hammer assumed  US$30 million in debt, bringing the total purchase price to  US$45 million.[SUP]
[13][/SUP][SUP]
[14][/SUP]  Saf-T-Hammer, a manufacturer of gun locks and other firearms safety  products, purchased the company with the intention of incorporating its  line of security products into all Smith & Wesson firearms in  compliance with the 2000 agreement.
 The acquisition of Smith & Wesson was chiefly brokered by  Saf-T-Hammer President Bob Scott, who had left Smith & Wesson in  1999 because of a disagreement with Tomkins’ policies. After the  purchase, Scott became the president of Smith & Wesson to guide the  157-year-old company back to its former standing in the market.[SUP]
[9][/SUP]
 On 15 February 2002, the name of the newly formed entity was changed to Smith & Wesson Holding Corporation.