Executive Protection is the 2001 sequel to the Swedish action film Zero Tolerance. In this installment, Johan Falk (Jakob Eklund) has been assigned to a desk job, as a punishment for his actions on a previous assignment. When one of his oldest friends turns up saying he's in danger, Falk decides to quit his job as a cop. He joins a private security company, to keep his friend or his family from getting killed.
The following firearms can be seen in the film Executive Protection:
One of the henchmen employed by Nikolaus Lehman (Christoph M. Ohrt) carries a Beretta 950 Jetfire as his sidearm. He most notably wields it during the assault on Persson's mansion. He also uses it to wound Ralf (Örjan Landström) near the climax. During the assault, the Jetfire appears suppressed. The henchman later passes the gun onto Lehman, and he uses it in the climax.
One of Lehman's henchmen uses a suppressed Heckler & Koch MP5A3 throughout the whole film. It is most notably seen during the assault on the mansion. Pernilla, Falk, and Rolf also use regular MP5A3s with Aimpoint red dot sights and tactical lights during the climax.
One of the German criminals working for Lehman uses a suppressed Swedish Carl Gustav M/45 throughout the film. He is most notably seen using it during the assault on the Persson's mansion.
Another one of Lehman's henchmen uses a suppressed Czech Sa. 24 submachine gun throughout the film, most notably during the attack on the mansion. He also uses it to kill the vigilante committee later on in the film.
The blonde henchman employed by Lehman uses an unknown revolver as a last ditch effort to kill Lehman. He is shot down before he can, though. The revolver's appearance is very brief.