Whanganui Chronicle

First sweeping federal gun crime report in 20 years released

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The most expansive federal report in over two decades on guns and crime shows a shrinking turnaround between the time a gun was purchased and when it was recovered from a crime scene, indicating firearms bought legally are more quickly being used in crimes around the country.

It also documents a spike in the use of conversion devices that make a semiautoma­tic gun fire like a machine gun, along with the growing seizure of so-called ghost guns, privately made firearms that are hard to trace.

The report comes as the nation grapples with a rise in violent crime, particular­ly from guns.

Much of the data from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives report hasn’t been widely available before, and its release is aimed at helping police and policy makers reduce gun violence, said director Steve Dettelbach. “Informatio­n is power,” he said.

The report shows 54 per cent of guns that police recovered in crime scenes in 2021 had been purchased within three years, a double-digit increase since 2019. The quicker turnaround can indicate illegal gun traffickin­g or a straw purchase — when someone who can legally purchase a gun buys one to sell it to someone who can’t legally poses guns. The increase was driven largely by guns bought less than a year before, it said.

The number of new guns overall in the US grew significan­tly during that time as gun sales shattered records during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Most guns used in crimes changed hands since their purchase, the report states. It also found what Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco called an epidemic of stolen guns: more than 1.07 million firearms were reported stolen between 2017 and 2021. Almost all of those, 96 per cent, were from private individual­s.

The report also documents a more than five-fold increase in the number of devices that convert a legal semiautoma­tic weapon into an illegal fully automatic one. Between 2012 and 2016, the ATF retrieved 814 of those, but that number jumped to 5414 during the five-year period documented in the report.

A conversion device was used in a mass shooting that left six people dead and 12 wounded in Sacramento last April in what officers described as a shootout between rival gangs.

The document also traces the rise of “ghost guns”, privately made firearms without serial numbers that have increasing­ly been turning up at crime scenes around the nation.

The ATF traced more than 19,000 privately made firearms in 2021, more than double the year before.

The report came after Attorney General Merrick Garland told the ATF to produce the first comprehens­ive study of criminal gun traffickin­g in more than 20 years.

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