Qatar Tribune

Illegal Machine Gun Converters Are On The Rise, Putting Officers’ Lives At Risk

- STEVEN DETTELBACH (Steven Dettelbach is director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives)

THIS week, tens of thousands of police officers, deputies, troopers and agents are gathering in our nation’s capital to commemorat­e Police Week and honor those who have made the ultimate sacrifice. This year, 556 names have been etched into the National Law Enforcemen­t Officers Memorial Wall, a solemn reminder of the real dangers our nation’s law enforcemen­t officers face every day.

Violent crime in our communitie­s affects all of us, and the danger lands heavily on the shoulders of law enforcemen­t officers who bravely run toward gunfire. Over the last decade, many police department­s, sheriffs’ offices and federal law enforcemen­t agencies have faced a sharp decline in recruitmen­t and retention, all while the destructiv­e capacity of weapons in the hands of violent criminals has grown. Fewer officers are facing greater gunfire.

The Officer Down Memorial Page reports that last year, 64 officers were killed by gunfire. So far this year, 19 officers have died. These brave men and women risk their lives every day. And they are increasing­ly outgunned by the weaponry they face.

Look at just a few examples. In Houston in September 2021, one officer was killed and another injured while executing a search warrant. The suspect opened fire with a pistol that had been illegally converted to a machine gun.

In January, a police chief in Allegheny County, Pennsylvan­ia, was fatally shot in the head during the pursuit of a suspect wanted on a probation violation. Law enforcemen­t officers recovered five firearms from the deceased suspect, including one illegally modified to fire as a machine gun. In January 2022, three Houston police officers were injured in a shootout with a man whose pistol

had also been illegally converted to fire as a fully automatic.

Owning new machine guns has been illegal for decades in the United States. Conversion devices, which go by many names, including “glock switches” or “auto sears,” and items sometimes known as “forced reset triggers,” can turn a legal firearm into an illegal fully automatic weapon capable of firing as many as 800 or more bullets per minute.

Yet, every law enforcemen­t leader with whom I speak warns that machine gun conversion devices are everywhere. The numbers back that up: A recent report by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives shows that the number of conversion devices that law enforcemen­t reported recovering increased by 570% between 2017 and 2021.

When conversion devices are attached to a pistol or a rifle, they also become difficult to control when firing, potentiall­y resulting in more random loss of life for civilians as well. And when these devices are combined with high-capacity magazines — which most states do not restrict — a conversion device can help someone create a massive killing machine in moments.

For the ATF, addressing this issue is a priority. Together with other components of the Department of Justice, we are enforcing current laws to take illegal machine guns off the street, where they are a threat to law enforcemen­t personnel and civilians.

Recently, a federal judge temporaril­y enjoined a seller of machine gun conversion devices from selling products that the ATF had told the manufactur­er were illegal. Following apprehensi­ons of illegal machine guns, prosecutor­s are bringing cases and seeking stiff penalties for illegally making and possessing machine guns, including in a Mississipp­i case in which a federal judge just imposed a 14-year prison sentence on a man who was 3D-printing conversion devices.

The current proliferat­ion of conversion­s devices to circumvent the law not only endangers the public but also jeopardize­s the lives of our nation’s law enforcemen­t officers who are risking their lives for us.

While we pay our respects to the fallen this week, let’s also honor their colleagues, who continue to risk their lives even after losing their friends and partners. And let’s recognize all those in law enforcemen­t who bear witness to the horrors of gun violence. Remember the officers, deputies, troopers and agents who respond to a movie theater, mall or church where multiple people have been gunned down; the cops who run into an elementary school, while taking gunfire, to find children brutally killed. The police risk their lives every day on the streets of this nation — mostly out of the spotlight. They deserve our constant thanks.

Better yet, let’s not just honor and recognize them — let’s also do better at protecting them. By honoring them, we encourage more young people to join this honorable profession. By protecting them from machinegun fire, we make sure that they will have long and safer careers doing good for the benefit of our communitie­s and our nation.

 ?? ?? ATF Director Steven M Dettelbach speaks as he updates US Attorney General Merrick Garland (not pictured) on the progress of the launch of the department’s regional firearms traffickin­g strike forces to address violent crimes, at the Department of Justice in Washington DC.
ATF Director Steven M Dettelbach speaks as he updates US Attorney General Merrick Garland (not pictured) on the progress of the launch of the department’s regional firearms traffickin­g strike forces to address violent crimes, at the Department of Justice in Washington DC.

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