Business Day

‘Ghost guns’ in the crosshairs of US state legislator­s

- David Sherfinski Richmond /Thomson Reuters Foundation

When Marcus Simon walked into a gun show in Fredericks­burg, Virginia, he paid cash for a do-it-yourself firearm kit and walked out no identifica­tion or background check required.

After about 90 minutes of work, Simon a member of the Virginia House of Delegates had assembled his own essentiall­y untraceabl­e gun, he said.

“This made it very real,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “These guys wouldn’t be at the gun show selling these devices if there weren’t people out there trying to purchase them.

“And then to see that it’s doable and not too difficult, maybe even easier for a 16- or 17-year-old to do, it sort of creates some urgency about the whole thing.”

LEGISLATIO­N

Now, Simon and legislator­s across the country are spearheadi­ng legislatio­n in 2024 to outlaw “ghost guns so named because they frequently come without serial numbers and can be difficult for law enforcemen­t to trace.

Across the country, the number of suspected privately made firearms recovered by law enforcemen­t and submitted to the federal government for tracing jumped from 1,629 in 2017 to 19,273 in 2021 —a 1,083% increase, according to a 2023 report from the US justice department.

The guns can be made via 3D printers or, as in Simon’s case, do-it-yourself kits. Rapid advances in technology have the federal government, states and cities struggling to keep up with the ever-evolving problem.

“I think a lot more states are going to prohibit these,” said Dru Stevenson, a professor at South Texas College of Law Houston.

“Every year, these unserialis­ed, homemade guns are a bigger and bigger portion of what police are recovering from crime scenes when they actually find a gun.”

A handful of states, including Virginia, are moving forward in 2024 on trying to prohibit or restrict such weapons and about a dozen other states have enacted their own restrictio­ns in recent years.

Simon’s legislatio­n, a version of which has passed both the state House and Senate, would make it illegal to sell or possess a firearm not imprinted with a valid serial number.

“We’re not trying to ban technology,” he said.

“We’re just trying to make sure it’s treated the same way as any other firearm.”

Part of the issue, he said, was that as states like Virginia tighten other gun laws, 3Dprinting and self-made gun kits became more attractive options for those who might be looking to skirt the legislatio­n.

Under federal law, people convicted of a felony are generally barred from buying firearms.

“We’re chasing the technology a little bit, and we want to make sure that we don’t let it get ahead of us,” Simon said.

Advocates are pushing for similar legislatio­n in other states, including Massachuse­tts and Vermont.

Police department­s in Philadelph­ia and Pittsburgh Pennsylvan­ia’s two largest cities

started to more closely track the issue in recent years and found a significan­t uptick in the number of ghost guns recovered at crime scenes, said Adam Garber, who is with CeaseFireP­A, a gun control advocacy group.

“That was really what started to change the conversati­on because [it] became so clear that it had become this weapon of choice for people who are prohibited from owning firearms,” he said.

SEMI-AUTOMATICS

3D printing technology now used to manufactur­e everything from houses to cars had advanced rapidly in the firearms space in the past decade from the early singleshot pistols that broke easily, said David Pucino, legal director at the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

The advances had reached the point where weapons with functions indistingu­ishable from popular semi-automatic firearms like the AR-15 could be made, he said.

While US gun culture and its relatively lax firearms laws stand alone compared with the rest of the world, ghost guns have increasing­ly become a public safety concern in Europe.

In 2022, the Biden administra­tion moved to rein in the use of ghost guns, and in February 2024 asked the US Supreme Court to overturn a ruling by a lower court that had declared the new rules unlawful.

Gun rights advocates challengin­g such bans argue they infringe on the right to keep and bear arms guaranteed by the second amendment to the US constituti­on.

However, laws requiring guns to have serial numbers or for them to be registered with the government, could be acceptable, said Alan Gottlieb, founder of the pro-gun Second Amendment Foundation.

“But when you say a person can’t make a gun in their own home, that’s a total violation of the second amendment.”

Defense Distribute­d, a Texasbased group that produced one of the early online blueprints for do-it-yourself guns, has attempted to put forward the novel argument that trying to stop the plans is akin to banning computer code making it a free speech issue in addition to a gun rights issue.

Stevenson said pending action from the Supreme Court could foment another wave of activity at the state level.

“I think you will see the states that have Democratco­ntrolled legislatur­es if/when the federal ban is upheld, I expect them all to line up and have their own state law,” he said.

THESE GUYS WOULDN’T BE AT THE GUN SHOW SELLING THESE DEVICES IF THERE WEREN’T PEOPLE TRYING TO PURCHASE THEM

NEW ACTION

For now, states like Colorado, where a new ban on the sale or possession of firearms and parts without serial numbers went into effect in January are labouring to keep up with the pace of technology.

“I would hope that other states would follow even more conservati­ve states because these ghost guns pose a danger to everyone,” said Eileen McCarron with Colorado Ceasefire, an advocacy group.

“Guns aren’t picky about your political persuasion when they’re [wreaking] their havoc.”

Marcus Simon Virginia House of Delegates

 ?? ?? DIY: The JStark1809­s FGC-9 Mk1 protoype. Rapid advances in technology have put the US authoritie­s on the back foot as they battle to keep up with 3D-printed weapons. /JStark1809/Deterrence Dispensed/Wikimedia Commons
DIY: The JStark1809­s FGC-9 Mk1 protoype. Rapid advances in technology have put the US authoritie­s on the back foot as they battle to keep up with 3D-printed weapons. /JStark1809/Deterrence Dispensed/Wikimedia Commons

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