Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

3-D guns’ maker quits firm after arrest

- WILL WEISSERT

AUSTIN, Texas — An activist who garnered national attention for running a Texas company that sells blueprints for making untraceabl­e 3-D-printed guns has resigned from the firm he founded after being arrested on charges of having sex with an underage girl.

Cody Wilson, who was born in Little Rock, tendered his resignatio­n Friday evening to tend to “personal matters,” Paloma Heindorff, director of developmen­t for Austin-based Defense Distribute­d said at a Tuesday news conference. The company is at the center of a federal case in which several states sued to block it from posting plans to build 3-D-printed guns online.

Heindorff said she would be taking over Wilson’s duties as director and was a strong believer in the Second Amendment.

“We believe people have a right to have these files,” she said of plans for printing guns. “We believe in our right to be able to publish them.”

Wilson didn’t attend the news conference, and Heindorff refused to comment on the criminal charges against him. But she said she supported his decision to leave, adding: “Going forward, as it stands, he has no role in the company.”

Nineteen states and the District of Columbia had sued President Donald Trump’s administra­tion to dissolve a settlement it reached with Defense Distribute­d over allowing it to disseminat­e its designs for making a 3-D-printable gun. The lawsuit was backed mostly by Democratic state attorneys general who argued that such weapons could be used by criminals or terrorists.

A federal court in Seattle barred Wilson from posting the designs online for free last month. Instead, Wilson began selling them for any amount of money to U.S. customers through his website.

Heindorff said the company has had about 3,000 orders so far for blueprints and was still in the process of fulfilling those orders.

“No one missed a day at work,” she said. “We’re still shipping and we have no intention of stopping.”

Investigat­ors allege the 30-year-old Wilson met a 16-year-old girl through the website SugarDaddy­Meet. com. According to an affidavit, the girl said they met in the parking lot of an Austin coffee shop in August and then drove to a hotel.

The girl told investigat­ors that Wilson paid her $500 after they had sex and then dropped her off at a Whataburge­r restaurant.

Wilson was arrested in Taiwan and brought back to the U.S. over the weekend. He has since been freed on $150,000 bond.

“We are glad that Cody is back in Texas again where we can work with him on his case. That’s our focus right now,” Wilson’s attorney, Samy Khalil, said in a statement Sunday night.

Wilson, a self-described “crypto-anarchist,” has said “government­s should live in fear of their citizenry.”

But law enforcemen­t officials worry that the guns are easy to conceal and are untraceabl­e because there is no requiremen­t for the firearms to have serial numbers. Gun industry experts have said the printed guns are a modern method of legally assembling a firearm at home without serial numbers.

Heindorff said the company has used online fundraisin­g to collect about $400,000 for a legal defense fund as part of the ongoing federal case. But she also suggested she may not embrace such a high-profile national role in it as Wilson did.

“I’m a different person, I’m not trying to replace him as a character,” Heindorff said.

The Washington-based Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, which has been a vocal opponent of 3-D-printable guns, said of Wilson: “We doubt that his movement will die with his resignatio­n.”

“Because of his actions, 3-D-printed guns now pose a danger all over the world,” Brady Campaign co-presidents Avery Gardiner and Kris Brown said in a statement Tuesday. “The next Cody Wilson is merely waiting in the wings, and we will continue to do everything in our power to combat this threat until it is no more.”

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