Boston Herald

SERIAL UNSERIALIZ­ED FINDS

Recovery of ghost guns up 280% since tracking began, Hub police say

- By Matthew Medsger

Since tracking began in 2019, Boston has seen a 280% increase in the number of so-called “ghost guns” recovered during the course of criminal investigat­ions, reflecting a national trend highlighte­d by President Biden last week.

“Since statistics have been tracked, the numbers have been going up. All firearms are a concern for the department, but these are all connected to criminal cases,” officer Andrew Watson, a Boston Police spokespers­on, told the Herald.

In 2019, the city recovered 15 unserializ­ed or homemade weapons, Watson said. The next year it was 23. Last year the number jumped to 58. So far in 2022 there have been 16 recovered, he said, meaning the department is on track for another year with dozens of such firearms confiscate­d.

This isn’t just a Boston or even a Massachuse­tts problem, according to Norwood Police Chief William Brooks.

“So-called ghost guns, or in law enforcemen­t known as unserializ­ed firearms or privately made firearms, have been growing in popularity,” Brooks said in an emailed statement.

Brooks, a board member of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Chiefs of Police and the former president of the Massachuse­tts Chiefs of Police Associatio­n, was in Washington, D.C., last week when Biden announced his administra­tion would crack down on the proliferat­ion of unserializ­ed firearms with new regulation­s.

“Last year alone, there were approximat­ely 20,000 suspected ghost guns reported to ATF as having been recovered by law enforcemen­t in criminal investigat­ions — a ten-fold increase from 2016,” the Biden administra­tion said in a release.

Brooks said the problem isn’t legal gun owners — or even homemade firearms — but the ability for criminals to easily come into possession of them.

“Obviously, those bought and assembled by hobbyists or firearm enthusiast­s are not the problem. The problem is that people who are not permitted by law to possess firearms can purchase unserializ­ed parts online and assemble a firearm, or can make the parts that would have been serialized using a 3D printer,” Brooks said.

A spokespers­on for the Massachuse­tts State Police said the department does not track socalled ghost guns but has been recovering more and more of them as they become more widely available.

In July of 2019, State Police arrested a Springfiel­d man with a gun they said was manufactur­ed illegally. In February of 2021, troopers in Boston found another after an illegal window tint stop.

The next month, staties arrested a Randolph man with two — one was silenced. In April of 2021, a man was arrested in Lawrence with another, State Police said.

In July of 2021, a Lowell man was found with two such weapons and a third with an obliterate­d serial number, State Police said. In August of 2021, staties stopped a Springfiel­d man in Chicopee and four homemade guns — and the parts for a fifth — were found. This February, a Worcester man was found with two during a drug bust, police said.

Jim Wallace, executive director of the Gun Owners’ Action League, said that the move to crack down on ghost guns is nothing more than the politics of panic.

“They get the public so upset about serial number — but those don’t mean anything. Mass. has been registerin­g handguns for 100 years — how many crimes have been solved with that database of serial numbers? They have the public so scared of something that is meaningles­s actually,” Wallace said.

“The problem is when the gun is in the hands of a criminal, not that it’s a ‘ghost gun.’ They made up a term to get the public scared about something that’s not a problem,” he said.

 ?? Afp photo / burEau of aLcohoL, tobacco, firEarMs aNd ExpLosivEs ?? IN THE WRONG HANDS: A handout picture shows a complete kit of a ghost gun.
Afp photo / burEau of aLcohoL, tobacco, firEarMs aNd ExpLosivEs IN THE WRONG HANDS: A handout picture shows a complete kit of a ghost gun.

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