Chattanooga Times Free Press

Justice Dept. rule would aim to crack down on ‘ghost guns’

- BY MICHAEL BALSAMO

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department on Friday released a proposed rule that would broaden the definition of a firearm, requiring some gun-making kits to include a serial number as the Biden administra­tion moves forward to combat so-called “ghost guns.”

It comes several weeks after President Joe Biden promised a crackdown on “ghost guns,” homemade firearms that lack serial numbers used to trace them and are often purchased without a background check.

For years, federal and local law enforcemen­t officials have been sounding the alarm about what they say is a loophole in federal firearms law, allowing people who are generally prohibited from owning guns to obtain them by making the weapons themselves. Ghost guns have increasing­ly been turning up at crime scenes and being purchased from gang members and other criminals by undercover federal Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agents.

The Justice Department estimates that more than 23,000 weapons without serial numbers were seized by law enforcemen­t from 2016 to 2020 and were identified in connection with 325 homicides or attempted homicides.

It’s legal to build a gun in a home or a workshop, and advances in 3-D printing and milling have made it easier to do so. Readymade kits can be purchased for a few hundred dollars online without the kind of background check required for traditiona­l gun purchases.

But under the proposed rule, retailers would be required to run background checks before selling some of those kits that contain the parts necessary for someone to readily make a gun at home.

The rule sets forth several factors to determine whether the unfinished receivers could be easily convertibl­e into a finished firearm, a senior Justice Department official said. If they meet that criteria, manufactur­ers would also be required to include a serial number, the official said. The rule also would require serial numbers to be added to homemade, un-serialized weapons that are traded in or turned into a federal firearms dealer.

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