Chicago Sun-Times

Despite ruling, company owner says he’s selling 3D-printed gun plans

- BY JIM VERTUNO AND MARTHA BELLISLE

AUSTIN, Texas — The owner of a Texas company that makes untraceabl­e 3D-printed guns said Tuesday that he has begun selling the blueprints through his website to anyone who wants to make one, after a federal court order barred him from posting the plans online.

Cody Wilson said at a news conference that he started selling the plans Tuesday morning and that he had already received nearly 400 orders. He said he’ll sell the plans for as little as a penny to anyone in the U.S. who wants them.

“Anyone who wants to get these files is going to get them,” Wilson said, noting he can only sell to U.S. customers. “They can name their own price.”

Wilson said that blueprints purchased through his company’s website could be downloaded on a thumb drive and shipped to buyers by standard mail, sent by email or sent by some other secure download transfer. Some of his first sales included purchases made with crypto currency, he said.

Nineteen states and the District of Columbia had sought an injunction to stop a settlement that the State Department reached with Wilson’s Austin-based company, Defense Distribute­d, after the agency removed the 3D gun-making plans from a list of weapons or technical data that are not allowed to be exported. The states argued that online access to the undetectab­le plastic guns would pose a security risk and could be acquired by felons or terrorists.

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Robert Lasnik in Seattle blocked Defense Distribute­d from posting the blueprints online, saying, “It is the untraceabl­e and undetectab­le nature of these small firearms that poses a unique danger.”

But Wilson said the ruling still allows him to sell the blueprints even if he can’t post them online for free, widespread distributi­on.

“Regulation under the (law) means that the files cannot be uploaded to the internet, but they can be emailed, mailed, securely transmitte­d, or otherwise published within the United States,” the ruling said on its final page.

 ?? AP FILES ?? Cody Wilson, owner of Defense Distribute­d, holds a 3D-printed gun called the Liberator at his shop in Austin, Texas.
AP FILES Cody Wilson, owner of Defense Distribute­d, holds a 3D-printed gun called the Liberator at his shop in Austin, Texas.

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