Detroit Free Press

MSP pauses contract with gun disposal company after exposé

- Amelia Benavides-Colón

The Michigan State Police placed its contract with Missouri-based gun demolition business, GunBusters, on hold this month, after a December 2023 New York Times investigat­ion revealed the company strips the guns prior to destructio­n to resell the parts in a “kit.”

Michigan is GunBuster’s largest client of 950 partner law enforcemen­t agencies in the country, according to the Times investigat­ion, with state police responsibl­e for turning over more than 11,000 guns for “destructio­n” in 2023.

The free disposal process doesn’t involve smelting or crushing, but the guns rather are taken apart, with the receiver or frame being the only piece destroyed. Federal law only classifies the receiver as firearms, allowing gun destructio­n businesses to sell the remaining parts as a kit: barrel, trigger, grip, slide, stock, springs — the final, regulated piece being the only part missing to create an operationa­l weapon.

Michigan’s contract with GunBusters began in 2020, but MSP spokespers­on Shanon Banner said the contract is temporaril­y on pause while other firearm disposal options are being explored.

The disposal process complies with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, which says an acceptable method of gun disposal is only destroying the receiver. Several lawmakers and city officials expressed concern upon reading the Times exposé, not understand­ing how a company created to take guns out of communitie­s can be profiting off of reselling its parts.

St. David’s Episcopal Church, which surrendere­d 224 guns to state police in December through a buyback program has since reconsider­ed the efficacy of the events.

“The big reason people came in line and gave their weapons to us is to be destroyed, not recycled,” the Rev. Chris Yaw told WDIV-TV.

 ?? GRAHAM KREWINGHAU­S/CAPE COD TIMES ?? Toby Leary made his PMF from a gun kit sold by Polymer80. The silver tag underneath the tip of the gun is were a serial number would go, but because he purchased it as separate parts and assembled it himself, Leary isn’t legally required to register the gun. Leary owns Hyannis’ Cape Gun Works.
GRAHAM KREWINGHAU­S/CAPE COD TIMES Toby Leary made his PMF from a gun kit sold by Polymer80. The silver tag underneath the tip of the gun is were a serial number would go, but because he purchased it as separate parts and assembled it himself, Leary isn’t legally required to register the gun. Leary owns Hyannis’ Cape Gun Works.

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