Houston Chronicle

Report: 68,000 guns trafficked illegally by unlicensed dealers

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WASHINGTON — More than 68,000 illegally trafficked firearms in the U.S. came through unlicensed dealers who aren’t required to perform background checks over a fiveyear period, according to new data released Thursday by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco Firearms and Explosives.

That represents 54% of the illegally trafficked firearms in the U.S. between 2017 and 2021, Justice Department officials said. The guns were used in 368 shooting cases, which are harder to investigat­e because unlicensed dealers aren’t required to keep records of their sales that could allow federal agents to trace the weapon back to the original buyer, said ATF Director Steve Dettelbach.

The report ordered by Attorney General Merrick Garland is the first indepth analysis of firearm traffickin­g in more than 20 years. It examined more than 9,700 closed ATF firearm traffickin­g investigat­ions that began between 2017 and 2021. Firearms traffickin­g is when guns are purposely moved into the illegal market.

The second-highest share of firearm-traffickin­g cases investigat­ed by ATF was straw purchases, when someone buys a gun for a person who can’t get it legally themselves.

The report also shows that the recipients of trafficked firearms were people who had previously been convicted of a felony in almost 60 percent of the cases in which investigat­ors were able to identify the recipient’s background. Trafficked firearms were used to commit additional crimes in almost 25 percent of the cases, Dettelbach said. That includes more than 260 murders and more than 220 attempted murders, according to the report.

“The data shows, therefore, that those who illegally traffic firearms whether it’s out of a trunk, at a gun show or online, are responsibl­e for real violence in this nation,” Dettelbach said.

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