Los Angeles Times

Senators urge limits for online weapon sales

Senate Democrats urge EBay, Amazon and Google to restrict the availabili­ty of firearm accessorie­s.

- By Jeff Bercovici

Democrats including Kamala Harris and Cory Booker are asking EBay, Amazon and Google to better enforce their own policies, which prohibit listing items for use with military-style rif les.

Following news reports documentin­g the continued availabili­ty of gun parts and accessorie­s on e-commerce platforms that supposedly prohibit their sale, a group of Senate Democrats led by Robert Menendez of New Jersey sent letters to the chief executives of Amazon, EBay and Google asking for internal data and better enforcemen­t of their policies.

In the letter to EBay Chief Executive Devin Wenig, the lawmakers cited a report in The Times detailing the sale of accessorie­s and equipment clearly intended for use with militaryst­yle semiautoma­tic rifles such as the AR-15 and AK-47 in the auction site’s marketplac­e, despite rules against listing such items.

“We write to urge you to immediatel­y implement stronger measures to keep guns and gun accessory sales off your platform,” they wrote. “America is in the throes of a gun violence epidemic and it is incumbent upon corporate America to do its part to help end the carnage.”

Presidenti­al candidates Kamala Harris of California, Cory Booker of New Jersey and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota were among those to sign the letters, along with Sens. Sherrod Brown (DOhio), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Maizie Hirono (D-Hawaii), Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) and Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.).

The senators asked Wenig to respond by Sept. 9 with answers to a list of questions about the technical safeguards used by the San Jose auction site to keep sellers from listing prohibited products and the processes it relies on to review flagged listings.

They also asked Wenig to disclose how many gun-related listings EBay takes down and how many ac

counts it suspends per month.

The company has in the past treated that informatio­n as proprietar­y.

A 2015 report by the investigat­ive journalism outlet Reveal, also cited in the letter to Wenig, found hundreds of listings for assaultrif­le parts for sale on EBay. When the reporter asked for data on flagged products, an EBay spokespers­on declined, calling it “our secret sauce.”

“Effective monitoring and the suspension of accounts in violation of these policies is essential,” the senators wrote. “As such, I have concerns that EBay’s efforts are falling short of what is required in light of the current crisis.”

EBay’s policies prohibit listing for sale any type of gun, parts or accessorie­s for assault weapons and “products that mention capability with an assault weapon, even if the part or accessory fits non-assault weapons.”

The state of California considers any semiautoma­tic rifle with a removable magazine and certain other features to be an assault weapon — a definition that includes standard configurat­ions of popular firearms like the AR-15 and AK-47.

The Times was able to find dozens of listings in clear violation of this broad ban, including ammunition magazines, parts like pistol grips and folding stocks, and accessorie­s such as singlepoin­t tactical slings and magazine couplers.

In many cases, sellers appeared to get around automated filters on flagged terms by substituti­ng the calibers of weapons for their model names, or by putting the names of weapons into images rather than product descriptio­ns.

The group of senators also wrote to Amazon Chief Executive Jeff Bezos and Google Chief Executive Sundar Pichai, following a report by the Washington Post revealing recent listings on their sites for prohibited products, including a 100round ammunition drum on Google similar to one used this month by a mass shooter in Dayton, Ohio.

Both companies ban the sale of guns and many gun parts and accessorie­s, including high-capacity ammunition magazines.

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