New York Daily News

‘GHOST’ BUSTER

Pol pushes to muzzle hard-to-trace guns

- BY KENNETH LOVETT ANGUS MORDANT

ALBANY — A Manhattan state senator wants to make “ghost guns” disappear.

Sen. Brad Hoylman, a Democrat, is introducin­g a bill that would ban ghost guns and 3-D firearms in New York.

Ghost guns are weapons that are assembled from parts easily purchased online or from technology like 3-D printers.

Many cannot be detected by metal detectors because they are made of plastic parts and are difficult to trace because they don’t contain serial numbers.

The Trump administra­tion recently settled a case with Defense Distribute­d, a Texas nonprofit group, that will allow online sites to post blueprints for building ghost guns at home starting Aug. 1.

“Thanks to the Trump administra­tion, anyone in America or across the world — be it a teenager, felon or terrorist — can evade a background check and manufactur­e a dangerous weapon with a click of a button,” Hoylman said.

“This is an existentia­l threat to gun control as we kno .

Under the legislatio­n, which Hoylman drafted with state Sen. Kevin Parker (DBrooklyn) and the California­based Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, it would be illegal to manufactur­e or assemble a ghost gun without a gunsmith license. The bill would mandate that such weapons be made so they can be picked up by a metal detector.

It would also require someone who assembles a register the weapon with law enforcemen­t and obtain a permanentl­y-affixed serial number. It would be a crime under the bill to possess or transfer a ghost gun without a serial number.

“It is unconscion­able to put the lives of New Yorkers and Americans at risk just to satisfy the demands of the gun lobby,” Hoylman said. “It’s now up to New York to close this deadly loophole that will allow dangerous individual­s to access a gun on demand, and I’m proud to take those initial steps.”

Adam Skaggs, chief counsel for Gifford Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, said the bill should “serve as a model for other states around the country.”

While he would not express his views on ghost guns, Tom King, an NRA board member from New York and president of the state Rifle & Pistol Associatio­n, said Sunday the issue should be determined at the federal level, not state by state.

“The fact that something may be illegal in New York and not illegal somewhere else does nothing but confuse the issue,” King said.

 ?? AP ?? A plastic pistol that was completely made on a 3D-printer at a home in Austin, Texas.
AP A plastic pistol that was completely made on a 3D-printer at a home in Austin, Texas.
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