New York Daily News

In a rail big jam

Subway worker nabbed with ‘ghost guns’ in Bx.

- BY MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN AND CLAYTON GUSE

A Bronx transit worker is the latest New Yorker charged with ordering gun parts online to make illegal DIY “ghost guns” at home, Manhattan federal prosecutor­s say.

Domingo Valle, 51, an NYC Transit subway car inspector, bought firearm components on the web at least 50 times over the last seven years to assemble the untraceabl­e firearms, which he stashed in a concealed, wall-mounted shelf in his Bronx apartment, the feds charge.

Police arrested Valle with six firearms, including two privately made AR-style rifles and three pistols, as well as ammunition. They also discovered body armor with loaded rifle and pistol magazines and numerous bullets, authoritie­s said.

Valle on Wednesday resigned from his inspector job, said MTA spokesman Tim Minton.

“The alleged crimes are wholly inconsiste­nt with the values of NYC Transit, which has zero tolerance for gun violence that is a clear threat to the safety of New Yorkers we serve,” Minton said.

On Tuesday, Valle was presented in Manhattan Federal Court on a charge of being a felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition. The feds say he’s banned from owning firearms due to a 1991 conviction for possession of a loaded firearm.

“As alleged, for years, Valle purchased firearm tools, parts, and accessorie­s online in order to create privately manufactur­ed firearms, also known as ‘ghost guns,’ which are difficult to detect and trace,” said acting U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss.

During one online shopping trip in 2020, Valle’s bought an Easy Jig, a tool used to assemble a gun. Soon after that, he bought components for the lower receiver of an AR-15, the feds say.

The “ghost guns” are typically sold on the black market for $250 to $500. They do not feature serial numbers, making it impossible for authoritie­s to track the gun’s original buyer and seller.

Of deep concern to authoritie­s and gun control advocates is that buyers can bypass criminal and mental illness background checks when they purchase gun parts separately.

So far in 2021, the NYPD has recovered 135 ghost guns and 45 frames — figures that lead cops to believe they’ll find more than the previous high of 145 last year.

Cops recovered 48 ghost guns in 2019 and 17 in 2018.

Valle faces up to 10 years within prison if convicted.

On Sunday, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) cited a Daily News cover story while calling on the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to implement a new rule requiring background checks for ghost guns. He said partially completed gun frames and receivers should be manufactur­ed with serial numbers and only sold by licensed dealers.

“Because of the proliferat­ion of ghost guns throughout New York we need the admin to issue this rule as soon as possible,” Schumer said. “When it comes to the ghost guns, we want the ATF to deliver an exorcism.”

The NYPD sounded the alarm about ghost guns last week after Isamuel Alcantara, 25, was accused of using a ghost gun to shoot four fellow patrons outside a lounge on 10th Ave. in Inwood.

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 ?? AP ?? A city subway car inspector is charged with assembling untraceabl­e “ghost guns,” like these above and below, after arrest at his Bronx home.
AP A city subway car inspector is charged with assembling untraceabl­e “ghost guns,” like these above and below, after arrest at his Bronx home.

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