New York Daily News

‘GHOST GUN’ FACTORY BUSTED

R.I. man sold over 100 pistols, fires one in vid, feds say

- BY MOLLY CRANE-NEWMAN

A Rhode Island ghost gun manufactur­er sold more than 100 of the untraceabl­e firearms — and even posted a YouTube video of himself shooting a DIY Glock, prosecutor­s said Thursday.

Robert Alcantara, 34, had a veritable DIY gun factory at his home in Providence, according to a complaint filed in Manhattan Federal Court. On Nov. 20, he allegedly bought firearm components costing more than $16,000 at a gun show in Morgantown, Pa. FBI agents arrested him driving through the Bronx hours later with an accomplice, allegedly carrying a stockpile that included 46 upper receivers and 45 lower receivers.

Further investigat­ion uncovered Alcantara’s YouTube channel. In a 2019 video cited in the complaint, he displays a homemade 9-mm. Glock, loads it with an extended clip and then opens fire.

“Everything work. No issue. Very nice,” he says in the video.

Pictures pulled from Alcantara’s phone show he had a poster portraying former President Donald

Trump as a heavyweigh­t boxer above a cluttered workbench with a hydraulic drill press, a vise and other tools used to make the guns, according to the complaint.

In one photo, five ghost guns were displayed on a mat with manufactur­ing instructio­ns.

Other images showed multiple DIY rifles and guns packaged for shipment or sale, the feds wrote.

Alcantara is charged with conspiracy to traffic firearms and lying to the feds following his arrest.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said a deadly business had been shut down.

“Untraceabl­e ‘ghost guns’ pose a serious threat to public safety,” Williams said in a statement. “As alleged, the defendant agreed with others to buy the parts for these firearms, put them together at his home, and then unlawfully sold or attempted to sell over 100 of them.”

Ghost guns have become a growing concern of law enforcemen­t because they are manufactur­ed without any serial number. They are assembled using gun parts, which can be purchased without background checks. Ghost guns have become increasing­ly

popular among criminals in the city. They have even fallen into the hands of kids: Last month, a Brooklyn teen was allegedly busted at his high school with one of the untraceabl­e guns and $30,000

cash.

To make and transport 15 Glocks, Alcantara charged a neat $9,624 — “tax” included, the complaint charges.

Alcantara got involved in the gun-traffickin­g scheme with five co-conspirato­rs in late 2019, the feds charge. According to messages in his Signal app, he dropped thousands on gun parts monthly. Texts show he delivered bullets to Philadelph­ia in September and bought $32,000 worth of ammo in November, according to a complaint.

In one series of texts in July 2021, Alcantara allegedly told a co-conspirato­r he could have his mother bring firearms with her on a trip from the U.S. to the Dominican Republic.

“My mother is coming tomorrow. In case you wanted to send something,” read the message, which was written in Spanish, according to court docs.

In another text, he wrote guns were “ready for exportatio­n” to the Dominican Republic, prosecutor­s charged.

Alcantara snapped another picture of two suitcases filled with cash and guns at a port in the Dominican Republic, according to the complaint.

Alcantara was ordered detained after an appearance in in Rhode Island. He faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

 ?? ?? Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin (center) holds candle during “We Are One America for Democracy” rally Thursday at Carl Schurz Park on the Upper East Side, where he spoke on the anniversar­y of the Trumpinspi­red Jan. 6 Capitol insurrecti­on.
Lt. Gov. Brian Benjamin (center) holds candle during “We Are One America for Democracy” rally Thursday at Carl Schurz Park on the Upper East Side, where he spoke on the anniversar­y of the Trumpinspi­red Jan. 6 Capitol insurrecti­on.
 ?? KMEAD ?? Ghost guns that feds say they seized from Robert Alcantara.
KMEAD Ghost guns that feds say they seized from Robert Alcantara.

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