New York Daily News

Eric and Tish tout a victory vs. ghost guns

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

New York City and state law enforcemen­t officers pulled 19 illegal guns and a cache of cocaine from circulatio­n as part of a monthslong investigat­ion into a gun and drug ring whose members were charged in an indictment unsealed Wednesday.

The 123-count indictment, which was made public by Queens Supreme Court Justice Evelyn Braun, is the result of a 16-month probe that Attorney General Letitia James and Mayor Adams touted as a sign the state and city are making a dent in the proliferat­ion of ghost guns, which are difficult to trace because they’re sold in parts and usually don’t bear serial numbers.

As part of the probe, the attorney general’s Organized Crime Task Force and the New York Drug Enforcemen­t Task Force — made up of officers from the NYPD, the state police and the federal Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion — removed 12 ghost guns, including assault rifles, from the streets.

“Every single day someone in New York or in this country is harmed by gun violence,” James said at a news conference. “We witnessed it yesterday with two teenagers outside their schools in broad daylight — and increasing­ly ghost guns are to blame for this destructio­n and this violence.”

The indictment charges that Eduardo Hernandez, Jose Garcia and Euclides Castillo trafficked in 19 firearms, high-capacity ammunition clips and 560 grams of cocaine, worth about $25,000.

Hernandez and Garcia allegedly procured the guns in Massachuse­tts, brought them to New York and then sold them from Hernandez’s Queens home and in Port Chester, Westcheste­r County. Prior to his involvemen­t with those two, Castillo worked for Smith & Wesson in the gun manufactur­er’s assembly division, said James, who added that Castillo gave buyers instructio­ns on how to operate the guns.

Adams and James have both made gun seizures a priority, and Wednesday they offered praise to President Biden, who announced a day earlier that he was issuing an executive order aimed at beefing up enforcemen­t of federal background check laws geared toward gun buyers.

Adams noted that since he took office in January 2022, the NYPD has seized more than 8,500 guns and made over 5,000 gun arrests. In June, he and James announced that they were suing several ghost gun makers, with Adams saying at the time that “we are not going to let gun companies turn New York into a city of mail-ordered murder.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States