Texarkana Gazette

Fears of terrorism raised because of 3D-printed guns

- By Ethan Baron

Concern that 3D-printed guns could fall into the hands of the wrong Americans has expanded into a fear that foreign terrorists could use the technology to obtain firearms invisible to metal detectors.

And Democratic federal lawmakers have called on social media and internetco­mpanies to remove any gun-printing blueprints from their platforms.

Recent weeks have seen fierce debate and legal fights over distributi­on of blueprints for making guns— mostly from plastic—with a 3D printer. “The availabili­ty of 3D-printed guns creates yet another loophole through which prohibited individual­s could more easily obtain firearms,” Johns Hopkins University professor Cassandra Crifasi said Aug. 1.

At the center of the furor is Defense Distribute­d, whose founder Cody Wilson in 2013 posted online digital instructio­ns allowing 3D printers to make a handgun.

Wilson was, at first, shut down by the federal government, which declared the upload of such blueprints a violation of firearms-export laws. Then he sued, and won: The government settled, agreeing to pay him $40,000 and allowing Defense Distribute­d to upload gun-printing files.

After the company announced it would post gun-printing files online on Aug. 1—to make handguns, AR-15-type rifles such as that used in the Parkland shooting, and AK-47-type assault rifles—New Jersey’s attorney general sent it a ceaseand-desist letter. Attorney General Gurbir Grewal stated that printed guns would “flood the illegal firearms market” and threaten public safety.

Then a federal court judge issued a temporary injunction barring publicatio­n of gun-printing files. New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood celebrated the ruling as a move to prevent “criminals” from getting guns.

However, some of the blueprints had reportedly been uploaded ahead of schedule, with, according to The Washington Post, 1,000 people downloadin­g plans for AR-15 semiautoma­tic rifles.

Now, the battle over the technology has broadened into a new area: terrorism. An Aug. 16 letter from gun-control group the Brady Campaign to U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo cited “the risks posed by gaining easy access to 3-D printed guns without benefit of a background check, armed with weapons potentiall­y undetectab­le by metal detectors and untraceabl­e by law enforcemen­t because they lack metal components and serial numbers.”

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