The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Judge blocks blueprint for 3D-printed guns

- By Martha Bellisle and Matthew Daly

A federal judge in Seattle on Tuesday stopped release of blueprints to make untraceabl­e and undetectab­le 3D-printed plastic guns as President Donald Trump questioned whether his administra­tion should have agreed to allow plans to be posted online.

The company behind the plans, Austin, Texas-based Defense Distribute­d, had reached a settlement with the federal government in June that allows it to make the plans for the guns available for download on Wednesday.

The restrainin­g order from U.S. District Judge Robert Lasnik puts that plan on hold for now. “There is a possibilit­y of irreparabl­e harm because of the way these guns can be made,” he said.

Eight Democratic attorneys general had filed a lawsuit Monday to block the settlement. They also sought a restrainin­g order, arguing 3D guns would be a safety risk.

Congressio­nal Democrats have urged President Donald Trump to reverse the decision to publish the plans. Trump said Tuesday that he’s “looking into” the idea, saying making 3D plastic guns available to the public “doesn’t seem to make much sense!”

Trump tweeted that he has already spoken with the National Rifle Associatio­n about the downloadab­le directions a Texas company wants to provide for people to make 3D-printed guns. The guns are made of a hard plastic and are simple to assemble, easy to conceal and difficult to trace.

The election-year headache is a problem of the administra­tion’s own making. After a yearslong court battle, the State Department in late June settled the case against Defense Distribute­d.

The settlement, which took gun-control advocates by surprise, allowed the company to resume posting blueprints for the hardplasti­c guns at the end of July. Those plans were put on hold by the Seattle judge’s decision.

Hours before the restrainin­g order was issued, Democrats sounded the alarm, warning about “ghost guns” that can avoid detection and pose a deadly hazard.

“All you need is a little money and you can download a blueprint from the internet to make a gun at home,” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. “No background check. No criminal history check.”

The company’s website had said downloads would begin Wednesday, but blueprints for at least one gun — a plastic pistol called the Liberator — have been posted on the site since Friday. A lawyer for the company said he didn’t know how many blueprints had been downloaded since then.

Outrage over the administra­tion decision is putting gun control back into the election-year political debate with a high-tech twist.

The president seemed surprised. He said on Twitter he was looking into the idea of a company providing plans to the public for printing guns, and he said it “doesn’t seem to make much sense!”

Democrats agreed and said Trump had the power to stop it.

Sen. Edward Markey of Massachuse­tts said Trump has boasted that he alone can fix problems afflicting the country.

“Well, fix this deadly mistake that once again your administra­tion has made,” Markey said.

Some Republican­s also expressed concern.

“Even as a strong supporter of the Second Amendment — this is not right,” Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski tweeted, linking to a news story on the guns.

The NRA said in a statement “anti-gun politician­s” and members of the news media wrongly claim that 3D printing technology “will allow for the production and widespread proliferat­ion of undetectab­le plastic firearms.”

In truth, “undetectab­le plastic guns have been illegal for 30 years,” said Chris W. Cox, executive director of the NRA’s political arm. A federal law passed in 1988 — crafted with NRA support — bars the manufactur­e, sale or possession of an undetectab­le firearm.

Trump spokesman Hogan Gidley made much the same point, saying the administra­tion supports the law against wholly plastic guns, including those made with a 3D printer.

But Democrats called the law weak and said gun users can get around it by using weapons with a removable metal block that the gun doesn’t need in order to function.

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 ?? MATTHEW DALY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., left, and Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Ct., display a photo of a plastic gun on Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democrats are calling on President Donald Trump to reverse an administra­tion decision to allow a Texas company to make blueprints for a 3D-printed gun available online.
MATTHEW DALY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., left, and Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Ct., display a photo of a plastic gun on Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington. Democrats are calling on President Donald Trump to reverse an administra­tion decision to allow a Texas company to make blueprints for a 3D-printed gun available online.

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