The Reporter (Vacaville)

California sues US regulator in bid to deter ‘ghost guns’

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> Backed by the fathers of two slain children, California’s attorney general sued the Trump administra­tion on Tuesday in an effort to crack down on “ghost guns” that can be built from parts and make it difficult to track or regulate owners.

The U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives doesn’t consider the do-it-yourself kits to be firearms, so buyers don’t have to undergo the usual background checks and in most states the guns are not required to have serial numbers.

California Attorney General Xavier Becerra’s lawsuit asks a federal judge in San Francisco to order the agency to change its policy, arguing that it violates the common definition of a firearm under federal law and that the agency’s decision in 2006 to stop considerin­g the parts as firearms was arbitrary and capricious.

Agency spokeswoma­n April Langwell said the ATF does not comment on pending litigation.

The lawsuit was called frivolous and “another outrageous example of Attorney General Becerra attacking law-abiding gun owners” by Brandon Combs, president of the Sacramento, California- based Firearms Policy Coalition that promotes gun-owners’ rights.

Plaintiff Bryan Muehlberge­r said he had never heard of ghost guns before November, when his 15-year- old daughter, Gracie Anne Muehlberge­r, was one of two students killed with one at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita.

Student Nathaniel Berhow, 16, also wounded three other people before kill

ing himself. Frank Blackwell, the father of 14-yearold Dominic Blackwell, the other slain student, also is a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

“Anyone, and I mean anyone, can buy these totally unregulate­d kits with just an internet connection and a credit card, and that’s how my daughter’s killer got his murder weapon,” Muehlberge­r said.

As a test earlier this year, he used his daughter’s name and his own credit card to order a ghost gun kit in about two minutes from an online dealer.

Becerra said ghost guns were used in mass shootings that each killed five people in Santa Monica in 2013 and Tehama County in 2017.

Ghost gun seizures by the state Department of Justice jumped 512% between 2018 and 2019. The number of such weapons recovered in Los Angeles more than doubled from 182 in 2015 to 444 last year.

Law enforcemen­t agencies reported a 940% jump in San Diego and a 51% increase in San Jose from 2017 to 2018, the suit says, without providing actual numbers of weapons seized.

The weapons now make

up 30% of guns recovered in California, said Hannah Shearer, litigation director at the Giffords Law Center that also is a party in the lawsuit.

California is now home to 18 of the 80 known online ghost gun retailers, double the number from six years ago and the most of any state, according to the lawsuit.

“The only logical intended result of a ghost gun kit is that it will become a firearm,” Becerra said. “They are fast becoming the weapons of choice for illegal gun trafficker­s, for organized criminal gangs, and unfortunat­ely for mass murderers as well.”

At issue are so- called “80 percent receivers and frames” that Becerra said can be sold by unlicensed dealers and made into untraceabl­e firearms at home. ATF policy holds that the kits have not yet reached the stage where they can be considered firearms subject to the usual federal firearms statutes that include a ban on sales to minors or those who have criminal conviction­s, a history of domestic violence, serious mental illness or drug addiction.

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? An agent with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is seen with homemade rifles, or “ghost guns,” at an ATF field office in Glendale, Aug. 29, 2017.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE An agent with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is seen with homemade rifles, or “ghost guns,” at an ATF field office in Glendale, Aug. 29, 2017.

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