USA TODAY International Edition

We will pull ‘ ghost guns’ into the light

Manufactur­ers and sellers of kits will be subject to federal laws to save lives

- Merrick Garland U. S. attorney general Merrick B. Garland is attorney general of the United States.

Law enforcemen­t officers across the country increasing­ly find there is no way to trace certain guns they recover from crime scenes. Because these guns are not marked with serial numbers, there is no way to track their origins or their owners. And because they are sold without a background check, anyone can buy them.

They truly are “ghost guns.” These unmarked guns are easy to buy, particular­ly in the form of a build- yourown kit that allows someone to quickly turn parts in a box into a gun capable of firing a bullet.

Last year, President Joe Biden and I announced that I had directed the federal agency responsibl­e for regulating firearms, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, to modernize our regulation­s to reflect the fact that today’s firearms need not be cast or forged but can be created from kits and by 3D printers. The Department of Justice committed to take action to prevent criminals and other prohibited people from easily purchasing untraceabl­e guns.

This morning, the department is submitting a final rule that will help keep guns out of the hands of criminals and save lives.

These updated regulation­s make clear that parts kits that can readily be converted into assembled firearms will be treated under federal law as what they are: firearms. And the manufactur­ers and sellers of these kits will be subject to the same federal laws as all other gun manufactur­ers and sellers.

This means that those who engage in the business of dealing in these guns will be required to mark every frame or receiver with a serial number so that the guns can be traced if they are used in crimes.

Those who commercial­ly sell these guns must be federally licensed, maintain records and run background checks before a sale – as they would have to do with any other firearm. And any federal firearms licensee who takes into inventory a ghost gun without a serial number will be required to add one.

These changes will make it harder for criminals and other prohibited persons to get their hands on untraceabl­e guns. They will help ensure that law enforcemen­t officers can get the informatio­n they need to solve crimes.

The regulation­s also will help reduce the number of untraceabl­e firearms flooding into our communitie­s. And they will achieve these important law enforcemen­t objectives while respecting the constituti­onal rights of law- abiding Americans.

We’re seeing a ghost gun boom

These changes are long overdue. Despite changes in technology, federal regulation­s that define what a “firearm” is have not been updated in more than 50 years. Meanwhile, since 2016, there has been a more than tenfold increase in the annual number of ghost guns recovered by law enforcemen­t in criminal investigat­ions and reported to ATF. That amounts to tens of thousands of guns, including guns recovered in connection with homicides and attempted homicides. These changes represent only one part of the Justice Department’s efforts to double down on the fight to protect our communitie­s from violent crime and from the gun violence that often drives it.

In partnershi­p with state, local, tribal and territoria­l law enforcemen­t, we are working to defeat the scourge of gun violence. That includes disrupting illegal gun traffickin­g networks – from the jurisdicti­ons where guns originate to the places where the guns are used to commit violent crimes.

Our U. S. attorney offices are prioritizi­ng prosecutio­ns of the most dangerous offenders who are responsibl­e for the greatest violence, those who illegally traffic in firearms, and those who act as straw purchasers. Our federal law enforcemen­t agents are recovering and tracing illegal guns. And as we work with our partners in law enforcemen­t, we are likewise committed to supporting local community leaders in their efforts to keep their communitie­s safe.

At the U. S. Department of Justice, we will be tireless in our efforts to put an end to the plague of gun violence and save the lives of those we love.

These changes will make it harder for criminals and other prohibited persons to get their hands on untraceabl­e guns. They will help ensure that law enforcemen­t officers can get the informatio­n they need to solve crimes.

 ?? HAVEN DALEY/ AP ?? “Ghost guns” are displayed at the San Francisco Police Department headquarte­rs in 2019.
HAVEN DALEY/ AP “Ghost guns” are displayed at the San Francisco Police Department headquarte­rs in 2019.
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