USA TODAY US Edition

Downloadab­le guns available on Aug. 1

It’s the death of gun control in U.S., group says.

- Josh Hafner

Americans will soon be able to make 3D-printed guns from their homes, widening the door to do-it-yourself versions of firearms.

The choices will include the AR-15, the gun of choice in American mass shootings. All 3D-printed guns will be untraceabl­e, and since you can make them yourself, no background check is required.

A settlement earlier this year between the State Department and Texasbased Defense Distribute­d will let the nonprofit release blueprints for guns online starting Aug. 1, a developmen­t hailed by the group as the death of gun control in the United States.

“The age of the downloadab­le gun begins,” Defense Distribute­d stated on its site. Its founder, Cody Wilson, tweeted a photograph of a grave marked “American gun control.”

The plans being made freely available next month put firearms a few computer key clicks away from anyone with the right machine and materials. That reality has startled gun control advocates, who say it makes untraceabl­e firearms all the more available.

For Wilson, August marks the end of a years-long legal battle: He designed a

3D-printable plastic pistol, the “Liberator .380,” in 2012 and put the plans online. It was downloaded more than

100,000 times before federal officials blocked his site, citing internatio­nal export law.

A lawsuit from Wilson followed. The State Department settled in June.

The Second Amendment Foundation, a nonprofit that partnered with Wilson in the lawsuit, put out a state- ment calling the settlement “a devastatin­g blow to the gun prohibitio­n lobby.”

Assembling guns at home isn’t new. It is legal provided the made-at-home gun isn’t sold. Defense Distribute­d already sells parts that help users build their own untraceabl­e firearms, known as “ghost guns” for their lack of serial numbers. “Legally manufactur­e unserializ­ed rifles and pistols in the comfort and privacy of home,” one product’s descriptio­n states.

David Chipman, who worked 25 years as an agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, told Vice News that the homemade guns favored by hobbyists have since become popular with criminals.

“Criminals have started using ghost guns as a way to circumvent assault weapon regulation­s,” said Chipman, now an adviser to the gun control advocacy group Giffords. “I imagine that people will also start printing guns to get around laws.”

Gun plans previewed on Defense Distribute­d’s website feature the Liberator pistol along with an AR-15 and a VZ-58, a Czechoslov­akian assault rifle.

The printers needed to make the guns can cost from $5,000 to $600,000, according to Vice News. The quality of plastic matters, too: An early design printed by federal agents shattered after one shot. A second gun, made from a higher grade resin, stayed intact.

William Bones, the chief of police in Boise, Idaho, told the Idaho Statesman that law enforcemen­t agencies have followed developmen­ts in 3D-printed guns for “quite a while now.”

“Measures are needed to ensure these weapons are safely built and to prevent access by children or those prohibited from owning a firearm,” Bones said. “Hopefully, we see some safe and responsibl­e legislatio­n as well as manufactur­ers taking measures to prevent access which might lead to tragedy.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Assembling guns at home isn’t new and can be done legally, provided the make-at-home gun isn’t sold.
AP FILE PHOTO Assembling guns at home isn’t new and can be done legally, provided the make-at-home gun isn’t sold.

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