Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevada-based maker of ‘ghost guns’ settles with Baltimore

- By Lea Skene

BALTIMORE — A leading manufactur­er of ghost guns has agreed to stop selling its untraceabl­e, unassemble­d firearms to Maryland residents under a settlement agreement announced Wednesday by Baltimore.

City leaders sued the company, Nevada-based Polymer80, two years ago “in response to the rapid escalation of ghost guns appearing on Baltimore streets and in the hands of minors,” according to the mayor’s office. Officials said the settlement grants the city all measures of relief requested in the lawsuit, including $1.2 million in damages.

“Nine out of 10 homicides in Baltimore City are committed with guns,” Mayor Brandon Scott said in a statement. “This settlement — and the statement it sends about the harmful impact of these ghost guns — is a critical victory for the effort to confront gun violence in our communitie­s.”

A spokespers­on for Polymer80 didn’t respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

The suit accused Polymer80 of intentiona­lly underminin­g federal and state firearms laws by designing, manufactur­ing and providing gun assembly kits without serial numbers to buyers who don’t undergo background checks. It was filed the same day Maryland’s statewide ban on ghost guns went into effect in 2022 following a law change that expanded the definition of a firearm to include “an unfinished frame or receiver.”

The Biden administra­tion in 2022 announced new federal regulation­s aimed at curbing the proliferat­ion of ghost guns, which authoritie­s say have been turning up at crime scenes across the nation in increasing numbers. The regulation­s, which include expanding the definition of firearms, were quickly challenged in court by gun rights groups.

Attorneys for the city of Baltimore have argued that Polymer80 falsely classified its gun-making kits as “non-firearms,” allowing them to end up in the hands of felons and minors — people who otherwise would be banned from purchasing firearms.

While Baltimore recorded a significan­t decline in homicides and shootings last year, city leaders are grappling with a rise in youth violence.

Baltimore leaders partnered with the national nonprofit Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence in filing the lawsuit.

“The only market for ghost guns is people who can’t buy guns legitimate­ly at a gun store,” said Philip Bangle, senior litigation counsel for Brady. He questioned why else someone would purchase a firearm they have to build themselves — without quality control checks or other measures to ensure it functions properly when the trigger is pulled.

Polymer80 has been targeted by similar litigation in other cities, including Los Angeles, Philadelph­ia and Washington, D.C.

Los Angeles sued the company after a teenager used its products in a high school shooting that left three children dead. That case similarly yielded a settlement agreement under which Polymer80 agreed to stop selling ghost guns in California. The case in Washington also resulted in a $4 million judgment against Polymer80 and barred the sale of its products to city residents.

But officials in Baltimore said their settlement goes the furthest to date in restrictin­g the company’s operations.

Under the agreement, it can’t advertise in Maryland, and the sales ban extends to dealers in nearby states doing business with Maryland residents. The company also has to submit quarterly reports documentin­g all sales of ghost guns in neighborin­g states, according to city officials.

The lawsuit was also filed against the Maryland gun shop Hanover Armory, which isn’t part of the settlement agreement. That piece of the litigation remains ongoing.

Officials said Baltimore police seized 462 ghost guns last year, a number that demonstrat­es their prevalence throughout the city.

Scott, who’s running for re-election as Baltimore mayor this year, said the lawsuit shows his administra­tion is “using every tool at its disposal to address the epidemic of gun violence we face.”

 ?? Haven Daley The Associated Press ?? “Ghost guns” at the headquarte­rs of the San Francisco police in 2019. A company agreed to stop selling its untraceabl­e, unassemble­d firearms to Maryland residents.
Haven Daley The Associated Press “Ghost guns” at the headquarte­rs of the San Francisco police in 2019. A company agreed to stop selling its untraceabl­e, unassemble­d firearms to Maryland residents.

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