Times Chronicle & Public Spirit

What some don’t get on ghost guns

- Clarence Page

A story about W.C. Fields holds that as he approached the end of his life, a friend was surprised to find him reading a Bible.

“Looking for loopholes, m’boy,” he reportedly explained. “Looking for loopholes.”

That scene comes to mind as I hear the standard response given by gun rights groups to even the most modest attempts to inject a little sanity into our nation’s gun laws.

The latest example of loophole-seeking has emerged in the recent pandemic of the home-assembled firearms known as “ghost guns.” Their parts can be 3D printed or ordered over the internet and constructe­d at home like Ikea furniture to produce a fullfledge­d gun.

The bad news is in their illegality. Buyers of unfinished parts or components have not been required to undergo a background check and their weapons have no serial numbers, which makes them virtually to trace. No need to prowl back alleys for your illegal blaster. Just go online.

As if we didn’t have enough guns on the street already.

Hunters, collectors and other firearms enthusiast­s have many legal ways to practice their pastime, but there’s no need to have a ghost gun unless you’re planning to commit a crime.

That’s why, in response to growing pressure, President Joe Biden announced new rules to regulate ghost guns under the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Eleven states have cracked down on the sale or transfer of gun parts that do not have serial numbers.

Last year alone, there were about 20,000 suspected ghost guns reported to the ATF as having been recovered by law enforcemen­t in criminal investigat­ions, Biden said in his announceme­nt at the White House, a tenfold increase from 2016.

But, predictabl­y, gun rights organizati­ons say the war on ghost guns is misplaced, to put it nicely. For one thing, they argue, ghost guns are only a small portion of the weapons police have recovered on the street. True. But the amount is growing.

Citing Justice Department statistics, Erich Pratt, senior vice president of Gun Owners of America, wrote that privately made firearms were found at 692 homicide or attempted homicide crime scenes over a six-year period.

“That means that, at worst, out of more than 16,000 yearly murders, homemade guns are used in around 115 homicides per year,” he writes. “That’s far fewer murders than many common items which are easily found around one’s house — such as knives (1,476), hammers or blunt objects (397), or fists and feet (600).”

Sure. But knives, hammers, fists and feet arguably have other uses besides homicide.

The growth trends for ghost guns are rising too fast to give many peace-loving Americans comfort. In Chicago, for example, only 72 ghost guns were recovered by police in 2019. But that number jumped to 130 ghost guns in 2020 and 458 last year. So far this year, according to reports, officers have recovered at least 166 of the guns.

By comparison, Chicago police say they recovered more

As if we didn’t have enough guns on the street already.

than 12,000 guns of all types last year, including some that were gathered during voluntary gun turn-ins. That’s disturbing, but hardly an excuse to ease the pressure on those who seek firearms to break laws.

The pro-gun rights crowd certainly isn’t easing the pressure from their end. They’re pouring it on. “The only nocompromi­se gun lobby in Washington,” says a quote on the homepage of the Gun Owners of America, which criticizes the National Rifle Associatio­n for being too moderate.

I believe in the virtues of compromise to heal the growing polarizati­on in our national politics. But in today’s firearms clash, it doesn’t seem to have a ghost of a chance.

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