WSJ Article - "The Rise of Untraceable 'Ghost Guns'"

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The Rise of Untraceable ‘Ghost Guns’
An emerging black-market gun-making industry lets buyers bypass background checks and gun regulations, authorities say


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Homemade rifles, known as ‘ghost guns,’ are displayed at a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives field office in Glendale, Calif., on Aug. 29, 2017. Law-enforcement officials say there is a growing black-market trade in these untraceable guns. PHOTO:JAE C. HONG/ASSOCIATED PRESS
By
Zusha Elinson
Jan. 4, 2018 5:30 a.m. ET
70 COMMENTS


Axel Galvez had a deal: $7,500 for five untraceable semiautomatic rifles. And he had a buyer: a felon who planned to ship them overseas. Now, he just needed weapons that would be invisible to regulators.

To avoid background checks, Mr. Galvez bought rifle parts, then assembled the five guns at the Los Angeles machine shop where he worked. He offered to build his buyer 100 more for $130,000.

An underground gun-making industry that enables criminals to elude background checks and bypass gun regulations is creating a growing trade of “ghost guns,” weapons that can’t be traced by police, authorities say.

Mr. Galvez’s buyer turned out to be a government informant; the 36-year-old machinist pleaded guilty in November to unlawful firearms manufacturing and dealing, according to court documents.

Ghost guns have been in the spotlight since a Northern California man, who was prohibited from possessing firearms because of a restraining order, killed five people in a November rampage using semiautomatic rifles that he made himself, police say. Other gunmen have employed the weapons as well. In 2016, a Baltimore man fired at police with a homemade AR-15, and Santa Monica shooter John Zawahri used a ghost gun in his shooting spree that killed five in 2013.

The number of these weapons in the U.S. is unknown. Because the guns bear no serial numbers, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is unable to track them. Serial numbers and gun registration play a key role in police and government investigations, allowing officers to trace a weapon’s history and owners.

Ghost guns appear to be most prevalent in California, where there are restrictions on assault weapons that make it difficult to buy guns that are available in other states. But the firearms have been seized in criminal investigations in other states, including Arizona, Maryland, New York and Texas.

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An ATF agent poses with ghost guns at the Glendale field office in August. The weapons appear to be most prevalent in California, due in part to the state’s restrictive gun laws.PHOTO: JAE C. HONG/ASSOCIATED PRESS
Graham Barlowe, resident agent in charge at the Sacramento, Calif., ATF field office, said the weapons are “a huge problem in my area.”

About 250 ghost guns were seized or purchased in undercover buys by his Sacramento agents in 2017, he said. While statistics from the previous year weren’t available, Mr. Barlowe noted that his office has seen a rise in the number of busts. The ATF doesn’t keep track of ghost gun seizures nationwide.


“It went from being a niche group of people that were into the gun culture that were the ones making them for themselves,” said Mr. Barlowe. “Now, they’ve become so commonplace we’re buying them from 17-year-old gang-members on the street.”

The starting point for building a ghost gun is an “unfinished receiver,” a metal or polymer piece that houses the firing mechanism. It can be purchased online without a background check, because the ATF doesn’t classify the part as a firearm.

Buyers can finish the receiver with a drill press or a computerized metal-cutting machine and then add the remaining pieces, all of which are readily available online. Some gun parts can also be made using 3-D printers.

A finished receiver is considered a firearm by the ATF.

“There is a loophole under federal law that allows an individual to make a firearm,” said Justin Lee, a federal prosecutor in Sacramento who has handled several ghost gun cases. “That loophole only extends to that person. The person breaks the law as soon as they are transferring that firearm.”

Mr. Galvez, the Los Angeles machinist, now faces up to 10 years in federal prison. His attorney, Lawrence Strauss, said his client wasn’t any sort of illicit gun trafficker and “was just looking for a way to make extra money.”

The prevalence of online retailers and YouTube instructional videos has given ghost guns a boost, according to Mr. Barlowe. He said illicit gun dealers can buy parts for an AR-15 style rifle for about $700, put in a few hours of sweat equity, and sell it on the street for $1,000 to $2,000.

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One Elk Grove, Calif., man caught by Mr. Barlowe’s team pleaded guilty early last year to selling 92 AR-15 style rifles, five handguns and 88 silencers, all without serial numbers, for $264,500 over a six-month period in 2015

Companies that sell the unfinished receivers and gun-rights advocates including the Firearms Policy Coalition say law-enforcement concerns are overblown. People who make these guns are generally hobbyists who “want to build things with their own hands,” said Tilden Smith, president of 80% Arms, which manufactures unfinished receivers and sells them online.

“There are much easier ways [to get guns] that’ll appeal to criminals,” said Mr. Smith.

Gun-owners distrustful of registering their firearms with the government also are customers. “Unserialized, Unregistered” is the slogan for GhostGuns.com, which sells handgun kits, unfinished receivers, and other items. Kyle Martin, president of Ghost America LLC, which runs the site, said customers “want to enjoy their complete freedom as American citizens.”

The emerging market has begun to attract scrutiny from gun-control groups and state lawmakers. Mr. Martin’s company was recently targeted by the Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence. The nonprofit, which promotes gun control and fights gun violence, sent a letter to his web host asking it to shut down GhostGuns.com for allegedly violating the terms of service, an allegation Mr. Martin denied.

The California State Legislature passed a bill in 2016 that would have defined unfinished receivers as firearms requiring background checks. Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed the legislation, saying the wording of the bill was vague and could have unintended consequences, but he signed a separate law that will make California the first state to require anyone who owns a firearm without a serial number to apply for one by 2019. The National Rifle Association opposed the legislation.

Write to Zusha Elinson at [email protected]
 
Hmmmm. A black market formed in an over-regulated industry? You don't say. People broke laws by trying to illegally sell items in said black market?

Wow, this is completely unheard of. With the exception of every single regulated and outlawed industry in the history this is a brand new thing!!!
 
Hmmmm. A black market formed in an over-regulated industry? You don't say. People broke laws by trying to illegally sell items in said black market?

Wow, this is completely unheard of. With the exception of every single regulated and outlawed industry in the history this is a brand new thing!!!

I think the 'prohibition' quote in my sig applies here.
 
Why is it so important to trace guns if they don’t prosecute the highest profile, most treasonous gun trafficking operation in modern US history despite it being perfectly documented due to the guns being traced, and despite there being a dead US law enforcement officer involved? Eric Holder should be in federal prison right now.
 
Correct me if I'm wrong but don't we already have laws on the books for this?

How many have been prosecuted or did they plea out to lesser charges?
 
He's a machinist. He does not need to buy 80% receivers. He can make his own. The 80% receivers were purely a matter of convenience.

M
Banning 80% lowers won't stop a guy like him. Anyone with the right equipment can download files for a CNC machine to pour out receivers. He has the skills and equipment to do whatever the hell he wants.
 
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He's a machinist. He does not need to buy 80% receivers. He can make his own. The 80% receivers were purely a matter of convenience.

Making 80% lowers won't stop a guy like him. Anyone with the right equipment can download files for a CNC machine to pour out receivers. He has the skills and equipment to do whatever the hell he wants.
Absolutely.

These leftists don't understand that guns are basic, centuries old mechanical designs.

Even the "modern sporting rifles" are now 60+ year old designs that can be made quickly and easily in basic shops across the globe, with or without unfinished lowers.
 
Mr. Galvez, the Los Angeles machinist, now faces up to 10 years in federal prison. His attorney, Lawrence Strauss, said his client wasn’t any sort of illicit gun trafficker and “was just looking for a way to make extra money.”

Good luck with that defense

He is a DACA dreamer, 10% Indian, Democrat voter, non-white turning his life around ... yeah, it totally works, judges don't interpret laws anymore, they make things "right" from the bench.
 
Why is it so important to trace guns if they don’t prosecute the highest profile, most treasonous gun trafficking operation in modern US history despite it being perfectly documented due to the guns being traced, and despite there being a dead US law enforcement officer involved? Eric Holder should be in federal prison right now.
This says it all right here. Gets my vote for post of the year!
 
wait until we have UK laws and business for 80% knife kits picks up :D

One of my first knives was made from an industrial saw blade. My dad taught me how to shape the blade and grind the edge, quenching it periodically so that I didn't ruin the temper. We had to use acid to put holes in the tang area for the handle rivets because none of his drill bits could cut that metal. I don't remember how he contained the acid, I have vague recollections of a clay-like material, but that just seems wrong???

The knife's long gone, unfortunately. But I have the bench grinder and drill press in my garage now.
 
I fear that the biggest problem with "ghost guns" is anti-gunners pushing harder for a total ban instead of recognizing that bad guys will always find a way. There's nothing to stop low-budget bad guys from buying an old Bridgeport for $1500, cranking out lowers and reinvesting the profits until they have several CNC machines running. Basement shops could pop up in every town like meth labs and then more hysteria and more laws.
 
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