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A New York man claimed that he was paid $21,000 for trading in 3D-printed guns at a government buyback event.
A man who identified himself as "Kem" noticed that the New York attorney general's office was holding a gun buyback event at the Utica Police Department on Aug. 27. Kem allegedly 3D-printed dozens of guns on a $200 3D printer he got for Christmas.
Kem told WKTV, "I 3D-printed a bunch of lower receivers and frames for different kinds of firearms."
The man reportedly drove six hours to the Utica Police Department to trade in the firearms.
Kem said, "And he sees the tote and says, 'how many firearms do you have?' And I said, '110.'"
He said that he negotiated all day with the staff of the attorney general's office.
"And it ended with the guy and a lady from the budget office finally coming around with the 42 gift cards and counting them in front of me," Kem explained. "$21,000 in $500 gift cards."
New York Attorney General Letitia James announced that "296 firearms, including 177 ghost guns, were turned in to law enforcement at a gun buyback event hosted by her office and the Utica Police Department."
"Since 2013, OAG has hosted gun buyback events throughout New York state and has successfully collected more than 5,300 firearms," the statement read. "To date, Attorney General James has helped remove more than 3,300 guns out of communities since 2019."
Kem mocked James, "I'm sure handing over $21,000 in gift cards to some punk kid after getting a bunch of plastic junk was a rousing success."
On Wednesday, a spokesperson at the attorney general's office responded, "It's shameful that this individual exploited a program that has successfully taken thousands of guns off the streets to protect our communities from gun violence. We have partnered with local police throughout the state to recover more than 3,500 guns, and one individual’s greedy behavior won’t tarnish our work to promote public safety."
"We have adjusted our policies to ensure that no one can exploit this program again for personal gain," the spokesperson added.
Previously, the New York attorney general said the gun buyback event "accepts — with no questions asked — working and non-working, unloaded firearms in exchange for compensation on site."
Kem lampooned buyback events for not reducing firearm incidents, "Gun buybacks are a fantastic way of showing, number one, that your policies don't work, and, number 2, you're creating perverse demand. You're causing people to show up to these events, and, they don't actually reduce crime whatsoever."
On July 30 at the Wheeler Avenue Baptist Church in Houston, Democrat Mayor Sylvester Turner held a gun buyback event, which is said to have taken in around 150 guns. The city awarded gift cards to citizens who turned in their firearms. For a non-functioning firearm, a citizen received a $50 gift card; for a rifle or shotgun, the amount was $100; for a handgun, the amount was $150; and finally, for a fully automatic rifle, a gift card worth $200 was awarded.
Turner touted the exchange as a success and has two similar buyback events planned. However, not all firearms — like 62 of the 150 reportedly exchanged on July 30 — will be accepted at subsequent buybacks. Turner said that 3D-printed guns, also referred to as "ghost guns," will be excluded the next time around.
One unnamed individual turned in 3D-printed guns in exchange for gift cards. He told Fox 26 that he exchanged 62 3D-printed guns, which each cost him approximately $3 to produce, and received $50 per firearm. He noted that "The goal was not personal profit, but to send [Houston leaders] a message about spending 1 million tax dollars on something that has no evidence of any effect on crime…”
The $1 million figure the person referred to concerns the money Turner has set aside from the city’s $53 million federally funded “One Safe Houston” program for this gun buyback initiative.
Other 3D-printed handguns were, however, rejected.
Cody Wilson, the director of Ghost Guns, brought around 25 3D-printed firearms that each allegedly met the criteria for "non-functioning firearm" to the buyback. With the understanding that finished frames are receivers for the purposes of federal law, Wilson and other members of the Ghost Guns team produced and brought such parts, which took them only a few hours and cost "mere dollars in plastic" to make. Houston police refused to take them.
\u201cTook a roadtrip to Houston for their gun "buyback." \n\nTurns out our printed/milled lowers are too spooky. They wouldn't take them because "they aren't firearms." No shit. \n\nProof the new ATF ruling is absolute bullshit.\u201d— GhostGuns.com (@GhostGuns.com) 1659203515
Wilson told TheBlaze that such gun buybacks call to mind to "the apocryphal story of how the English Imperial Office tried to get rid of cobras in India," by placing a bounty on them. "And supposedly people began to farm cobras." In the case of gun buybacks, he suggested that one way to "spoil liberal posturing" would be to breed cobras or in this case 3D-print firearms for buybacks.
Wilson regards both law enforcement's and governments' acceptance of ghost guns and their rejection at these events as a win.
If accepted, entrepreneurial ghost-gun manufacturers can make some money. What's more, changes in definitions and in criteria incentivize innovation. "If you think about it, it's like a technology challenge ... encouraging the advancement of the state of the art." For instance, when lawmakers targeted polymer handgun parts, they "created structural incentives for people to make ghost guns from rifles and rifle parts" instead. Additionally, the attempt to pass off a 3D-printed firearm in light of the new exclusion forces private printers to improve quality.
If, on the other hand, "they have to say they don't want 3D guns, then we say, 'well, how big a problem can they really be?'" Wilson noted the disconnect at the event, where Houston police would have arrested 3D-gun manufacturers who had trunks full of firearms, despite having just been denied gift cards on the basis that the same items were not in fact guns.
On April 11, the Biden administration announced that the U.S. Department of Justice had issued a rule to “rein in the proliferation” of “ghost guns,” then defined as “unserialized, privately-made firearms.” The rule banned the business of manufacturing unserialized “buy build shoot” kits that individuals could use to assemble firearms without background checks. The rule further deems these kits “firearms” under the Gun Control Act.
This rule goes into effect August 24.
Wilson suggests that this rule and related efforts are tantamount to "pure anarcho-tyranny. We know the only people that have the equipment in the hobby to make guns are good, law-abiding people. And this [rule] is meant to terrorize."
A 13-year-old student was arrested for bringing a loaded ghost gun to a middle school in Maryland, according to police.
The alleged incident unfolded on Tuesday at Isaac J. Gourdine Middle School in Fort Washington.
Police said they were called to the school after a report from a student who said that another student was showing off a ghost gun. Numerous students saw the gun.
When they arrived at the school at about 8:15 a.m., they found the gun in the waistband of a 13-year-old student. The school went into a brief period of lockdown during the incident.
No one was injured in the incident, officials said, but charges against the child are pending. The child might be charged with bringing a loaded handgun and dangerous weapon onto a school property.
Maryland has banned ghost guns and the law went into effect in June. Despite the restriction, 10 guns have been recovered at Prince George's County Public Schools since the beginning of the year, and three of them were ghost guns.
Prince George’s County at-large councilmember Mel Franklin told WUSA-TV that the issue needed to be addressed by officials.
“I think our oversight committee is going to have to look at it," Franklin said. "I think our police chief is going to need to address it, obviously, our school system is trying to address it. All of those things need to come together to really come up with what our game plan is going to be."
The school sent a letter home with students asking parents to discuss safety with their children.
"Please assist in our efforts to maintain a safe learning environment by discussing with your child acceptable behaviors that support a positive school climate," read the school letter.
"Discuss with your child the consequences, such as expulsion, for bringing weapons or anything that resembles a weapon to school," the school added. "Please encourage your child to always immediately report the sighting of any weapon or suspicious objects on school grounds to a staff member or trusted adult."
13-year-old student arrested for bringing ghost gun to Prince George's Co. middle schoolwww.youtube.com
Biden Cracks Down on 'Ghost Guns,' Says This Is Just the START | The News & Why It Matters | Ep 996