Biden administration moves to curb proliferation of ´ghost guns´
Published : 12 Apr 2022, 04:15
The administration of U.S. President Joe Biden announced Monday new measures aimed at curbing the proliferation of "ghost guns" -- unserialized, privately-made firearms that law enforcement personnel are increasingly recovering at crime scenes in cities across the United States, reported Xinhua.
Last year alone, there were approximately 20,000 suspected ghost guns reported to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) as having been recovered by law enforcement in criminal investigations -- a ten-fold increase from 2016.
Because "ghost guns" lack the serial numbers marked on the firearms, the U.S. law enforcement has an exceedingly difficult time tracing a ghost gun found at a crime scene back to an individual purchaser.
A new rule issued by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) now bans the business of manufacturing the most accessible "ghost guns," such as unserialized "buy build shoot" kits that individuals can buy online or at a store without a background check and can readily assemble into a working firearm in as little as 30 minutes with the equipment they have at home.
It clarifies that these kits qualify as "firearms" under the Gun Control Act and that commercial manufacturers of such kits must therefore become licensed and include serial numbers on the kits' frame or receiver, and commercial sellers of these kits must become federally licensed and run background checks prior to a sale.
The rule applies to all "ghost guns," regardless of how they were made, which can include 3D printing as well as kits, while the DOJ will require federally licensed dealers to take any unserialized firearm into inventory to serialize them.
Biden introduced these new actions from the Rose Garden at the White House on Monday afternoon as part of his administration's efforts to reduce gun crimes, alongside Vice President Kamala Harris and Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco.