Cody Wilson Thwarts Another Attempt To Stop Ghost Guns
The ATF is expected to adopt a new rule requiring that the metal parts hobbyists used to manufacture their DIY weapons be registered as legal firearms. So Cody Wilson made those parts unnecessary.
HD DownloadThe Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) is expected to adopt a new rule in the coming weeks with the potential to undermine the DIY gun industry: It will require that the metal parts that hobbyists used to manufacture their so-called ghost guns be registered as legal firearms.
Cody Wilson, the founder of the Austin-based Defense Distributed and a prominent figure in the DIY gun movement, has been planning a countermove that he says will allow his customers to circumvent the new rule: The company has modified its* home milling machine so that users no longer need to load it with the partially fabricated metal parts subject to the new rule.
Instead, they'll be able start from scratch with a solid block of aluminum.
The newest version of the Ghost Gunner, a milling machine that's roughly the size of home printers, will now be able to "take raw materials…in their primordial state…and turn them into guns," Wilson tells Reason. Blocks of aluminum will not be subject to the new regulation.
It's not the first time the federal government has tried to undermine Wilson's business. In 2013, the State Department ordered him to take down plans posted to his website for his first 3D-printed gun, the Liberator. Wilson sued on First Amendment grounds, which led to a 2018 settlement with federal government, a media firestorm, and a 9th Circuit Court injunction against states trying to ban sharing of the files in 2021.
The new 100-page administrative rule issued by the ATF, which was published to the Federal Register in May 2021 for public review, will change the definition of a firearm to encompass "weapon parts kit[s]…designed to or [which] may readily be assembled, completed, converted, or restored."
If adopted, it will mean that the federal government will require gun part kits sold online to bear the same serial numbers as do fully manufactured firearms, which could put most companies in the space out of business because customers won't want to deal with the bureaucratic hurdles of registering their parts.
Wilson says that Defense Distributed is the only DIY gun company pivoting in the face of the upcoming rule, so its real impact will be to drive his competitors off the market. Biden is "giving us, the nation's premier ghost gun company, a monopoly of the market," Wilson says.
As justification for the forthcoming rule, the ATF cites an uptick in the number of homemade guns recovered at crime scenes, and the agency says it views unregistered firearms as a growing national security threat. After the Capitol riot, the Department of Homeland Security turned its focus to "homegrown domestic terrorism," which the White House calls "the most urgent terrorism threat the United States faces today."
Wilson says the new regulation will have the opposite effect because it will mean that more DIY gunsmiths are buying blocks of aluminum instead of gun kits—the sale of which can be more easily surveilled by law enforcement.
"People are gonna make guns. They're gonna choose gun privacy. They're gonna choose ways to acquire weapons outside of government oversight," he says.
Some critics have accused Wilson of helping to arm far-right activists, claiming that Defense Distributed is a part of a larger project meant to funnel weapons to militia groups aligned with those involved in the Capitol riots. His latest video marking the new product launch makes visual reference to January 6.
Wilson says that Ghost Gunners are being used by many different types of political groups.
"Our perspective has always been global," he says. "And of course, there's no level of control that I can affect to make sure that only the right-wing gets access to this equipment."
When we saw news reports about the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone, or CHAZ—the short-lived project started by far-left activists in Seattle—he says he noticed participants carrying homemade guns and wearing the "Come and Take It" patches made by Defense Distributed.
Wilson personally identifies with the "the post-political right" because they're "the only people actually attempting to… resist this accumulation of centralized power control," he tells Reason.
He elaborated on the concept of "post-political" in an April 2021 speech at the "Bear Arms 'n' Bitcoin" conference, in which he encouraged the audience to focus less on engaging in electoral politics or debate and persuasion and more on maintaining intellectual independence, political sovereignty, and creating things that constrain power in the real world.
"It's not just that [U.S. politics are] performative, but it's like, somehow cringeworthy and connected to a pseudo-reality that's further and further away from what's actually happening," he says.
Wilson notes that the ATF's latest move shows how disconnected the U.S. regulatory state is from reality.
"These people will high-five themselves, like, 'Well, we solved kit guns and gun crime in America, right?'"
A complete federal ban on DIY guns is a nonstarter in Congress, Wilsons says, but that's not the case at the state and local level. Defense Distributed is suing New Jersey's attorney general in a Texas court for his attempts to ban the distribution of gun files, and multiple cities in California have banned the sale and distribution of ghost guns. Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom has proposed a law modeled on Texas's new abortion law that would deputize private citizens to pursue lawsuits against individuals who distribute ghost gun kits.
But Wilson says that path is unlikely to ever be sufficient to halt the home production of firearms.
"There's a world of things that are not gun parts. We will give you the technology to turn these things into guns and gun parts," says Wilson.
Four years ago, Wilson's personal legal troubles caused him to temporarily step back from his role at Defense Distributed. In 2018, he was indicted for paying for sex with a 16-year-old girl he met through a dating site for adults, though his legal team at the time argued he wasn't aware that she was a minor who had lied about her age to sign up for the site. He ended up pleading guilty to a third-degree felony charge, was sentenced to seven years of probation, and had to register as a sex offender for that period.
"You can't choose your messenger," Wilson tells Reason. "I don't presume to be a spokesperson for everything happening in the movement, which I clearly fathered. At the same time, when [Defense Distributed has] a technical innovation, I'm gonna show the way. I'm not gonna wait for you to figure it out or to commercialize it."
A lesson that Wilson says he came away with from his prior fights with the federal government is that politicians and regulators care most about how they are perceived and that they will back down quietly—as long as those challenging their authority are careful not to publicly embarrass them too much.
The State Department agency previously responsible for regulating ghost gun files gave up its legal fights, which enabled Wilson to make the online library of gun files—DEFCAD—available once again. Regulation shifted to a division of the Department of Commerce, which allows DEFCAD to host, but not generate or sell, the files.
"They literally just wrote how we did DEFCAD into their regulations," says Wilson. "So, there's this process of accommodation. Power never admits that it loses, but it does have to tactically retreat."
"Power is essentially impotent in these places."
*CORRECTION: The original version of this article stated that the Ghost Gunner sells for $500. The deposit is $500, and the final sales price is $2,500 before shipping. The text has been updated to correct the error.
Produced by Zach Weissmueller; camera by John Osterhoudt; additional footage by Mark McDaniel; intro graphics by Regan Taylor; additional graphics by Nodehaus.
Photos: Karen Ducey/ZUMA Press/Newscom
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Progressives will continue gunning for our gu…firearms.
don't cross the streams!
In related news, CA official state media source KCRA reports that AR15 Bullet Buttons (the work around for detachable magazines on ARs that make them “assault weapons” in CA) are to “allow users to rapidly exchange ammunition magazines by using a small tool or the tip of a bullet.”
https://kcra.com/article/california-assault-weapon-owners-registration-deadline/38749353
The point of KCRA’s helpful article is to remind AR owners in CA that they have a deadline to register their firearm as an Assault Weapon, even if it has that troubling Bullet Button.
I will live so free that my mere existence is an act of rebellion to the People's Republic of California.
Yon bureau of whisky, tobaccy and boom sticks should be a convenience store, not a gubmint agency!
*spits*
Thankfully, the only product in said shop experiencing inflation has been spittin tobacky. And that only increased ten cents per pouch. Ammo has stayed the at same price for the past few years.
Same elevated price! Why I remember back when I could shoot all muh guns the days long for a few dollars.
Those were the days
Interesting that they aren't trying to ban rubber bands, nails, metal pipe, and all the other stuff "juvenile delinquents" used to make zip guns in the fifties and sixties.
"There is no such thing as a dangerous weapon; there are just dangerous men"
- L. Long
You can make a pretty effective 12 ga. with about $20 of iron pipe from any hardware store and a nail.
That's basically how the Chinese successfully revolted against the Mongols.
A "Four Winds" shotgun.
Alas, that might be the direction all the shrapnel goes as well.
"As justification for the forthcoming rule, the ATF cites an uptick in the number of homemade guns recovered at crime scenes, and the agency says it views unregistered firearms as a growing national security threat. After the Capitol riot, the Department of Homeland Security turned its focus to "homegrown domestic terrorism," which the White House calls "the most urgent terrorism threat the United States faces today.""
The progressives in the US are truly at war with its own citizens. And when did a homemade ghost gun get recovered at a crime scene, has this happened even once? I can't imagine it has, but if so, they act as though its all the sudden some reoccurring thing? GTFOH!!
an uptick in the number of homemade guns recovered at crime scenes,
this is the best they can do? not even 'used in crimes' just 'found in location where we raided people's homes for some reason'?
The cathedral always lies, always.
The writer misspelled "throwdown."
If controlling criminals was the point, then we'd be focused on that.
We obviously have a VERY different viewpoint on what an elected official's job is.
Far as I can tell, the single most imported job of every elected official is to get re-elected.
This means not pissing off the money guys and finding short term, feelgood solutions to whatever kneejerk problem the press has set everyone's hair on fire about most recently. Long term doesn't matter. Actual results do not matter. Real problems do not matter.
In this case of political theater, the idea is not to control criminals, it is to be able to SAY they are doing something about criminals and lowering gun violence. Being able to piss of team red is seen as a bonus.
Yes, we never hear from those who've been charged with enforcing the law that they've been enforcing the law.
I don't know the numbers, but if there was one found last year and two this year, there's been an uptick.
A 100% increase in incidents even!
"And when did a homemade ghost gun get recovered at a crime scene, has this happened even once? "
A quick search shows a definite uptick in the numbers.
https://bfy.tw/SLxp
It also makes since to find them more and more in the hands of the more organized criminals. Acquiring guns in any sort of bulk on the black and grey markets is not only somewhat difficult, but caries risks of its own. Seems it would be way easier, and much less risky, to get one [gang/mafia/militia/whatever] member to get a ghost gun printer and start cranking out tons of weapons for the group. Them not having any sort of pesky serial number for law enforcement to trace would be an added bonus. Not complete hyperbole either, as their have several news stories of caches of weapons being seized for exactly that sort of purpose.
Once again, jack asses like crack dealers and street thugs are why we are not allowed to have nice things...
If simpler options are unavailable to them, they might buy a lathe and a mill, and hire a machinist to make them lots of machine guns. Several countries have spent the last century or so coming up with design for reliable and easy to manufacture automatic weapons.
Since making something like that is not any harder than making a semiauto gun, when the gangs start manufacturing their own, they are likely to make the more serious kind of weapons.
Last year it was one. This year three - 200 percent rise!
Yes, I'd like to see and review this claimed data, though it likely doesn't exist.
They are deliberately conflating guns with serial numbers defaced with home built gun, never serialized.
Home built guns in the U S are strictly made by hobbyists/survivalists.
Any criminal van get a pistol by breaking into parked cars.
Lots of people leave their gun in the glove compartment.
Especially when they go into gun free zones like post offices and courts buildings.
And how many 80% lowers have been sold in the past two years because of civil unrest and now the ATF madness (all of a sudden what was considered legal for decades isn't?). I got like 5 (all of which have been lost in mysterious boating accidents).
Now if primers become available again I can be self-sufficient for a while.
"If adopted, it will mean that the federal government will require gun part kits sold online to bear the same serial numbers as do fully manufactured firearms, which could put most companies in the space out of business because customers won't want to deal with the bureaucratic hurdles of registering their parts."
Which is the whole point.
Serious question: How many crimes are committed with guns without serials?
And what difference did the lack of a serial make, in either acquiring the gun or solving the crime?
Probably went from 5 to 15- that's a 200% increase!
Given that very few guns used in crime were legally purchased by the criminal in question, probably very little.
The real question is how many had to post bail? Probably close to zero.
But if the guns aren't registered, how can they confiscate them like they said they never would?
If you like your doctor - - - -
If you like your health plan - - -
I will not mandate vaccines - - - -
You're not supposed to be paying attention to things like that.
Why won't you accept your programming? Are you watching the prescribed minimum amount of television each day?
and where is RevCuntland to tell us this is from our betters and choking on it etc etc.. seems you are not following along with his prescribed bootlicking/brownshirting "betters"...
Instead, they'll be able start from scratch with a solid block of aluminum.
Well that's just great. Now NJ is going to ban aluminum.
You know what else is made out of aluminum?
Aluminum Hitler?
Gort?
Whale tanks in the 23rd Century?
If it is used in a crime, hopefully cops will foil it.
Carry on Mr. Wilson. Carry on!
"The only way to deal with an unfree world is to become so absolutely free that your very existence is an act of rebellion."
A. Caymus
Who?
Albert Camus. Writer and also member of the French Resistance during WW2.
"Aluminum kills people."
The Gun Control Lobby
Not everyone will be siding with aluminum.
"Blocks of aluminum will not be subject to the new regulation."
Yet.
If you can make it illegal for people to own gold, why not aluminum too?
There is something hilarious about when the government tries to enforce some unenforceable law.
Score another point for Cody Wilson.
There is something horrifying about the damage caused when the government tries to enforce some unenforceable law.
Cody is a decent mechanic. But anyone with an ounce of "intellectual independence" or "political sovereignty" would be a fool to pass up the opportunity to peacefully repeal bad laws by voting Libertarian. People all over the world would give anything for such an opportunity--likewise for a Bill of Rights containing a Second Amendment. These are not either-or, but rather, complementary facets of freedom.
If only voting Libertarian meant freedom.
There's an EXTREMELY local story (like less than a mile from my residence) on this topic.
14-year-old gets shot the day after Thanksgiving. Car pulls into the gas station pleading for someone to help-they'd started to take her to the hospital and apparently thought they didn't have time to get her there so were pleading for anyone who knew first aid.
Turns out, her 13-year-old brother had a little cottage industry of assembling ghost guns and then selling them around them, and of course he wasn't checking ID. A 19 year old resident comes over under the guise of buying a gun, but instead assaults the 13-year old and steals the gun. 13 year old picks up his own weapon to fire on the burglar as he's fleeing the scene, and hits his own sister, who dies from her wounds.
Both the 19-year-old burglar and the 13-year-old entrepreneur/shooter are charged with felony murder.
Now, I'm pro gun ownership in all respects, as well as being generally in favor of people making money however they see fit, but there's plenty of ethical issues with this case, and the 13-year-old's business model.
Hard cases make bad laws. The more so when fabrications from whole cloth.
Google Yusef McArthur El shooting (in Georgia) and you can read up on the case. It's completely real, not fabricated, and I haven't heard any narrative that disputes what happened yet, as of yet.
My thoughts are more about the problem with regulations and making something illegal. This robber is already doing something illegal, so he has fewer compunctions about just grabbing the gun and running. And the kid can't report the weapon stolen because he's engaged in illegal activity, so he's got no legal recourse to recover his property. Now, he's 13, so even if it was legal he might still make the bad decision to pull out his own gun and shoot the fleeing suspect, but at least he'd have less incentive. But even if we lived in a second amendment paradise, I'm not a fan of 13 year olds selling weapons because I believe gun-sellers still have some degree of ethical obligations that don't need to be legally codified.
If there is a point to your anecdote, I fail to see it.
Agreed - what's the point?
Several laws were broken. Bad shit happened to stupid people. Sounds like just another day among the hood rats.
Agreed. Sad news, but what is the point?
A few questions come to mind after reading the story. As I understand things, it costs more to buy the parts separately than to buy a fully functioning gun. Where is a 13 year old getting the money to buy all of these parts?
Secondly, did the mother not notice her son's hobby?
He probably only turned to guns because they outlawed unlicensed lemonade.
When life gives you lemons, make ghost guns.
He's described as making semi auto and other guns. What other? Single shot? Full auto? Sounds like this kid was going full Khyber Pass more than anything.
Erratum: The price of the milling machine seems to be $2500, not $500 as the article says. $500 is the deposit required to reserve a $2500 machine from the next production run (in the third quarter of this year).
If you billet, they will come.
You're just firing those puns from the hip, I see.
Most of the "Ghost Gun" talk across the river (D.C. and D.C. suburbs in Maryland) is about how ghost guns make prosecuting folks who shoot someone with one more difficult.
I've been unable to figure this out, and the police and county executives never explain in detail. Any ideas?
The idea they're trying to sell (which is totally misleading) that other criminals use guns that are easily traced back to them.
Reality says that criminals use guns not traceable back to them or illegally obtained in 90%+ of cases. So the difference it 'might' make is the roughly 10% of cases they wouldn't have been able to solve anyway.
Government's job is to preserve, protect and defend our rights.
Yet Government is the #1 threat to our rights. They constantly strive to further erode them while forcing the people to pay them to do it.
It's almost like hiring a security guard to protect your property, only to discover that the guard is stealing from you. It's as if the bodyguard you hired is always attempting to assassinate you.
Prohibit it from initiating force.
Ghost guns have been around since the turn of the last century. Bad guy takes a metal file, removes serial number. Its just now we get the silly Madison Ave scare name: Ghost Guns!!!!! Boooooo!!!!!
I don't understand what all this hoopla is about. People have been able to make guns at home for centuries, quicker, more easily, and better than anything you can do with a CNC or 3D printer.
The lack of any semblance of logic in so many of these comments makes me wonder if libertarian now means “lack of critical thinking skills “.
You think mr. Wilson is a freedom fighter but I see really just another fool playing with fire, completely unconcerned with the consequences of his actions. While focusing on the evil government (which I also worry about) I see no analysis of the contribution of ghost guns to an already thriving black market of illegal guns going into the hands of people who should NEVER be allowed to have them. Freedom also means being responsible, which is in short supply for the criminal class.
If most of you are legal gun owners and supporters of the 2nd as I am, please explain how ghost guns benefits you? Did you not go thru a process when purchasing a firearm that allowed you to own one because you were not an ex felon? How does a criminal obtaining a firearm comfort you, be it by theft, sale or manufacturing?
Tens Millions of guns were legally purchased in 2020/2021, many by first timers fearful of the new world we live in. Many will never get training including the mental training of emotional regulation owning a gun requires. Do all those new guns bought in FEAR make you all feel safer?
The ill(logic)most of you use to overcome your cognitive dissonance is that the big, bad feds are going to take your guns. That is completely off the table from both parties. The genie is out of the bottle along time ago. There are close to 400 millions guns in the USA. And yet you want any fool to be able to make one with a 2500$ machine? Please explain to me how this makes us safer? I live in a big city and I am way more worried about the criminal class hurting me than the USGOV. Yes, concealed carry is comforting…up to a point. But the number of illegal guns out there is disturbing.
Sorry but being a libertarian is not just about embracing “freedom” but also the responsibility that comes from being a free but also good citizen. There is such a thing called the “social contract”. Cody Wilson is irresponsible and cares nothing about the results of his actions. And he will always claim his freedom trumps any responsibility his actions lead to.
Try not being “knee jerk libertarians” . Try reading “the libertarian mind” for a deep dive into the philosophy before showing how much you all actually suffer from your minds being captured by your emotions. Knowing thyself is the ultimate freedom. Free from propaganda and manipulation, free from wishful thinking and harmful group behavior. A libertarian at his best is a free individual who knows the limits of what he knows.
Have a good day gentlemen.