Bill Introduced to Ban 3-D Guns Following Murder of Pawtucket’s Cheryl Smith

Friday, January 10, 2020

 

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Legislation introduced to ban 3-D printed guns. PHOTO: Mirko Tobias Schäfer/Flickr Commons

State Senator Cynthia Coyne has reintroduced legislation that would ban 3-D printed guns, along with other untraceable firearms.

This comes as investigators continue to look into what may be Rhode Island’s first murder committed with a 3-D printed gun in the case of Pawtucket’s Cheryl Smith.

 

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 “Our laws require serial numbers, background checks and age restrictions for gun ownership to provide accountability and some level of safety. 3-D guns, ghost guns, and undetectable plastic guns are all meant to dodge these safeguards, at tremendous risk to public safety. These guns are designed for criminal activity. Our state laws should be very clear that possessing, creating or selling them is a criminal act, and we should be doing everything we can to keep these dangerous weapons from proliferating here,” said Coyne who is a Democrat represents Barrington, Bristol, and East Providence.

State Representative Patricia Serpa is preparing to submit identical legislation in the House.

“While I am a strong proponent of people’s right to bear arms, these devices simply lack the safety, reliability, and accountability of conventional firearms and have become a menace to society,” said Serpa.

The bill, which passed the Senate last year, is co-sponsored in the Senate by Senate President Dominick J. Ruggerio.

 

Cheryl Smith Case

Investigators believe such a gun was used in the New Year’s Day murder of Cheryl Smith in her Pawtucket home. Suspects Jack Doherty, 23, of Albany, N.Y., and Shaylyn Moran, 18, of Pawtucket, allegedly used a handgun that appears to be made from 3-D printed parts.

 A Facebook account apparently used by Doherty includes several posts made prior to the murder showing the gun as it was being created.

The director of the Rhode Island State Crime Lab has said the weapon is the first 3-D gun it has been tasked with investigating, and that it will pose challenges, since plastic weapons may not leave marks on bullets the way metal guns do.

Plastic weapons are also known to frequently explode when fired, so the staff at the crime lab may be unable to conduct test firing on the weapon.

 

The Legislation

The legislation would make it unlawful in Rhode Island for any person to manufacture, sell, offer to sell, transfer, purchase, possess, or have under his or her control any firearm that is made from plastic, fiberglass or through a 3-D printing process; or a ghost gun — one that lacks a serial number under the requirements of the Federal Gun Control Act of 1968; or one that would be undetectable by a metal detector after removal of all parts other than a major component, or whose major component would not generate an accurate image if subjected to the type of screening equipment used at airports and public buildings.

The bill sets a punishment for violations at up to 10 years in prison and up to $10,000 in fines.

 

PHOTO: Mirko Tobias Schäfer/Flickr Commons 

 
 

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