East Bay Times

Biden cracks down on ‘ghost guns.’

- By Annie Karni

President Joe Biden, calling gun violence in the United States “an internatio­nal embarrassm­ent,” took a set of initial steps on Thursday to address the problem, starting with a crackdown on the proliferat­ion of so-called ghost guns, or firearms assembled from kits.

Acknowledg­ing that more aggressive actions like banning assault weapons, closing background check loopholes and stripping gun manufactur­ers of their immunity from liability lawsuits would have to wait for action from Congress, he said it was nonetheles­s vital to do what he could on his own to confront what he called an epidemic of shootings that are killing roughly 100 Americans a day.

“We’ve got a long way to go — it seems like we always have a long way to go,” Biden said during an appearance in the Rose Garden, weeks after two mass shootings, in Georgia and Colorado, left 18 people dead and put the administra­tion under intense pressure from the left to take action.

While the moves the president announced fall far short of the broad legislativ­e changes long sought by proponents of making it harder to buy guns, especially semi-automatic weapons often used in mass shootings, they addressed narrower issues also of intense concern to many Democrats and supporters of gun regulation­s.

The most substantiv­e of the steps was directing the Justice Department to curb the spread of ghost guns. Kits for these guns can be bought without background checks and allow a gun to be assembled from pieces with no serial numbers.

Biden said he wanted the department to issue a regulation within a month to require that the components in the kits have serial numbers that would allow them to be traced and that the weapons be legally classified as firearms, with the buyers subjected to background checks.

“I want to see these kits treated as firearms under the Gun Control Act,” the president said.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives estimated that 10,000 ghost guns were recovered by law enforcemen­t in 2019. Cities like Philadelph­ia, Baltimore and San Diego have seen significan­t increases in the number of such guns recovered each year since then.

Ghost guns, experts said, have become particular­ly appealing to criminal organizati­ons and rightwing extremists who want access to untraceabl­e firearms that do not require any background checks. They are often linked to shootings in states like California that have instituted strict gun laws.

The focus on ghost guns also underscore­d the White House’s intent to address gun violence broadly and not just the mass shootings that get widespread news coverage.

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