Are you ready for what it takes to stop ghost guns?

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New laws in California and New York might stop anyone from 3D printing guns — and create entirely new kinds of surveillance.

by Mack DeGeurin

Jul 7, 2026, 11:00 AM UTC

In the summer of 2024, former Army National Guard member Andrew Scott Hastings spent a sweaty afternoon carefully packing boxes with parts he made using his 3D printer. These weren’t novelty figurines or replacement Ikea pieces. The boxes were instead filled with a handful of homemade firearm lower receivers and more than 100 “switches,” small devices capable of converting a semiautomatic gun into a fully automatic weapon. Their intended recipients, federal prosecutors allege, were al-Qaida operatives.

Months later ATF agents busted two men in Colorado Springs for allegedly using 3D printers to churn out hundreds of illegal machine gun conversion devices as a part of a DIY black market. To avoid detection the duo allegedly stuffed their products ...

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