
Washington – On Wednesday, the Supreme Court upheld a federal ban on the sale of spare parts groups that allow those who are unlicensed to make firearms at home that cannot be followed by the police.
In Resolution 2, the judges agreed on these homemade weapons, and often referred to as “ghost rifles”, which are qualified as firearms under federal law.
Today, thousands of law enforcement agencies depend on the country [federal] Judge Neil Gorsesh said of the court: “A system of firearms tracking participating in crimes for their owners.”
Judges Clarence Thomas and Samuel spent a. Alto.
The decision supports a list issued in 2022 by the Biden administration, which was strongly supported by the police and prosecutors.
Conservative judges rule in Texas who said that Congress did not give federal organizers a authority prohibiting the “groups of parts” that can be assembled in a weapon.
It is a rare victory for the preachers to control arms in the Supreme Court.
“This decision of the Supreme Court is great news for everyone except for criminals who adopted ghost ghosts that cannot be tracked as weapons of their choice,” said John Venbilat, the president of every city for arms safety. “Ghost ghosts look like regular rifles, fire like regular weapons, and kill like regular rifles – so it is only logical that the Supreme Court has just confirmed that it can also be organized like regular weapons.”
Last year, the conservative majority of the court prevented a list supported by both Trump and Biden departments that banned “casting stocks”, which allowed semi -automatic weapons to quickly shoot like a machine gun. Thanks to 6-3 vote, the judges said that these devices are not commensurate with the definition of the gunman as the Congress identified.
But the court said on Wednesday that weapons control in the 1968 law widely defined a firearm as “any weapon … it would, be designed or may be easily transferred to expel a shell through the work of the explosive.”
None of the case was directly involved in the second amendment and its protection of weapons rights.
The Los Angeles Police Administration and other police agencies have expressed a warning of the increasing threat to the easy -to -collect weapons that can be purchased as online layers.
Three years ago, LAPD said, “Ghost ghosts are an epidemic not only in Los Angeles but at the country level … … ghost weapons are real, working, and they are killing.”
The Ministry of Justice told the courts of the court that local law enforcement agencies seized more than 19,000 ghost rifles in crime scenes in 2021, an increase of more than ten times in four years.
In urging the court to support the embargo, lawyer General Elizabeth Brailogar argued that arms groups from the mail arrangement can “effectively fill” weapons laws dating back to 1968, which allow the police to track weapons used in crimes.
Without the new regulations adopted by the alcohol, tobacco office, firearms, explosives or ATF, “anyone can buy a group online and collect a rifle that operates at full capacity in minutes – there is no examination, records or serial number required.”
California has already banned the sale of these parts groups, but Atty. General Rob Punta said the federal embargo is necessary to impose a ban on sending these groups via mail.
Although California has at least tried to curb the unconditional weapons since 2016, these weapons represent approximately 30 % of all the weapons that have been recovered in the state by ATF.
Meanwhile, the number of unoccupied weapons that law enforcement agencies in California has increased from 167 in 2016 to approximately 12,900 in 2022, an increase of 77 times, Punta said.
However, the Fifth Circuit Court in New Orleans has not retracted due to the warnings issued by the police stations. The ATF list has struck and ruled “the set of weapons parts” is not a firearm, even if it could be assembled in one.
The Supreme Court put the fifth circle ruling last year and a voice to hear the government’s appeal in Bondi’s case against Vandastoc.