Sheriff Annoyed That People Are 3D Printing Guns to Sell to State Buyback Programs

“You can’t guarantee that those guns will never be used to harm someone.”

Buy It Back

An upstate New York sheriff is irked that people around the US are 3D printing firearms to turn into gun buyback programs for cold, hard cash.

“I know in Utica, New York, Houston, Texas, and Spartanburg, South Carolina that 3D printed guns were submitted to the gun buyback program,” Robert Swenszkowski, the sheriff of New York’s Oneida County and, strangely, a professor at Utica University, told Spectrum News 1.

He appeared to be referring to several stories that emerged this summer, in which people in Texas, South Carolina and New York did indeed sell back guns they 3D printed at home to local authorities as part of state gun buyback programs. One man, who identified himself only as “Kem,” admitted that he 3D printed more than 100 guns to turn into New York State’s gun buyback program. He was awarded $21,000 for his efforts, which was paid out to him in $500 gift cards.

Regulatory Nightmare

The NY state attorney general’s office confirmed that the man known as Kem had indeed exploited the program — and as Swenszkowski noted, it’s unclear what to do about the loophole, given that others are doing the same in other parts of the country.

“From a public safety perspective,” the Utica sheriff said, “getting any gun off the street if it has the potential to harm someone may be just as effective [as buying back traditionally-manufactured guns] so there’s certainly considerations that need to be given.”

“You can’t guarantee that those guns will never be used to harm someone or never be used unlawfully,” Swenszkowski added in his interview with the Utica-based Spectrum News 1.

To the sheriff’s mind, people like Kem should be held accountable for fraud — but he admits that changing the language of these buyback programs, which currently operate on a no-questions-asked basis, may hurt their efficacy.

“It’s a catch-22,” Swenszkowski said — and it’s hard to argue, given the gravity of gun violence in the US today.

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