Futility and fury. That’s what I experienced in the 24-hour period starting Monday morning. It began with President Joe Biden’s attempt to do something — anything — to counter gun violence and ended with a gunman in a Brooklyn, New York, subway firing 33 rounds, hitting 10 people, with another 13 injured.
I appeared on MSNBC on Monday to discuss Biden’s announcement of new restrictions on the manufacture and sale of “ghost guns” and the announcement of his second candidate to lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
The president’s executive order to regulate ghost guns was a promise that he intends to do anything and everything to battle gun crimes, even if lawmakers won’t.
Tuesday, I was on the air once more, this time to discuss yet another mass shooting, this one occurring during the chaos of the morning rush-hour commute. I expressed how furious I am at those who remain unwilling to take commonsense steps against gun violence, and I was reminded of the seeming futility of piecemeal measures that fall short of broader federal legislation.
Biden’s announcement on ghost guns and his nomination of former U.S. Attorney Steve Dettelbach to be ATF director was commendable — not necessarily for any monumental impact it will have on preventing the devastating number of mass shootings in America, but for its defiance in the face of relentless recalcitrance by lawmakers more beholden to the NRA than to public safety. The president’s executive order to regulate ghost guns wasn’t a panacea as much as it was a promise: that he intends to do anything and everything within his limited authority to battle gun crimes, even if lawmakers won’t. His attempt to fill the seat of a Senate-confirmed ATF director, which has been vacant since 2015, sends a similar message that he won’t be deterred in his attempts to make the country safer.
Ghost guns, which can be made at home from a kit and have no serial numbers that allow them to be traced, have become increasingly confounding to investigators trying to solve murders and shootings. According to a Monday statement from the White House, “Last year alone, there were approximately 20,000 suspected ghost guns reported to ATF as having been recovered by law enforcement in criminal investigations — a ten-fold increase from 2016. Because ghost guns lack the serial numbers marked on other firearms, law enforcement has an exceedingly difficult time tracing a ghost gun found at a crime scene back to an individual purchaser.”
The president’s executive order essentially redefines a firearm — for the first time in 50 years. As succinctly explained by The Atlanta Voice and The Associated Press, the new rule modifies the existing definition of a firearm under federal law to include “unfinished parts, like the frame of a handgun or the receiver of a long gun. It says those parts must be licensed and include serial numbers. Manufacturers must also run background checks before a sale — as they do with other commercially made firearms. The requirement applies regardless of how the firearm was made, meaning it includes ghost guns made from individual parts, kits, or by 3D-printers.”
The new regulations won’t stop gun violence, but they most certainly will help solve crimes involving guns by enabling law enforcement to better track and trace the firearms used in violent attacks.








