ATF Seizes 165 Firearms, Including 82 Ghost Guns, During San Diego Operation
A three-month operation led by federal law enforcement agents and the San Diego Police Department resulted in the seizure of 165 firearms, including 82 “ghost guns” that have no serial number and are suspected of being privately made, authorities announced this week. The campaign — which lasted from Feb. 1 to May 1 and was led by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives — has resulted in the prosecution of at least 29 people, some suspected of unlawfully manufacturing, selling or possessing firearms, and others suspected of committing related drug offenses, officials said Wednesday at a morning news conference. About two-thirds of those defendants are being prosecuted in U.S. District Court, mostly on firearms charges, while the others were charged with drug offenses in San Diego Superior Court, authorities said. “Guns, drugs and violence go hand in hand,” U.S. Attorney Randy Grossman told reporters. About half of the seized weapons and related items were displayed on tables nearby, including short-barreled rifles, silencers and handguns modified with “Glock switches” to make them fully automatic. Grossman said the firearms seized during the operation “were illegally possessed, used in an alleged crime or found at a crime scene.”
Los Angeles Times
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