Fact check: Is North Carolina a top state for ghost gun confiscations?
Mike Easley Jr., the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, said: "North Carolina is among some of the top states in the country for the number of ghost guns that are seized as crime guns." PolitiFact NC checks the claim.
Posted — UpdatedA federal prosecutor says North Carolina law enforcement authorities are among the leaders in confiscating homemade guns that are hard to track.
One seized weapon was a so-called ghost gun. These firearms are hard to trace because they’re often made privately using 3-D printers or assembled from a kit.
Easley said ghost guns are a growing problem in North Carolina, adding that the state is “among some of the top states in the country for the number of ghost guns that are seized as crime guns,” he said.
Is Easley right about North Carolina being among the leading states in ghost gun confiscations?
Boyce also referred PolitiFact NC to ATF.
Although Easley’s comments reflect what federal agents have said, and North Carolina may have confiscated a high number of ghost guns in 2021, it’s difficult to know how these numbers stack up to other states.
The federal government hasn’t disclosed a state-by-state comparison of ghost gun seizures, according to Erik Longnecker, a deputy chief in ATF’s public affairs division, and some departments aren’t regularly reporting such seizures.
A growing concern
About 20,000 suspected ghost guns across the country were confiscated and reported to ATF in 2021, Biden said, adding that last year’s numbers marked a tenfold increase since 2016.
North Carolina seized more than 400 ghost guns last year, according to Corey Ray, a spokesperson for ATF in Charlotte. That figure represented a sevenfold increase over the previous year, although the 2020 figure may have been underreported.
Ray said in an email that North Carolina is among the “top 10 states” for recoveries, but he wouldn’t be more specific. He also said a state-by-state comparison isn't available to the public. Ray declined to release a ranking, saying that such information was sensitive. He added that he himself hasn’t seen a complete list or a specific breakdown.
Ray said Texas, Arizona, Pennsylvania and the District of Columbia have reported some of the highest numbers of recoveries, and that North Carolina “has seen similar recoveries.” But he also said tracking that information is difficult and that the quality of data varies widely among agencies across the country. As awareness and reporting increases, there will likely be more specific information available, Ray said, “but for now those are all the details that can be shared.”
He added that the ATF has struggled to pinpoint how many ghost guns are being seized in the field because privately made firearms are such a new phenomenon and some law enforcement agencies are still learning how to recognize and document them.
“Many agencies may still be in an educational phase — what makes a ghost gun a ghost gun, how are they constructed, how do you report such a device when recovered at a crime scene?” Ray said in an email.
So, although ATF says North Carolina is among the top states, as Easley claims, the agency still leaves us with an incomplete picture of how the state’s confiscation numbers compare with others.
A PolitiFact North Carolina review of ghost gun confiscations mentioned in news articles found that the Tar Heel state’s 400 recoveries is likely lower than at least five other states.
California collected at least 2,400 among Los Angeles (1,949), Oakland (275) and San Francisco (190). New York confiscated at least 500 among New York City (375), Buffalo (70) and Rochester (48).
Pennsylvania seized at least 600 between Philadelphia (571) and Pittsburgh (50). In Illinois, Chicago alone captured 455. Maryland recovered at least 423 between Baltimore (352) and Montgomery County (71). The District of Columbia also has confiscated at least 400.
Our ruling
Easley Jr. said “North Carolina is among some of the top states in the country for ghost guns seized as crime guns."
His office cited a claim by ATF, which said North Carolina is among the top states for ghost gun confiscations.
But the agency hasn’t released a state-by-state breakdown. An ATF spokesperson also acknowledged that data is spotty because some law enforcement agencies aren’t reporting some ghost gun recoveries or are still learning how to document them.
Easley’s statement is accurate but needs clarification or additional information, which is our definition of Mostly True.
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