this post was submitted on 09 Dec 2024
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[–] Mikina@programming.dev 77 points 2 weeks ago (37 children)

I admit I'm kinda disappointed. He pulled out almost perfect assassination that looked well thought out, managed to get away with only a few hickups in his plan as far as his face is considered, and then walks around with a murder weapon and a manifesto in his bag? Shame, really. All he needed was to lay low for a while, grow a beard and he'd probably be OK.

[–] Scrollone@feddit.it 9 points 2 weeks ago (21 children)

The gun is planted. They just found a crazy guy in order to convince everyone that they actually found the culprit.

[–] Mikina@programming.dev 5 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

I find that kind of unlikely. If they wanted to frame someone just to have a killer, they wouldn't be talking about a "3D printed ghost gun", but just use a regular gun. I, for one, haven't known that it's possible to 3D print a pretty well working, and silenced, gun. And that might inspire someone - acquiring weapons is the harder part of any such murder, assuming you don't want to get caught, and the fact that you can get it without anyone knowing about it makes it way easier.

[–] selfAwareCoder@programming.dev 2 points 2 weeks ago

People misunderstand 3d printed guns. We use mostly normal gun parts bought anywhere, but legally the pistol handle is considered the gun, and the most popular commercial ones have been plastic for decades. So 3d print that glock frame and put a glock slide on it and you've got a cheap glock (and outside of like 3 States, that's totally legal).

There's fairly large 3d printing gun communities, mostly because it's just fun to build things.

3d printed silencers are much more rare / fragile because those are illegal to make without ATF approval and silencers need to withstand heat and pressure, so the typical plastic can't withstand prolonged use.

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