I Made an Untraceable AR-15 'Ghost Gun' In My Office
Released on 06/03/2015
(gun firing)
This is what some people call a Ghost Gun.
It's an AR-15 semi-automatic rifle
that has no serial number, it's untraceable.
I didn't have to go through a background check,
or any sort of waiting period to get it.
The government has no knowledge of its existence, in fact.
And that's because legally speaking, I didn't buy this gun.
I made it.
(gun firing)
Anyone can buy every part of an AR-15 on the internet.
There's one part though, that you can't buy
without a background check,
and that is a functioning lower receiver,
the body of the gun.
What you can buy is this.
This is not a lower receiver,
although it looks a lot like one.
To the government, this is legally just a chunk of aluminum,
but to any gunsmith, it's an 80% lower.
That's a lower receiver that's basically 80% finished.
All you have to do is remove a few cavities of aluminum
from this, and you're left with a true, functioning gun.
For years, DYI gunmakers have been legally creating
their own lower receivers to skirt gun control laws,
and build untraceable weapons.
I wanted to see if new digital tools
could make building one of these ghost guns
easier for someone like me with little firearms
or power tools experience.
If I can legally make a semi-automatic rifle
and circumvent all gun control, anyone can.
So I tried making my AR-15 lower receiver
three different ways.
With a traditional drill press, with a 3D printer,
and with a new computer-controlled milling machine
called the Ghost Gunner.
So first I'm gonna try to do this
the old-fashioned manual way.
Wow that is really not good.
Is there supposed to be a hole there?
This is now detached from this,
and that wasn't supposed to happen.
I've just made like a total mess
of the inside of this thing.
I don't think that this is a working
firearm component by any means.
So next, I used a MakerBot Replicator,
and free plans I downloaded from the web
to 3D print a plastic AR-15 lower receiver from scratch.
Process was incredibly easy,
but the results were somewhat flawed.
I cut a finger trying to remove excess plastic.
Finally, I tried what could be the future
of homemade gunsmithing.
The $1,500 Ghost Gunner is a computer-controlled
milling machine, the latest invention
of Defense Distributed, a controversial group
known for releasing 3D printable blueprints for gun parts,
including a fully 3D printable pistol.
The Ghost Gunner doesn't print parts in plastic though.
It machines them out of aluminum.
And it works on the same 80% lowers
I had tried with the drill press method,
but requires far less equipment and skill.
I could already tell it's a lot better at this than I am.
As I watched the Ghost Gunner precisely carve away aluminum,
it became clear that the barrier to legally obtaining
a fully metal, untraceable, semi-automatic rifle
is lower than ever before.
This is the beautifully milled aluminum lower receiver
for an AR-15 that we built today.
Before I put actual explosive rounds
through anything I'd made,
I thought I should check my work with a professional.
So I took my box of gun parts to Nathan Rinder
at Bay Area Gunsmithing.
Please don't laugh.
This is the lower that I tried to make.
With a drill.
With a drill.
Oh, I've seen worse than this.
[Andy] Nathan argued that only the lower receiver
I'd made with the Ghost Gunner was functional and safe.
We could totally assemble this.
He was nice enough to let me muddle through
the final assembly of the AR-15 at his shop.
I test fired my homemade AR-15 for the first time
at a nearby firing range.
(gun firing)
I can't take this gun with me on a flight back to New York,
and I can't sell it to anyone here in San Francisco,
or even give it to someone else at Wired legally.
So instead, I have to take it apart and either destroy,
or turn over to the police, the lower receiver.
That was the end of my Ghost Gun.
But it's just the beginning
for Defense Distributed's Ghost Gunner.
The group has already sold more than 1,000
of its milling machines.
Every one is a tiny, anarchic rifle factory.
And if they work as well as the one I tested,
there will be many more Ghost Guns to come.
Starring: Andy Greenberg
Pregnancy Doctor Answers Pregnancy Questions
Jen Easterly On The Future of Cybersecurity and Her Agency's Survival
Psychologist Answers Couples Therapy Questions
Building The Biggest Telescope You Can Buy
Football Historian Answers Football Questions
Bill Gates on His Early Years & The Inspiration Behind 'Source Code: My Beginnings'
Paleontologist Answers Extinction Questions
New Xbox One - Kinect: Exclusive WIRED Video
NYC Eastside Access Part 2: Most Expensive Transportation Project in US History
Barclays Center Part 1: From Concert Venue to Basketball Arena in 8 Hours