Current:Home > NewsGuns flood the nation's capital. Maryland, D.C. attorneys general point at top sellers. -StockHorizon
Guns flood the nation's capital. Maryland, D.C. attorneys general point at top sellers.
View
Date:2025-04-14 10:40:48
The nation's capital is grappling with a deadly flood of weapons. Prosecutors are pointing fingers at three federally licensed gun stores in Maryland.
Attorneys general of Maryland and Washington D.C. filed a lawsuit Tuesday against three gun shops for selling firearms to a straw purchaser – the same stores identified as the top retailers of recovered crime guns in Maryland between August 2020 and July 2021, according to a report commissioned by the state attorney general’s office.
According to the lawsuit, the three stores in Montgomery County, Maryland, roughly 25 miles northwest of Washington D.C., collectively sold 34 semiautomatic pistols to one person in six months. Only two remained with the purchaser, while the rest are presumed to be trafficked, prosecutors said.
Some have been recovered from people accused of assault, a stabbing, and drug distribution, the lawsuit added, while most remain unaccounted for.
"Federally licensed gun dealers know the law and they know what to look for to spot possibleillegal trafficking. As this lawsuit demonstrates, gun dealers cannot just choose to ignore these warning signs and guardrails," said Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown. "Let this be a warning to other dealers who put public safety at risk to make a profit: We are watching, and we will hold you accountable for illegal conduct that fuels gun violence across our region."
The lawsuit comes as public health experts and gun safety advocates warn about an alarming level of gun violence across the nation — guns are the leading killer of children in the U.S. and kill nearly 50,000 people a year. Lawsuits in other states have also targeted sellers and traffickers as culprits in gun crimes, including New Jersey, Michigan, and Philadelphia.
Lawsuit: Man bought 34 guns in 6 months
Three federally licensed gun stores – Engage Armament, United Gun Shop and Atlantic Guns – collectively sold Demetrius Minor, an "obvious straw purchaser," 34 guns between April 6 and October 5, 2021, according to the lawsuit filed in Montgomery County Circuit Court.
According to Engage Armament’s records cited in the lawsuit, Minor spent more than $31,000 at the one store for at least 25 guns. In July 2021 alone, he came to the store at least four times and bought five guns, prosecutors said.
Minor gave many of the weapons to a relative, Donald Willis, a Washington D.C. resident with a record of violent felonies, the lawsuit said, and Willis then spread the guns to other "dangerous individuals." Minor has been convicted for his role in the straw sales. But Tuesday's lawsuit said the stores "who chose profits over safety" have faced no consequences for their "critical role in fueling gun violence" in the D.C. metro region.
At least nine of the weapons, which the lawsuit contends were "illegally sold," were found at crime scenes in Washington D.C. and surrounding Maryland suburbs. "Many more are likely in the hands of other individuals legally barred from possessing firearms and will be used in future crimes," the lawsuit said.
The lawsuit cites a federally required form to buy a gun — the ATF firearms transaction record — which is used to determine whether a gun sale is legal. The form notes that straw purchases are illegal, meaning the firearm must go to the person who legally bought it. It also states that the seller is responsible for ensuring the sale is legal, and simply conducting a background check does not fulfill obligations.
The lawsuit notes that just as straw purchases are illegal, it is also against the law for a firearm dealer to help advance illegal sales, and federal law requires licensed dealers to report when an unlicensed buyer purchases two or more handguns within five days.
Atlantic Guns denied the straw sales allegations in a statement to USA TODAY on Tuesday.
"Atlantic Guns, Inc. has never and will never knowingly sell to someone who we have reason to believe is committing a straw purchase," the store said, declining to comment further before review of the lawsuit.
Engage Armament and United Gun Shop didn't immediately return USA TODAY's requests for comment.
Cities and states across U.S. go after sellers to battle gun violence
The lawsuit Tuesday is the latest to sweep the nation as cities and victims of shootings target firearm stores and traffickers to battle gun violence.
Last July, Philadelphia announced a lawsuit against three vendors that the city said were the source of more than 1,300 crime guns between 2015 and 2019. The weapons were used in shootings, a home invasion, drug crimes, vehicle theft, and more, according to the city.
Three Missouri men were charged earlier this year for illegally selling guns to the people who fired shots into the Super Bowl victory parade that killed a mother and injured over 20 people earlier this year.
In Michigan, the parents of a 14-year-old Oxford High School student who was severely injured in a 2021 mass killing, named a gun store as one of the defendants in a lawsuit, alleging Acme Shooting Goods negligently and illegally sold the firearm used in the school assault that killed four people and wounded seven others. Acme sold the gun to the shooter’s father while ignoring signs it was a straw purchase, the lawsuit alleged.
In July 2023, a northern Indiana gun shop that police called a key supplier of Chicago's criminal firearms market announced it was closing its doors after Chicago sued Westforth Sports in 2021 over what it said was a pattern of illegal gun sales.
A USA TODAY investigation earlier this year found the majority of guns used in crimes are sold by a small fraction of the nation’s gun shops. Two of the Maryland gun shops named in Tuesday’s lawsuit – United and Atlantic – were on a list by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives of stores that sold at least 25 guns traced to a crime over a year that were purchased within the past three years.
Contributing: Nick Penzenstadler and Grace Hauck, USA TODAY
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Elle King Breaks Silence After Drunken Performance at Dolly Parton Tribute Show
- Ryan Gosling greets fans, Vanessa Hudgens debuts baby bump: The top Oscars red carpet moments
- Dozens of Indian nationals duped into joining Russia's war against Ukraine, government says
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- 3 reasons you probably won't get the maximum Social Security benefit
- Who is Robert Hur? A look at the special counsel due to testify on Biden classified documents case
- Why Al Pacino's 2024 Oscars Best Picture Flub Has the Internet Divided
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Grabbing Russell Wilson instead of Justin Fields could be costly QB mistake for Steelers
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- 4 adults, 1 child killed after small plane crashes in Bath County, Virginia woods: Police
- Biden’s big speech showed his uneasy approach to abortion, an issue bound to be key in the campaign
- 'The Boy and the Heron' director Hayao Miyazaki, 83, wins historic Oscar but absent from show
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Justice Department investigating Alaska Airlines door blowout
- Baker Mayfield re-signs with Buccaneers on three-year deal
- All 5 aboard dead after small private jet crashes and burns in rural Virginia woods, police say
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Jimmy Kimmel calls out Greta Gerwig's Oscars snub, skewers 'Madame Web' in opening monologue
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Make Surprise Appearance at Madonna's Oscars 2024 After-Party
Jamie Lee Curtis was In-N-Out of the Oscars, left early for a burger after presenting award
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Disney seeks major expansion of California theme park to add more immersive attractions
Inside a U.S. airdrop mission to rush food into Gaza
Schools are hiring more teachers than ever. So why aren't there enough of them?