New Jersey, Minnesota sue Glock over switch that allows pistols to fire
like machine gun
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[December 13, 2024]
By MIKE CATALINI and STEVE KARNOWSKI
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — New Jersey and Minnesota sued Glock on Thursday,
calling on the gunmaker to stop selling firearms that can be adapted
with dime-sized switches to fire up to 1,200 rounds a minute.
New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin and Minnesota Attorney General
Keith Ellison also announced that top law enforcement officials in 14
states and the District of Columbia are forming a coalition to reduce
gun violence by coordinating enforcement of the states' consumer
protection laws.
The moves by mostly Democrat-led states amount to early pushback against
President-elect Donald Trump's second administration, which Platkin, a
Democrat, said “routinely sides with the gun industry.”
Before speaking at a Boys & Girls Club in New Jersey's largest city,
Platkin's office played a video of a law enforcement officer
demonstrating how to use the Glock switch. The video shows an officer
first firing the pistol without the switch, requiring a pause between
shots. The officer then installs the switch and is able to fire multiple
rounds without any pause.
Women wearing red Moms Demand Action T-shirts in the gymnasium hosting
the attorney general let out a gasp.
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“For decades, Glock has knowingly sold weapons that anyone with a
screwdriver and a YouTube video can convert into a military-grade
machine gun in a matter of minutes,” Platkin said.
The Associated Press emailed Glock requesting comment. The Austrian
company's U.S. subsidiary based in Smyrna, Georgia, has not responded to
previous AP requests for comment on lawsuits involving the switches. But
an industry trade group condemned the lawsuits as “lawfare” that abuses
the judicial system and disregards federal law.
“This is clearly an abuse of the courts to attempt to circumvent the
Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA),” Lawrence Keane,
senior vice president and general counsel of the National Shooting
Sports Foundation, said in a statement. “Attorneys General Platkin and
Ellison, along with the other colluding states, are attempting to extend
the frivolous claims that have no foundation in law and abuse taxpayer
dollars to advance an unconstitutional gun control agenda."
A September report from the anti-violence organization Everytown for Gun
Safety concluded that Glock pistols are a popular choice for gun crimes,
in part because the switches enable easy conversions into fully
automatic weapons.
Authorities believe shooters who killed four people and injured 17
others in Birmingham, Alabama, in September were using conversion
devices to make their guns more powerful. About 100 shell casings were
recovered from that scene.
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New Jersey Attorney General Matt Platkin's office displays a photo
of a so-called Glock switch in Newark, N.J. on Thursday, Dec. 12,
2024, (AP Photo/Mike Catalini)
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Glock isn’t the only gunmaker whose weapons can be adapted with
so-called “Glock switches,” but critics say Glock’s guns are among
the easiest to convert. Platkin said Glock is profiting by
continuing to sell the adaptable version in U.S. markets, even as
they make and sell handguns in Europe that cannot accommodate such a
switch.
Also known as “auto switches,” the devices, which are already
illegal in New Jersey and some other states, can be bought for about
$20 or 3D-printed, and are about the size of a small Lego brick.
When added to a pistol, the weapon can be fired like a machine gun,
which has been prohibited under federal law since the gangster era
of Al Capone.
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, speaking at a news
conference in St. Paul, said Glock has long known that its guns can
be easily and illegally converted to fully automatic fire. He said
two of every three handguns sold in the U.S. is a Glock.
“Glock has known about this problem for decades and has done
nothing. A change of design could prevent these handguns from being
turned into illegal automatic weapons. But Glock has turned a blind
eye. And again and again, the death toll continues to rise,” Ellison
said.
The Minnesota lawsuit, filed in Hennepin County District Court,
alleges violations of Minnesota laws against consumer fraud,
deceptive trade practices, false advertising, public nuisance,
negligence and product liability. The New Jersey suit, brought in
state Superior Court in Essex County, alleges violations of the
state's public nuisance laws.
Ellison also alleged that Glock advertises its fully automatic
handguns to civilians who can’t legally own them, depicting them as
fun and cool, knowing that it’s very easy for members of the public
to convert its semi-automatic handguns.
In addition to New Jersey and Minnesota, the coalition includes
California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of
Columbia, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nevada,
Oregon, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
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Karnowski reported from Minneapolis.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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