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Dem. Bill in Colorado Would Make It Illegal to Own Images of Guns That Are Too Detailed


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Colorado is moving forward with HB26-1144, a bill that would curb 3D-printed guns by restricting digital files and instructions used too manufacture firearms. The measure would ban possessing computer-aided design files and other “digital instructions” that could be used to print a gun or its parts, and would treat first offenses as misdemeanors with felonies for later violations. Democrats frame the bill as an extension of a 2023 law banning ghost guns, while Republicans argue it infringes on constitutional rights and could be evaded via cross-state printing or vpns. The legislation would also bar most people from selling or transferring firearm barrels, except for federally licensed dealers. The debate is reflected in accompanying coverage and social-media posts cited by supporters and opponents, including references to other states pursuing similar crackdowns.


Colorado is moving forward with a bill that could regulate digital records showing citizens how to use a 3D printer to make a gun.

The bill is HB26-1144, and it puts new limits on what a 3D printer could do, according to TechSpot.

The measure would not only ban making a gun or key components of one, but would also criminalize what are called “digital instructions” that can program a machine to make the gun or parts.

The legislation would ban having computer-aided design instructions if they are going to be used to make a gun, or d with someone else trying to make one.

The Colorado bill treats first offenses as misdemeanors, but later violations become felonies.

The report noted that some states are trying to crack down on the printers themselves so that they cannot be made to produce a gun.

On Friday, the Colorado House moved forward with the bill as Democrats steamrolled Republican objections, according to the The Denver Gazette.

Democrats framed the bill as adding to a 2023 law that banned possessing or selling so-called ghost guns, which are assembled by individuals and do not have a serial number. The bill did not ban making a ghost gun.

Colorado State Rep. Dusty Johnson, a Republican, said the bill and others like it are “chipping away at a fundamental right that we as Americans have.”

“We are here to represent the voices of those who elected us to serve them,” she said. “That means representing their values, not dictating what their values are and what they cannot do.”

Johnson described the ban on instructions for printing a gun as a type of censorship.

Colorado State Rep. Ron Weinberg, a Republican, said the law is merely feel-good legislation that fails to consider the ease of evading it.

For example, he said, a resident could easily cross state lines to print a firearm, or use a VPN so that no one knows a Colorado resident is downloading banned material.

“There’s no enforcement on this. This is a nothing bill,” he said. “Internet distribution, in case you didn’t know, is borderless. There is no border for the internet.”

As noted by The Denver Post, Colorado lawmakers are also backing a proposal that would ban anyone except for a federally licensed firearm dealer from selling or transferring a firearm barrel.




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