A New York federal judge issued an order Tuesday temporarily barring two firearms companies from selling devices that prosecutors say convert AR-15 style rifles into machine guns, finding that prosecutors are likely to prove the companies plotted to hide their sale from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives by intentionally failing to register the accessories.
The preliminary injunction ruling is the first barring a company from selling the accessory, the FRT-15, according to a spokesperson from the US attorneyโs office. Prosecutors say the device allows a semi-automatic firearm to fire as fast as a machine gun.
According to prosecutors, Rare Breed Triggers, LLC and Rare Breed Firearms, LLC, and their owners Lawrence DeMonico and Kevin Maxwell, knew that FRT-15s made a weapon qualify as machine guns under federal law. Rare Breed sold approximately 100,000 FRT-15s anyways, prosecutors allege, ignoring demands from the ATF to stop selling the accessories and โfalsely representing that the FRT-15s was โabsolutelyโ legal, District Judge Nina Morrison wrote in an opinion Tuesday.
โThe parties agree that the ATFโs classification process is voluntary. A manufacturer can choose to forego the process and risk facing prosecution or civil liability if the device is later declared to be illegal,โ according to the opinion.
โYet Defendantsโ deliberate decision to bypass that process with the FRT-15,โ Morrison wrote, โindicates that Defendants declined to seek ATF classification of the FRT-15 and instead simply assure RBTโs customers that the device was โlegalโ precisely because they knew that allowing ATF to examine their device before bringing it to market might kill their proverbial golden goose.โ
CNN has reached out to attorneys for the defendants.
As part of her ruling, Morrison said that prosecutors are likely…
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