Dexter Taylor is a software engineer from Bushwick, Brooklyn, who was sentenced to ten years in prison in 2024. [1] [2] He was convicted of weapons charges related to the possession and manufacture of unlicensed firearms, often described as ghost guns. [3] His case has gained attention from gun rights advocates who believe this case has implications for Second Amendment rights. [4] [5]
Taylor, prior to his conviction, worked in the tech industry as a software engineer and was interested in building firearms from home as a hobby. Prior to his conviction, he had no criminal record or violent history. [5] Taylor claimed he believed he was engaging in constitutionally protected activity under the Second Amendment. [4]
In 2022, New York authorities raided Taylor's Bushwick apartment and discovered more than a dozen unlicensed firearms, including AR-15-style rifles, semiautomatic pistols, large amounts of ammunition, and equipment for manufacturing guns. [6] Taylor was indicted on multiple weapons charges. In 2024, he was convicted on two counts of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon, three counts of third-degree criminal possession of a weapon, five counts of criminal possession of a firearm, unlawful possession of pistol ammunition, and violating the prohibition on unfinished frames or receivers. [2] Prosecutors argued that his collection of untraceable weapons posed a danger to public safety, while Taylor and his defense maintained that he was engaging in constitutionally protected activity without intent to cause harm. [7] [4]
Taylor was sentenced to ten years in prison. The severity of the punishment sparked debate across media and legal circles. [4] Some criticized the sentence as disproportionate, suggesting that Taylor's case illustrated how complex gun laws can criminalize ordinary individuals rather than prevent violence. [3] [5] Taylor's friends have stated that, “he a tinkerer, a software engineer, electronic music composer and amateur TikTok philosopher who made guns as a hobby,” and that, “he doesn’t belong behind bars.” [1]
Advocates for stricter gun control, however, pointed to the risks posed by unlicensed weapons that are untraceable. [8] Media coverage, including from WNYC, framed Taylor's prosecution as emblematic of the broader conflict between state efforts to curb ghost guns and concerns about civil liberties. [1]
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