LONDON (Reuters) - A 26-year-old man has become the first person in Britain to be convicted of making a firearm with a 3D printer that was capable of firing a lethal shot, police said on Wednesday.
A man who used a 3D printer to make parts of a gun has been found guilty of terrorism and firearms offences, the Metropolitan Police said. Counter-terrorism police officers found Polish national ...
This is the moment armed police swooped to arrest a transgender former Police Community Support Officer convicted of trying to make a semi-automatic gun with a 3D printer. Zoe Watts was jailed for ...
Once police released details on the arrest of the suspected shooter of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, internet sleuths identified the weapon used as a Chairmanwon V1, a version of a popular ...
A former police community support officer who was "obsessed with weapons" has been jailed after she tried to make a gun using a 3D printer. Zoe Watts, 39, of St Helen's Avenue, Lincoln, who is a trans ...
A Polish man who held ‘hateful views towards ethnic minorities’ has been found guilty of 3D printing parts for semi-automatic firearms in his London flat. Robert Adamski, 29, of Lea Bridge Road, ...
A man who utilised a 3D printer to manufacture parts of a firearm has been convicted of terrorism and firearms offences, according to the Metropolitan Police. Robert Adamski, a 29 year old Polish ...
A man has been found guilty of terrorism and firearm offences after he was caught attempting to use a 3D printer to make a sub-machine gun at his home in east London. Polish national Robert Adamski, ...
A former police community support officer (PCSO) accused of using a 3D printer to make a semi-automatic gun says she was making a toy fidget gun. Zoe Watts, 38, was arrested after police found several ...
A former police community support officer who was "obsessed with weapons" has been jailed after trying to make a gun using a 3D printer. Zoe Watts, 39, of St Helen's Avenue, Lincoln, has been jailed ...