Here he shoots with 3D-printed weapons-from Uppsala

It was in March last year that the police made the discovery. In conjunction with a doping investigation, pictures and films were found in a phone that represented weapons of the model FGC-9, a kind of 3D-printed K-piste, which the police suspected that two men had manufactured in a workshop outside Uppsala.

The two men were charged in January on suspicion of extremely serious weapons crime. The people involved, the men and a woman charged with assisting in crime, denied the charges.

The men are now sentenced to prison for six years and four months and five years and two months respectively. The woman is sentenced to one year and six months in prison.

Doping crime

In addition to weapons handling, one of the men is also convicted of gross doping crime – together with another man, who SVT News Uppsala could reveal was employed Si’s youth home in Bärby when he was arrested and arrested.

The former SIS employee is now sentenced to prison three years and three months.

Meet at NFC

Since the weapons were not found at the house search, a large part of the investigation was placed on searching them right.

Among other things, the National Forensic Center (NFC) has been compared to the images against all similar weapons seized in other investigations.

– There we have found a weapon that we mean is one of the five, says prosecutor Jenny Örn, without wanting to go into what crime it was linked to.

In addition to the tracking of the weapons, the police have also tried to find any client or buyer, but went bite.

In the clip above: See when the man tests the 3D-printed bullet gun.

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