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Cody Wilson: 3D printed gun pioneer charged with child sexual assault

'Crypto-anarchist' accused of having sex with 16-year-old girl at a hotel in August and paying her $500 in cash, according to an affidavit filed in Travis County

Tiffany Hsu
Thursday 20 September 2018 12:48 BST
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Cody Wilson with an example of a 3-D printed gun, called the 'Liberator', which his company Defence Distributed designed at his factory in Austin, Texas
Cody Wilson with an example of a 3-D printed gun, called the 'Liberator', which his company Defence Distributed designed at his factory in Austin, Texas

Cody Wilson, whose push to post blueprints for 3D printed guns online has made him a key figure in the national gun control debate, was charged on Wednesday with sexually assaulting a child in Texas.

But law enforcement officers said they were having trouble finding Mr Wilson, who missed a flight back to the United States from Taipei, Taiwan, his last known location. During a news conference Wednesday, commander Troy Officer of the Austin Police Department said that a warrant had been filed for Mr Wilson’s arrest and that local detectives were working with national and international partners to find him.

Mr Wilson, 30, is accused of having sex with a 16-year-old girl at a hotel in Austin on 15 August and paying her $500 (£378) in cash, according to an affidavit filed in Travis County. The girl told police that she had met Mr Wilson through the website SugarDaddyMeet.com, where he was using the screen name “Sanjuro,” the affidavit says.

Officer said detectives who had interviewed the girl said that “if someone mistakes her age, it would be because they think she’s younger, not older”.

She and Mr Wilson, who identified himself to the girl, exchanged phone numbers and then continued messaging each other, sharing at least one explicit photo apiece, according to the affidavit. During one conversation, Mr Wilson described himself as a “big deal”, the affidavit says.

According to the affidavit, Mr Wilson and the girl met in the parking lot of an Austin coffee shop that evening and left for the hotel in a black Ford Edge SUV registered to Wilson’s company, Defence Distributed. The police were notified of the alleged assault after the girl told a counsellor, and they confirmed the details using surveillance video and interviews.

Mr Wilson’s national prominence grew this year when he announced plans to upload blueprints for 3D printed guns onto Defence Distributed’s website at the beginning of August. He was blocked from doing so as a result of a lawsuit filed by attorneys general from 19 states and Washington, DC.

Last month, a federal judge extended the restraining order barring Mr Wilson from executing his plan at the request of the attorneys general, who have said guns made with 3D printers are a national safety threat because they are difficult to detect and track. The case, which touches on issues of free speech, gun regulation, states’ rights and trade rules, has drawn the attention of president Donald Trump and attorney general Jeff Sessions, among others.

Mr Wilson, a self-described crypto-anarchist, has said more recently that instead of posting free blueprints online, he will mail flash drives loaded with the files to buyers in exchange for whatever they want to pay.

Neither Mr Wilson nor his lawyer in the sexual assault case responded to a request for comment. The Austin police said a friend of the victim had told Mr Wilson before he left for Taiwan that he was under investigation.

The New York Times

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