Floral Park Man Indicted for Ghost Guns

(Photo Courtesy of the Nassau DA's Office) This 3D printer inside Parmbir Singh's house was used to create ghost guns.

A Floral Park man has been indicted for the possession of two ghost guns, high-capacity magazines, and rapid-fire modification devices after a search warrant executed at his home found tools and parts used in the manufacturing of untraceable firearms. A press conference was held at Nassau County District Attorney Anne Donnelly’s office on December 10.

The Nassau County DA’s Office, Homeland Security Investigations, the Nassau County Sherriff’s Department, and the New York City Police Department began a joint task force investigation after Parmbir Singh was identified as allegedly making dozens of purchases for firearm-related items through online gun part sellers over the course of approximately 19 months. The parts, including slides, magazine extensions, and other accessories for pistols, were shipped to Singh’s home in Floral Park. The investigation determined that Singh did not have pistol permits in Nassau County and was on active Nassau County probation.

(Photo Courtesy of the Nassau DA’s Office) Parmbir Singh also had hidden compartments inside his house to hide the weapons.

A search warrant was executed at the defendant’s home on November 20, 2024. Investigators located several hidden compartments concealed within floating shelves in Singh’s bedroom and attic that contained two completed and loaded ghost guns. Further searching located a 3D printer, various ghost gun parts, including pistol lower receivers that could be used to assemble complete guns, a shotgun, high-capacity magazines, and a manufactured lower receiver for an assault weapon.

Investigators also recovered two rapid-fire modification devices that are used to convert semiautomatic pistols into fully automatic weapons capable of firing multiple rounds without reloading.

Singh, 23, was arrested on November 20, 2024, by HSI, the Nassau County Sheriff’s Department and the NYPD Financial Crimes Task Force in Floral Park. He was arraigned on December 9 before Judge Robert Bogle on two counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Second Degree (a Class C violent felony); four counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Third Degree (a Class D violent felony); two counts of Criminal Possession of a Firearm (a Class E felony); Criminal Possession of a Rapid-Fire Modification Device (a Class A misdemeanor); and two counts of Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Fourth Degree (a Class A misdemeanor). He pleaded not guilty, and bail was continued at $500,000 cash, $1.25 million bond, and $2.5 million partially secured bond. He is due back in court on January 15, 2025. If convicted, the defendant faces up to 7 to 15 years in prison. 

“This defendant allegedly purchased firearm parts online with a very clear vision: to manufacture and assemble untraceable ghost gun pistols in his Floral Park home,” Donnelly said. “A search warrant executed by our task force partners revealed a makeshift workshop with ghost gun parts and other components scattered throughout the home and two completed and loaded ghost gun pistols tucked away in trap doors located in the defendant’s bedroom and attic shelving. Two rapid-fire modification devices were also found, which can effectively turn any gun into a mass killing machine. Together with our partners, we will continue to target amateur gun makers who use technology to create illegal weapons and keep the communities of Nassau County safe.”

“Today’s announcement serves as an example of HSI New York’s unique ability to utilize novel investigative techniques to uncover crimes related to one of the most pressing dangers facing our metropolitan area — the proliferation of illegal firearms. Since February 2024 alone, the HSI New York El Dorado Task Force’s Economic Crimes Group, which includes the NYPD and the Nassau County Sheriff’s Department, has seized nearly 200 illegal firearms, including rifles and ghost guns, from the streets of New York,” said HSI New York Special Agent in Charge William S. Walker. “The task force’s methods may be complex, but our goal is simple: protect the public from the harm that occurs when criminal opportunists procure and traffic illegal firearms. Today, our communities are safer as a result of the team’s work.”

NYPD Commissioner Jessica S. Tisch stated, “The charges announced today reflect the promise that the NYPD and our law enforcement colleagues have made to the people we serve – to ensure their safety, to make them feel secure, and to improve their overall quality of life. The proliferation of ghost guns in our communities is an ongoing threat in New York and across the nation. We are committed to relentlessly pursuing the removal of these and all illegal firearms from our streets and holding accountable those who manufacture, possess, or use them. I commend the members of our NYPD Financial Crimes Task Force, as well as our partners at Homeland Security Investigations, the Nassau County Sheriff’s Department, and the Nassau County District Attorney’s Office, for their unwavering dedication to our shared mission of public safety.”