A routine overdose call in Wicomico County turned into one of the largest gun seizures in recent regional memory—and it’s raising serious questions about how someone with a documented nine-year cocaine addiction managed to amass an arsenal that would make a gun range jealous.
On Thursday, May 1st, the Wicomico County Sheriff’s Office executed a search warrant at a residence on Laurel Drive, just south of Salisbury, and recovered more than 50 firearms. But here’s where it gets wild: many of those guns weren’t purchased through traditional channels. Deputies seized two 3D printers along with the weapons, suggesting that at least some of the arsenal was manufactured right there in the home using additive manufacturing technology.
The whole thing started Tuesday evening when deputies responded to the home for a reported overdose. When they arrived, they found a man in his early 30s experiencing what Sheriff Mike Lewis described as a drug-induced episode. The man admitted to being a cocaine addict for nine years and confessed to recent cocaine use. While officers were there, they noticed something hard to miss: dozens upon dozens of guns scattered throughout the property.
That observation led to the search warrant signed off by a judge. Lewis was blunt about what he found deeply troubling: Here’s a self-admitted, active cocaine addict with access to this much firepower—and apparently falsified records to get some of it. Maryland’s gun purchase forms require buyers to swear under oath that they’re not habitually addicted to drugs or alcohol. This guy’s possession of the weapons violates that requirement in nearly every way imaginable.
The investigation is still ongoing, and no charges have been filed yet. The suspect didn’t answer the door when deputies knocked, forcing them to break it down to execute the warrant. The Sheriff’s Office hasn’t disclosed what motivated this particular stockpile or whether there were plans to sell any of the weapons. What remains clear is that a significant threat to public safety—whether intentional or not—has been removed from circulation, at least for now.
The rise of 3D-printed firearms represents a new frontier in gun regulation conversations, one that law enforcement is still figuring out how to address. This case shows it’s not just a theoretical concern anymore in the Mid-Atlantic.










