For over half a decade, Cody Wilson has been a hooked thorn in the side of anyone who advocates even the most minimal form of gun control. More than any person else on the planet, the creator of the world's first 3-D printed gun has advanced the dangerous idea that with digital DIY tools, anyone can make a deadly weapon at home. Now with Wilson removed from that fight, the community of DIY gunmakers he inspired (along with the anarchist gun-making machine that formed around him for years) has no intention of slowing down.

On Tuesday, Defense Distributed announced in an Austin press conference that Wilson has resigned from his role as director of the company, which he founded in 2012 to promote the advance and spread of 3-D printable guns. Wilson faces charges of sexual assault of a minor, stemming from an incident earlier this year in which he allegedly had sex with a 16-year-old girl he met online. Wilson was released on $150,000 bail Monday. But Defense Distributed's new director, Paloma Heindorff, said at Tuesday's event that neither the company Wilson built nor the legal battles he has waged will change in his absence.

"I am extremely proud to say that over the past few days, the entire team at Defense Distributed have recommitted to enabling the sharing and publication of CAD and 3-D printing files," Heindorff told reporters. In the wake of Wilson's arrest in Taiwan, she added, "We didn’t miss a beat. No one blinked."

'Proceeding apace'

Defense Distributed's staff has refused to remark on Wilson's criminal case, and Wilson himself didn't respond to WIRED's request for comment. But at Tuesday's press event, Heindorff and Josh Blackman, a lawyer for Defense Distributed, emphasized that not only are Defense Distributed's sales of gunmaking tools unaffected, but also that the company will continue its battles with a group of attorneys general from more than a dozen states, who have sued Defense Distributed and the State Department to reverse a legal win that would allow the gun rights group and others to post digital blueprints for firearms online.

In June, those attorneys general won an injunction against Defense Distributed that has, for now, frozen its plan to digitize as many gun designs as possible and post the models on a repository called Defcad, intended as a library of files for DIY gunsmiths. But Wilson didn't personally fund those legal conflicts, Defense Distributed says, nor did he serve by name as the plaintiff in the case against the State Department that resulted in May's landmark settlement. "The case is proceeding apace, as it was before," Defense Distributed's lawyer Blackman told the media.

'We didn’t miss a beat. No one blinked.' Paloma Heindorff, Defense Distributed

Defense Distributed's adversaries in the gun control movement haven't claimed victory over Wilson's exit either. In a statement to WIRED, the copresidents of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, which also sought a court injunction against Defcad last May, write that the legal fight continues. “Cody Wilson was the face of Defense Distributed and 3-D printed guns, but we doubt that his movement will die with his resignation. The Pandora’s box has been opened, and it will not go away with Wilson," their statement says. "Because of his actions, 3-D printed guns now pose a danger all over the world, from the United States to Europe to Taiwan. The next Cody Wilson is merely waiting in the wings, and we will continue to do everything in our power to combat this threat until it is no more.”

Meanwhile, Defense Distributed continues its other core project undeterred: selling a milling machine called the "Ghost Gunner", capable of carving gun components out of aluminum in anyone's workshop or garage. The company has sold 6,000 of those $1,675 tools since it started selling them in 2014, netting millions that have helped to fund its legal efforts and allowed it to expand to around 20 employees. In her press conference, Heindorff said the company has received orders for 1,500 more of those machines it has yet to ship.