Customs officers seized 30 machine guns at the Port of Tacoma, a  Customs & Border Protection news release announced today.
The  weapons, copies of M-4 automatic rifles, arrived in a 40-foot container  on Oct. 20, 2009, the news release said. The shipment, listed on the  manifest as “Toys and Parts,” was valued at $10,000 and came from a  manufacturer in Taiwan.
According to Customs & Border  Protection, the rifles were of the same size, weight and look of the M-4  rifle, the weapon used by the United States military. The weapons bore  no serial numbers and did not have an orange-blaze tip, which is  required for all imports of toy guns, the Customs news release stated.
The  Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms responded to the Port of Tacoma  warehouse where the shipment was unloaded for inspection. ATF agents  took a sample rifle for evaluation.
On Jan. 25, the ATF submitted its report. It found “that in their  imported condition the rifles were tooled to shoot plastic balls.  However, replacement of internal components with original machine-gun  components could be accomplished within a short period of time, thus  rendering the rifles capable of firing live ammunition,” the Customs  news release said. 
The ATF also confirmed the shipment did not  arrive with the proper permits to enter the United States. The guns were  turned over to ATF agents and will be destroyed.
"These rifles could  have had far-reaching and potentially devastating ramifications if they  had gotten into the hands of individuals who wanted to do harm in the  American population," said Customs and Border Protection area port  director Rolando Suliveras Jr. "This was a good interception by our  officers."

