Hey guys! Who do we like for transfers in the Twin Cities these days? It's been a while since I have done one, and I'm not sure the people I have used in the past have the easiest process. The fee is important, but it's secondary to someone being responsive and either allowing me send their FFL or d...
That article says nothing about the police assembling a rifle out of parts he had. It says that he flashed a gun, and when they searched the car, they found an unregistered SBR. Do you have a better link that describes anything like what you posted earlier? And I mean an actual government document o...
SBRs do not have specific, serialized parts (barrels or stocks) associated with them. If you had a Title II lower (permitted SBR) and an upper with a short barrel attached, but not attached to a pistol or another titled SBR, you would be in violation without the proper form to transport it. However,...
That's a good point, and the documents actually do explicitly state that machine guns and destructive devices are treated differently, so I can see where your experience would differ. Also, in another interpretation letter, I read that an SBR is never actually removed from the registry. When they re...
What I was told by the attorney who created my trust, and what I see in all the ATF documents, is that configuration is what determines NFA status, not your stamp. The stamp is merely your "permission" to posses the NFA item, which exists, legally or illegally, independently from your stam...
Oh, interesting, I found this letter from the ATF from 2007. It seems to address some of these issues nicely, assuming ATF is consistent, which might not be the best assumption: "Finally, if you place the long barrel on your registered SBR receiver (essentially converting the weapon temporarily...
Joe, correct me if I'm wrong, but my understanding is that the gun can go back and forth from NFA configuration to "regular" configuration, as long as you have the stamp and do not transfer ownership. The NFA handbook doesn't really address going back and forth specifically, but Section 2....
I have no interest in carrying it loaded, in my car or anywhere else. That's what I have a pistol for (and your comment applies to all rifles, not just SBRs). I absolutely can loan it to a friend, simply by taking 30 seconds to write his name down on the appropriate form in my trust. And selling it ...