Hammer99... wrote:1. P2P denial does not = no possession? If thats the case anytime somebody was denied a P2P, P2C or failed NICS. They would have to get rid off all there guns until they got it straitened out.
If you're denied P2P, P2C or failed NICS that indicates a particular agency has a problem with your background and history from their records/perspective. In the end you're the one who's responsible for making sure what you do is legal.
Hammer99... wrote:2. I believe an instructor has no legal obligation to report or check anything while loaning a firearm for the shooting part of the class. If it turns out that he truly could not posses the firearm he is the only one who should be on the hot seat.
The instructor might not have a legal obligation. If it could be shown that the instructor had some knowledge they were loaning the firearm to someone who was ineligible they could end up in trouble though. Also if someone ineligible has or had firearm they could be charge with a more serious crime...
"Anyone who has been convicted of a felony is banned by federal law from ever possessing "any firearm or ammunition." Specifically a person "convicted in any court of a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year" cannot possess any firearm in any location. 18 U.S.C. 922(g) is the federal law that prohibits anyone ever convicted of any felony to ever possess any firearm either inside or outside of his home. The federal punishment for felon gun possession is up to 10 years in prison."So in this case local law enforcement sees this person as being ineligible. I think recommending that he tries to buy or use a firearm is pretty dumb until that issue is resolved; or he has had competent legal council advise him he is okay in doing so.
"The problem in defense is how far you can go without destroying from within what you are trying to defend from without." -- Dwight D. Eisenhower