Squib Joe wrote:The premises listed on a FFL has special regulations, including that the acquisition, disposition, and most importantly the transfer of all firearms be recorded under penalty of law. Firearms owned by the business, owned by customers, owned by employees - all of them fall under the purview of the law. In addition, if a private party transfer takes place on property owned by the FFL, then the FFL has (knowingly or not) facilitated the transfer by allowing use of the property for the transfer. All parties involved could then be found guilty of making a firearm transfer without proper recordkeeping and background check requirements required by a FFL facilitated transfer (ATF Proc. 2013-1). The dealer, of course, would probably be the only one prosecuted depending on the circumstances.
Interesting. Such a private party sale would not be an FFL-facilitated transfer since the FFL isn't conducting a background check. It sounds like you're saying that just carrying a gun into an FFL's premises makes your gun his responsibility. But I'm no expert and am prepared to be proven wrong.
Can you cite your source for the special regulations for the premises listed on the FFL?