CarryCauseICan wrote:Question? If guns are not registered, who is to know? If he buys it, takes it home, sells it years later? How would he be found guilty of buying it across state lines? Who would know and how would they know?
wildfan1 wrote:Where in is? I'm an ffl and here for work all week. Will help if I can
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CarryCauseICan wrote:Question? If guns are not registered, who is to know? If he buys it, takes it home, sells it years later? How would he be found guilty of buying it across state lines? Who would know and how would they know?
Izod wrote:The gun that i'm looking to by is a little 380 which would be my carry gun. So ya, i'll just go through the ffl.
Squib Joe wrote:CarryCauseICan wrote:Question? If guns are not registered, who is to know? If he buys it, takes it home, sells it years later? How would he be found guilty of buying it across state lines? Who would know and how would they know?
If the gun is ever lost or stolen and later turns up (or if ever used for self defense) they will do a trace on the gun. A trace follows the chain of ownership from the factory. They will most likely see that it jumped the border without an FFL transfer and both individuals will have some 'splainin to do.
xd ED wrote:I won't disagree with doing the transfer by the book, but I wonder: would any secondary or tertiary FFL transfers, not sequential, or related to the original chain of custody, or the original sale FFL be discovered? If so, how?
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