I'm struggling to understand how the proposal for forcing background checks on all firearm transfers would even be enforceable. Since there is no 'master list' of registered firearms tracking where they are, it seems to be that firearms could still be transferred without a FFL and there would be no way to tell.
For instance: Say I purchase a new 1911. It goes through the NICS check at the dealer I buy it from. A year later I give it to my son, without any FFL involvement. There is no way for any authority to know or claim that he is not legally the owner of that weapon. The original NICS check is not put into a master database that is searchable. Even though he is not the original owner there is nothing to prove that it wasn't officially transferred by an FFL. If they ask which FFL it was so they could check the paperwork "I don't remember". There are hundreds (thousands?) of FFLs in MN so what are they going to do, subpoena records from all of them?
This same scenario could hold true for any person-to-person transfer, whether gift or sale. Nobody can prove that the current holder of the firearm did not get it via an FFL transfer because there is no central repository of records showing the history of transfers. There is no requirement that I've seen proposed regarding these 'universal background checks' that says anything about someone having to maintain a record of the transfer or prove that it happened to justify their possession of the firearm.
Now I'm sure that if someone did one of these 'illegal' transfers and the weapon was eventually used in a crime, then they would come knocking on the original owner's door. But there still is no requirement to prove that you did the FFL transfer. "It was years ago and I don't remember which FFL was used." What are they going to do??
If it is this easy to poke holes in the proposed law, what good is it? Or am I missing something?
BB