mrp wrote:My understanding is if I give you $400 to buy a gun for me then it's a straw purchase whether or not I could have legally purchased the gun myself.
Your understanding is correct, in that it is a truthful understanding of the interpretation under which BATF has been operating for the last decade or so.
A more reasonable interpretation would be that it is a straw purchase only if you could not have legally purchased the gun yourself. Which is the interpretation under which the BATF had been operating under, until fairly recently.
Under the current interpretation, if I buy a firearm, intending it for myself, and then change my mind and sell it to another who is not legally disabled from possessing a firearm, I am within the law, but if I buy a firearm, intending to sell it to another who is not legally disabled from possessing a firearm, I am not.
IOW, the only difference between the two acts is my intent. Which is absurd.
I prefer to believe that the current BATF interpretation is incorrect, and that the law does not impose penalties of this severity solely on what the BATF can convince a court was my intent, at the time I engaged in what would have otherwise been a legal act.
Who, among us, who has ever sold a firearm, would be free from risk of prosecution, should the BATF interpretation prevail?