by jshuberg on Wed Jun 18, 2014 7:20 pm
The problem with the 1992 interpretation is that action alone is not what constitutes a crime, but action along with intent. While there are many laws where the intent of a person may determine the extent to which they broke the law (first degree, second degree, etc), there is no black and white with this law. It's all entirely in the gray.
A person can purchase a gun with intent to keep it, only several hours later regret the purchase and sell the gun to a friend. A person can also purchase a gun with the intent to sell it to a friend, but hold onto it for an extended period of time before selling it. There is simply no way for the court to divine the intent of an individual, except by his actions. But actions alone are insufficient to determine if a crime has occurred. Two separate people can perform the exact same actions, and because of intent one may have committed a crime while the other has not.
Basically, it *is* the law. The law *has* been found constitutional, but that doesn't change the fact that a great many people believe it is a bad law. It forces a jury not to judge a persons actions, but to presume to judge a persons thoughts.
It would be better to simply make it illegal to transfer a firearm to a prohibited person, rather than impose this convoluted, highly subjective and interpretive restriction on transfers between two individuals who are both legally allowed to own firearms.
The only way this law makes sense is when you understand that one of the end goals is to criminalize *all* private transfers, so that the government knows the current owner of every firearm in the country.
To criminalize a transfer between two otherwise lawful gun owners is simply one more incremental step towards the establishment of a registry. Laws exist to dissuade and punish people for performing bad actions that are a harm to society. When a person buys a firearm on behalf of another person who is lawfully able to own it, there has been no harm to the society.
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