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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Donut Shop
trading a rifle
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<blockquote data-quote="txyaloo" data-source="post: 8600101" data-attributes="member: 23362"><p>I was referring to this post. By the way he phrased things, it sounded like he was referring to registration like Chicago requires.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Legal ownership does not remain with you once you have given the firearm to someone else, but the only way to prove this is with a valid bill of sale. Also, the authorities would need the ability to trace the firearm back to the owner. In states that don't require gun registration, this isn't an easy thing to do. The police can find which dealer originally sold the gun. If it's been less than 10 years, the dealer should have their bound book and can reference the owner. If you bought the gun used, all bets are off.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Actually there is a list; it's for title 2 firearms and devices. I'm on it several times, but you're correct; there is no list maintained by the ATF for title 1 firearms.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="txyaloo, post: 8600101, member: 23362"] I was referring to this post. By the way he phrased things, it sounded like he was referring to registration like Chicago requires. Legal ownership does not remain with you once you have given the firearm to someone else, but the only way to prove this is with a valid bill of sale. Also, the authorities would need the ability to trace the firearm back to the owner. In states that don't require gun registration, this isn't an easy thing to do. The police can find which dealer originally sold the gun. If it's been less than 10 years, the dealer should have their bound book and can reference the owner. If you bought the gun used, all bets are off. Actually there is a list; it's for title 2 firearms and devices. I'm on it several times, but you're correct; there is no list maintained by the ATF for title 1 firearms. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Donut Shop
trading a rifle
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