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View Poll Results: Would you inquire about a NFA Weapon | |||
I would ask for a Form 4 | 2 | 2.11% | |
I would inform authorities | 2 | 2.11% | |
Just let them be | 91 | 95.79% | |
Voters: 95. You may not vote on this poll |
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January 14, 2010, 07:41 PM | #51 |
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I think it should be the RO's responsibility and or the range itself. If I were to own a range and anyone with NFA came in I would ask to verify paper work at the door and leave it at that. Liability would be the biggest thing.
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January 15, 2010, 12:12 AM | #52 | |||||
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Join Date: September 7, 2001
Location: Washington State
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O-kay, here's this mindset again...
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I guarantee that if you are at a range in the State of Washington, and you have a SBS/SBR, AOW, full auto or a suppressor, you had better fall into one of the following classes: 1. Active law enforcement, with credentials; 2. SOT, with dealer's samples; or 3. Active duty military, with documentation showing that it is an issued weapon. Here's why... Quote:
There are exceptions, of course: Quote:
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January 15, 2010, 12:54 AM | #53 |
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According to that, Powderman, NFA happy-switch stuff is flat out illegal unless you are an SOT or LEO/Mil.
In free states that don't care, it's none of anyone's business what tax documents say. And in your state, WA, my tax paperwork wouldn't do any good anyways. Even if I have an NFA stamp for my (theoretical) 1984 manufactured, automatic Uzi that I acquired in 2007... according to the law you cited I'm not allowed to own it in the state of WA. I'm not familiar with WA state law and don't pretend to be other than the snippet you provided. But, in AZ... it is a matter of a private contract with a range you participate at whether you submit to any request to show paperwork. RSO's and such have no legal grounds to go chasing folks for tax paperwork. I'm not 100% familiar whether any state laws in AZ allow for NFA-based inquiry by local law enforcement here. I'd be inclined to give him my driver's license and refer the matter to the ATF if I have the weapons and appropriate paperwork, but I wouldn't hand them over without a warrant. And I would contest the warrant... depending on if the state of AZ has any law enforcement grounds to be looking at Federal tax documents. Not sure if there is a case history of states subpoenaing federal 1040 forms or other non-state revenue tax documents. |
January 15, 2010, 12:58 AM | #54 | |
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Location: Mesa, AZ
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Quote:
It is a presumption of guilt until proof of innocence. But... it screams out in whatever section of law it's located in that "hey you! If you participate in this, keep your papers ready to prove you're legit!" To my knowledge, that phrase does not exist in regards to NFA in AZ. As such, there is no duty of officers to presume illegality of posession without other mitigating/incriminating circumstances or behavior. "Showing up at the range with a cool gun" isn't enough. |
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January 15, 2010, 02:12 AM | #55 | |
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Nice ,friendly to the point with PLEASE. Thank you very much for the information and I most definitely will. |
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January 15, 2010, 04:41 AM | #56 |
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Join Date: September 7, 2001
Location: Washington State
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@azredhawk44:
You are correct. IMHO, we (Washington State) should be working all-out to remove this law from the books. Owners of full auto have to jump through far more hoops than normal to exercise their rights. Personally, my point of view is that if want to own a firearm of ANY type, you should be able to walk into the durned store and buy it! Wouldn't that be just too cool: _______________________________________________ "Hi. Can I help you?" "Yes. I'd like to take a look at that 1928A1, please." "Here you go. Thompson/Kahr just made a new run of these. See the quality of that bluing? And, take a look at this model--same one, with a nice high polish blue and extra-fancy walnut stock and forearm." "I like it! How much for the extra fancy model?" "Well, Kahr has a promotion on for the rest of the month--$1350 for the SMG, plus they throw in 2 stick mags and an L-drum. This month only--if you want, you can put it on layaway. We do 120 days net on layaways." "Layaway? I don't think so. I'll take the extra fancy model with the special--and while you're at it, how about 500 rounds of Magtech ball ammo to go with it? I wanna heat it up today!" "You got it!" _____________________________________ I still do like the idea of the NICS check, though.
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January 15, 2010, 03:41 PM | #57 |
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not in our lifetimes powerman...what you're talking about is nirvana!! Its a bad few apples that have historically ruined it for the rest of us law abiding citizens.
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January 15, 2010, 11:31 PM | #58 |
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Join Date: November 1, 2006
Location: Cypress, Texas
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Unless your LEO, BATFE or following range rules, it's no ones business.
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January 16, 2010, 04:21 AM | #59 | |
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Quote:
To us, a situation like that would be nirvana--BUT IT IS ACHIEVEABLE!!! How? Here's how... 1. Coming up this year, we have the opportunity to fire a good deal of the Senate and the House. Let's USE that opportunity! Get out and VOTE! 2. I've said it before, and I'll say it again...pick a candidate who actually (a) comes as close as possible to our views and beliefs, and (b) WHO ACTUALLY HAS A CHANCE OF WINNING!!! Obama barely beat McCain--getting a little over 50% of the vote. Can you imagine if everyone who voted for candidates who didn't have a snowball's change of winning, voted for McCain? Second, how about those of you who actually VOTED :barf::barf::barf: for Obama? UNIFY the vote, like the Democrats did in the last election. VOTE for a good Conservative candidate! 3. There are an estimated 85-90 million gun owners in the United States--a powerful force to be reckoned with. Can you imagine what would happen if ALL OF US drafted a letter--not a form letter, but one written in your own words--DEMANDING the repeal of the NFA, and GCA 68? I would, however, like to see the following things kept: a. If you are a convicted felon, no guns. Period. You should have kept your hand out of the cookie jar. b. Keep the NICS check. It is a valuable means to tell if a prohibited person is buying guns. c. Keep the DV disqualification. If you want to beat up your spouse, children, relatives or domestic partners, why should YOU have access to firearms? Other than that, NO RESTRICTIONS for private ownership of ANY FIREARM. Just my take on it...
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January 16, 2010, 08:42 PM | #60 |
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Powderman, if you're in law enforcement (as a previous post of yours would suggest), you're the kind of police officer we need more of.
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January 16, 2010, 10:07 PM | #61 |
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Yes, I am one of the folks who activate the "blue light special" in your rearview mirror when you don't pay attention to your speed. Also known as tail-light chaser, road nazi, JBT, butthead, #%&!!, and other savory terms of endearment.
You would be surprised, though... The VAST majority of LEO feel EXACTLY the same way. As in, "Why the heck should I have to interfere with someone exercising their rights?" My first reaction when I hear the cheerful sound of automatic weapons is to drool profusely. Unfortunately, in this State, it's something we don't hear too often. And, when we do, we have to ask (tactfully) the hard questions. I had an experience a while back...I was on the firing line at my gun club, when someone walked up and asked me if it was OK to shoot full auto. (I was also the club president at the time.) I asked about calibers, and they said, "9mm". I told them that it was fine. The guys started breaking out the goodies--one full sized MP5, an MP5K, and a Savage 110 with a Gemtech suppressor. I remarked, mildly, "Getting the stamps for all that must have been expensive." Turned out that the guy is a SOT/Class 7 manufacturer, and wanted to test out some recent work. Of course, being the club president, I was offered the chance to (ahem) sample the goods. The guy had a C-Mag for the MP-5; I got to shoot the MP5K with a full drum. Sweet! And the suppressed Savage (in .30-06) had almost no recoil and a report like a .22. It must have improved the harmonics, too--sub MOA with hunting loads at 100 yards.
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January 17, 2010, 12:02 AM | #62 |
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Harassing someone with a loaded firearm for no good reason doesn't sound like very sound judgement to me. Unless they're behaving in such a way as to make me think they're doing something unsafe/illegal/against the rules of the range, I'd leave them alone or perhaps compliment them on their neat gun.
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January 21, 2010, 09:21 AM | #63 |
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Join Date: May 16, 2008
Posts: 9,995
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This would be as rude as asking a young driver to see their license IMO.
"Hey, you look too young to be driving, let me see your license or I am calling the police" Hey, you look like a criminal, let me see your form 4 or I am calling the police." None of my business. The only way I would possibly become involved is if they were being blatantly dangerous could not control the full auto then I might think about it. |
January 22, 2010, 12:51 AM | #64 | |
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Location: Northern AZ
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Quote:
I agree with them in the spirit in which they were intended, but, due to many perversions of the law, they have come to be widely abused. (a) To wit: Parents' "A's" 18 year old son takes Parents' "B's" 17 year old daughter to the prom. They have sex after. Parents "B" find out, and are highly incensed that their innocent angel of a daughter (who, in all likelihood, has been having sex since she was 14) has been "violated" and press charges against Parents "A's " 18 year old son. (Don't scoff; It's happened.) Boy "A" is found guilty and is convicted of statutory rape, a FELONY. Now, should HE be denied the ownership of a gun because of some slutty little tramp and naive, overzealous parents? (By the way, that's just one example; There are many things that so many of us do each day that are felonies that we're not even aware of. And just to make it even more convoluted, if we have knowledge of someone that has committed a felony and don't report it, that's "misprision," also a felony. Get the point?) (b) NICS checks are a good idea SO LONG AS ABSOLUTELY NO RECORDS ARE KEPT ONCE A PERSON HAS BEEN CLEARED. There have to be foolproof safeguards installed to prevent abuse of NICS checks. This one is waaaay to easy for susceptibility to governmental abuse. (c) Once again, too many states have enacted DV laws that make an arrest mandatory of at least one person if they respond to a DV call. And too many of these have occurred when a spiteful spouse self inflicts a wound to make it look like an assault has occurred. (And I would tend to think it's usually the woman who does this, but I don't have any statistics for obvious reasons.) Now: Let the flaming begin. [Edit: I am not including true cases of DV in this post. There is NO excuse for a man hitting a women, EVER, or vice versa.} Last edited by gyvel; January 22, 2010 at 06:27 AM. |
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January 22, 2010, 07:41 AM | #65 |
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Location: tenn.
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nfa
this old man would like for anyone that saw me with a weapon that the feds frown upon would tell me immediately so it could be corrected before any trouble with those guys started. have never owned one mainly because finances will not permit it.
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January 22, 2010, 12:28 PM | #66 |
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gyvel:
Response inbound via PM, so that I don't jack the thread.
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January 22, 2010, 01:09 PM | #67 | |
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I have never been so happy to quit a job in my life. |
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January 28, 2010, 06:01 AM | #68 |
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The bottom line remains thus: You do not have to show your NFA paperwork to anyone but an agent of the ATF.
I am not citing the wisdom of refusing to cooperate with your local LEO as ther are many other trumped up charges that can be leveled against you, but the fact remains that, if you are arrested for refusing to show paperwork, you have a great lawsuit for false arrest. |
January 28, 2010, 07:19 AM | #69 |
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We was out at our private range yesterday shooting the M16 and the local police SWAT team had their MP5's out playing as well (off duty off course). Next thing we see is red/blue lights coming out to the range, we stopped shooting to see what was going on, turned out to be a couple Sheriff's deputies....someone called them cause they heard full-auto fire coming from the field. Once they got there and realized it was the city police we all had a good laugh.
BTW: When I pulled the M16 out, none of the SWAT guys said anything about it other than "nice M16". |
January 28, 2010, 02:05 PM | #70 | |||
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I would put it more in the vein of more bees with honey than vinegar. Plus, it seems that there isn't a epidemic of harrassment of NFA possessors Last edited by Wagonman; January 28, 2010 at 02:10 PM. |
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January 28, 2010, 02:17 PM | #71 |
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people ask me all kinds of questions when I shoot one at the range, it just goes with the territory
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January 28, 2010, 04:22 PM | #72 | |
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You would not be arrested at this junction. You would be DETAINED, pending further investigation. The presence of a fully automatic firearm without documentation of any type would lead a reasonable person to believe that the firearm MIGHT be illegally possessed. Thus, you would be detained until the proper documentation turned up.
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January 28, 2010, 04:44 PM | #73 | |
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Quote:
You keep willfully missing the point. Having something out of the ordinary is cause for INVESTIGATION not ARREST. If you have your paperwork in order then the encounter should be concluded. If you don't then expect to be inconvienced fir a length of time. What don't you understand about Affirmative defense? An affimative defense just means you are authorized to do something that in some cases would be illegal. I.E. An ad for driving without a license is producing said license. |
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January 28, 2010, 04:59 PM | #74 |
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Not to be rude or anything 1911, but who cares? What difference does it make or what business is it of anyone else? Like I said, I don't mean that in a rude way towards you, just posing a question. I have owned and still own a few NFA items. The first time I ever took my first NFA gun ( a MAC-11 9mm) to a public range it drew more attention than I wanted. I mean that in the sense where, people just wouldn't leave me alone about it. Everyone wanted to ask if they could fire it, was it expensive, can own those legally, blah blah blah. I never was questioned about paperwork or anything. Since then I have owned a Ruger AC-556, several suppressors (still have 2) and an SBR (semi-auto Krinkov, still have that one also). I've just never been questioned and to be truthful, most cops don't know what to ask you anyway. Believe it or not, the only time I was ever questioned was when I got pulled for speeding and the trooper could see in the back of my Tahoe. He asked me what I had in the back and I told him.....guns. When he took a look at them he kinda freaked out and called for another officer. They just assumed I had illegal guns and even when I gave them my papers they were still skeptical. Held me up for an hour, but it went fine.
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January 30, 2010, 09:09 AM | #75 |
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I was asked very discreetly about my can yesterday. I took it into my local gunshop to make sure that it would fit on the pistol I was picking up. The counter man asked how much it set me back and I responded that it was $250 for the can and $200 for the tax. That told him that I was legit. Then we had a conversation about what hoops I had to jump through, wait time, etc.
I didn't mind for several reasons. First, I love teaching people stuff. Even if it's just educating a stranger about NFA legality and how they can exercise their rights. Second, he was doing his job. The store has a right to know if people are bringing illegal items into their store so that they can avoid any accusations about illegal activity going on there.
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