General Categories > General Firearm Discussion
selling gun question.....
66bigblock:
barman - I agree with you to a point. IMO - The difference in the govt check is that some people think that it may lead to govt confiscation since the govt has a list of every purchase.
If I ask for your permit as proof to me that the govt has done a background check on you, I will not be back kicking in your door to confiscate or make you register in the future as many believe the govt could do.
Anyone is free to make a sale to anyone that they are comfortable with. The OP asked a question and I gave my opinion on how I would handle it. Not stating case law for him.
66bigblock
newfalguy101:
--- Quote from: Mudinyeri on September 15, 2014, 12:48:10 PM ---It will take him about 20 minutes and $5.00 to get a new permit. For my own piece of mind, I'd require the buyer to do that. However, it is not legally required.
--- End quote ---
That will depend entirely on your location!! I used to be able to walk into the Sheriffs office and walk out with the permit, 15 minutes door to door, however, now the last permit I got took several days to show up in the mail...........their policy is to send them out now
AWick:
--- Quote from: newfalguy101 on September 15, 2014, 08:58:24 PM ---That will depend entirely on your location!! I used to be able to walk into the Sheriffs office and walk out with the permit, 15 minutes door to door, however, now the last permit I got took several days to show up in the mail...........their policy is to send them out now
--- End quote ---
They're making it easy for CHP applicants at the Omaha State Patrol Office on i st. They put up a big sign that points to the obscure door and has the word "FINGERPRINTS" in letters about a foot tall! I drove through the parking lot of the Omaha State Patrol office today (they have a USPS dropbox) and noticed the new sign since having applied for my own CHP there.
Gumby:
I had a handgun permit when it was a time in my life to buy handguns. Then I let the permit lapse for nearly 10 years. I bought long guns in the interim and was treated like a pariah by both auctioneers and retailers. Now that I have a permit once again, my ring is kissed in all quarters.
Yet like Mntnman said, "The fact that he is able to pass a background check means nothing".
Follow the law and sell the AR.
Mntnman:
The problem is that we have been conditioned to feel that out natural right to keep and bear arms is a privilege. We don't even consider how much of an infringement we rubber stamp just to play nice. People, we have to accept that some things that our liberty opens us up to are not pretty. They use our fear and sense of doing what is right to fool us into weakening the one document that protects us from tyranny. We have to stop that. There are ways of dealing with society's ills without giving up our shield. In fact, we have to roll back many "laws" that they have fooled us into going along with.
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