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Selling pistol to private party

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AAllen:

--- Quote from: DR4NRA on February 26, 2015, 02:39:09 PM ---I think that in Lincoln you are still registering the weapon. Do believe that the responsibility is on the seller though it doesn't say so. Must be done on day of sale.

Link to form

http://cjis.lincoln.ne.gov/HTBIN/CGI.COM


--- End quote ---

Correct, I may have been a little fuzzy on how I worded that.  What I meant to convey is there are other cities besides Lincoln that have the same requirement, we don't hear about them much but they are out there.

OnTheFly:

--- Quote from: AAllen on February 26, 2015, 01:59:17 PM ---Since this is a pistol the purchaser must have (per State Law, this applies to individuals as well as FFL's) either a Firearm (Handgun) Purchase Certificate, Concealed Handgun Permit or Police Credentials that are valid and not expired. 
--- End quote ---
Thanks for setting me straight on that Andy.  Good info.



--- Quote from: DR4NRA on February 26, 2015, 02:39:09 PM ---I think that in Lincoln you are still registering the weapon. Do believe that the responsibility is on the seller though it doesn't say so. Must be done on day of sale.

Link to form

http://cjis.lincoln.ne.gov/HTBIN/CGI.COM

--- End quote ---
That link seems to be broken.  Here is a good one...

http://cjis.lincoln.ne.gov/~lpd/gunreg/

bullit:
I find best meeting behind a shopping center and making the exchange using a brown paper sack .....

AAllen:
I guess I could add one other item to the list of acceptable Purchase Certifications that we often forget about: an FFL.  If the person is an FFL they do not need one of the other permits, but I would get the name and Number off the FFL as well as its expiration for my records and most FFL's don't just pass those around.

There are also times (not sales but loans or other times) that one of the permits is not needed.  You are going to be able to see the person the entire time they have the pistol, the person is your spouse, sibling, parent, child, aunt, uncle, niece, nephew, or grandparent, or if the pistol is an antique (I believe the model needs to be recognized as such by the ATF).  If you are selling it to a law enforcement agency then the permit is also not needed.

Tstephens:
Thanks for the info guys.

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