heard there was a websight that may be hit or miss or call the police station would be the only sure way.How can we as public individuals check and see if a gun is stolen before we proceed (buy, trade)?
Is there a way we can check beforehand?
heard there was a websight that may be hit or miss or call the police station would be the only sure way.How can we as public individuals check and see if a gun is stolen before we proceed (buy, trade)?
Is there a way we can check beforehand?
I would chose the Highway.
That assumes the person that he traded with knew or had reason to believe they were trading a stolen firearm.You're a victim of theft by deception
Theft by deception is the act of stealing from another person under false pretenses. This kind of crime is often deliberate, as it is a manipulative way of gaining control of a person's assets, property, or finances by the culprit falsely representing themselves, value, and their intentions.
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Back in ‘89 or ‘90, some jake-legged peckerwoods broke into my folks’ house and stole a bunch of stuff, including a couple of guns that pretty much only had sentimental value. One of them showed up in a pawn shop in MWC, but to get it back, my dad would’ve had to have bought it back from the pawn shop because, under Oklahoma law, they “had a financial interest in it.”IIRC there have been some recent changes in Title 21 about pawned property. The pawn shop owners protection act, I think?
Back in ‘89 or ‘90, some jake-legged peckerwoods broke into my folks’ house and stole a bunch of stuff, including a couple of guns that pretty much only had sentimental value. One of them showed up in a pawn shop in MWC, but to get it back, my dad would’ve had to have bought it back from the pawn shop because, under Oklahoma law, they “had a financial interest in it.”
To say that my dad was PO’d would be an understatement. He didn’t particularly care for pawn shops before, but he really hated them after that little affair.
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