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The Range
NFA & Class III Discussion
How to move this weapon to Oklahoma?
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<blockquote data-quote="CAR-AR-M16" data-source="post: 2116647" data-attributes="member: 204"><p>The whole story sounds funny. I have never heard of a functioning military weapon just being "taken out of service" to present to someone. Even if it did happen, military weapons are not in the NFA registry, so it would have had to have been papered somehow back in 68. If it did somehow get papered back then and the owner later died, it would had to have transfered to the widow on a Form 5 after he passed. She would now have to Form 4 transfer it to the son (assuming he is a resident of the same state). If not, it will have to transfer on a Form 4 to a 01/03 FFL/SOT in the son's state and then another Form 4 from the 01/03 to the son. All of this will take many months to years to do legally. I would suspect it is un-papered and therefore contraband and cannot be made legal. If you do have some paperwork you need to contact an NFA savy lawyer like was mentioned in the link above to get this worked out, but you still may have to surrender the weapon in the end.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CAR-AR-M16, post: 2116647, member: 204"] The whole story sounds funny. I have never heard of a functioning military weapon just being "taken out of service" to present to someone. Even if it did happen, military weapons are not in the NFA registry, so it would have had to have been papered somehow back in 68. If it did somehow get papered back then and the owner later died, it would had to have transfered to the widow on a Form 5 after he passed. She would now have to Form 4 transfer it to the son (assuming he is a resident of the same state). If not, it will have to transfer on a Form 4 to a 01/03 FFL/SOT in the son's state and then another Form 4 from the 01/03 to the son. All of this will take many months to years to do legally. I would suspect it is un-papered and therefore contraband and cannot be made legal. If you do have some paperwork you need to contact an NFA savy lawyer like was mentioned in the link above to get this worked out, but you still may have to surrender the weapon in the end. [/QUOTE]
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How to move this weapon to Oklahoma?
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