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The Range
Firearms Chat
Pistol Brace "rules" signed by AG today
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<blockquote data-quote="OKNewshawk" data-source="post: 3945651" data-attributes="member: 6592"><p>Pros: </p><p>You get a free tax stamp.</p><p>Cons: </p><p>The "SBR" must be registered by an individual--it cannot be added to a trust.</p><p>Once registered, you cannot take it out of the state of registry without AFT permission.</p><p>Once registered, the tax stamp holder is the only one who can handle the firearm (excepting a registered FFL or gunsmith, I presume.)</p><p>Once registered, the AFT knows what you have and where you have it.</p><p></p><p>I don't know about you but the cons outweigh the pros on this one. I would wait until we see how the court challenges fare. I've already noticed a few places where they may have left themselves wide open to having the rule, if not the entire NFA, struck down as unconstitutional.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="OKNewshawk, post: 3945651, member: 6592"] Pros: You get a free tax stamp. Cons: The "SBR" must be registered by an individual--it cannot be added to a trust. Once registered, you cannot take it out of the state of registry without AFT permission. Once registered, the tax stamp holder is the only one who can handle the firearm (excepting a registered FFL or gunsmith, I presume.) Once registered, the AFT knows what you have and where you have it. I don't know about you but the cons outweigh the pros on this one. I would wait until we see how the court challenges fare. I've already noticed a few places where they may have left themselves wide open to having the rule, if not the entire NFA, struck down as unconstitutional. [/QUOTE]
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