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The Range
Law & Order
Proposed App For Private Sales
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<blockquote data-quote="ConstitutionCowboy" data-source="post: 3272038" data-attributes="member: 745"><p>I stand corrected. The gun does not have to be logged in as long as it remains in the seller's hands. The seller, however, must surrender his information so the dealer can log the gun in prior to the actual transfer, at which time the dealer is required to enter the info into his A&D book. If the seller hands over the gun to the dealer for whatever reason, it must then be logged in regardless of whether it becomes a proceed, delay, deny, or the deal falls through. In that case, if for any reason the deal does not get completed, the dealer must do a background check on the seller before it can be returned. If for any reason the seller does not pass and is denied, you now have the dealer holding the seller's gun. The dealer is still at risk and I can find no solutions laid out in the law. The only options I see is that the seller must find someone else to buy his gun or surrender it - but to whom does it get surrendered? The dealer? The ATF? Other law enforcement?</p><p></p><p>I still believe, as an FFL dealer, it is risky to get involved in a private sale.</p><p></p><p>Woody</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ConstitutionCowboy, post: 3272038, member: 745"] I stand corrected. The gun does not have to be logged in as long as it remains in the seller's hands. The seller, however, must surrender his information so the dealer can log the gun in prior to the actual transfer, at which time the dealer is required to enter the info into his A&D book. If the seller hands over the gun to the dealer for whatever reason, it must then be logged in regardless of whether it becomes a proceed, delay, deny, or the deal falls through. In that case, if for any reason the deal does not get completed, the dealer must do a background check on the seller before it can be returned. If for any reason the seller does not pass and is denied, you now have the dealer holding the seller's gun. The dealer is still at risk and I can find no solutions laid out in the law. The only options I see is that the seller must find someone else to buy his gun or surrender it - but to whom does it get surrendered? The dealer? The ATF? Other law enforcement? I still believe, as an FFL dealer, it is risky to get involved in a private sale. Woody [/QUOTE]
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