Posted on 03/18/2014 11:16:50 AM PDT by marktwain
I have been trying to make sense of the current chaos involving EPArmory 80% lowers, the BATFE, and Aries Armor. Kilbreaux at the eparmory.com forum has some cogent analysis:
Of course I wonder just what IF anything the ATF can do in terms of retrieving receivers from customers.
First, a significant number of receivers had to be OTC, cash sales no way to track those people down. For the CC internet customers, so they find out who they are how do they prove the parts received were manufactured in such a manner as to be considered a firearm? Assuming they even know what theyre talking about and EP was making lowers outside first the problem the Feds have when it comes to rules of evidence and what happens in courts where lawyers tend to show up, and the thin film of probable cause that gets a warrant from a rubber stamp bench, carries no weight. How does the ATF prove any receivers sold prior to their visit were built incorrectly? Clearly EP Armory isnt going to confess to building them outside-to-in and in fact they even LOOK build inside-to-out by anyone who has any knowledge of plastics molding the flashing around the polymer insert plug is from the receiver indicating the plug was already there when the outside part was injected. But the point is, the Feds position is tenuous better for the purpose of making cautious people scared than for actually proving anything.
Add to this the fact that any lowers already milled out no longer contain ANY incriminating evidence. On a milled lower there is NO WAY to ascertain HOW it was molded. IF as was implied in EPs Facebook post, they did in fact have a Letter from the ATF, even their own ad-hoc rule changing cant be leveraged against the end customer.
I read a post on Calguns where some clown stated hed bought an EP lower but never finished it as if to suggest this lets him off the hook, yet he is in fact, more wrong than right in his view because IF the ATF were to show up at his front door and demand to see the lower and it was presented in as received condition, then HE is in possession of an unregistered firearm! However, if (as Chriss post above made me suddenly realize) the ATF show up at the front door demanding to see the lower and its already been machined out, the evidence as it were, that the receiver was improperly molded is GONE!
(Its kind of like when the school takes your 13 y/o daughter down to the local abortion clinic without ever telling you because THEY CAN, and they CANT tell you, and she has an abortion. YOU can no longer push for prosecution of some punk because the EVIDENCE has been destroyed! (This is how it works in Kalifornia)
Well, the same thing applies here regardless of what the ATF round during their raid, they cannot prove (only allege) that receivers not on the premises were manufactured improperly, and if they send out surrender letters to purchasers the LAST THING a purchaser wants to do is send them an as-delivered lower! Because IF and thats a MIGHTY tall if, the ATF does deem the EP lower improperly made, the surrender of one in that configuration would be a felony in and of itself and by sending it directly to the ATF the purchaser has confessed through stupidity.
On the other hand, if the purchaser chooses to surrender a completed lower interior milled out, and appropriately demilled by sawing in half, the ATF is NOT receiving a unregistered firearm in the mail and have absolutely NO WAY to prove the receiver was EVER in such a configuration as to be considered an unregistered firearm.
And as Chris stated above as far as hes concerned he has a legal firearm I suspect that simple statement pretty much sums it all up once completed the EP lower is no longer in as-manufactured configuration and without the ability to PROVE that EP Armory has always been manufacturing them in the wrong sequence, I dont think the ATF has a whole lot of options other than the intimidation factor that will probably cause most who receive such demand letters to return what they have but for those who are bragging about having never touched their lower with a tool, if they send it back that way EVEN IF they saw the entire thing in half, what the ATF receives will STILL BE evidence of an unregistered firearm having been in the possession of the sender!
I further advised that I would do my best to expedite ATF's reconsideration of the determination that the receivers were firearms and if ATF determined they were not firearms, ATF would return the product to his client. I also requested the records of any customers who had purchased EPS Arms receivers to ensure they were not distributed to persons prohibited by Federal law from possessing a firearm. I also made it clear that we are limiting our request to only the EPS Arms receivers and records of sales of those receivers.
Could someone explain what improper molding means? “Inside to out” vs “outside to in?” What difference does it make?
Isn’t incomplete incomplete, regardless of where the plastic overage is?
The government is scrutinizing how a piece of plastic was molded?! Seriously?!
Have they not better things to do with my tax dollars?
Every bureau of this corrupt administration is hell bent on criminalizing any opposition.
Could someone explain what improper molding means? Inside to out vs outside to in? What difference does it make?
As I understand it (and I could be wrong), if they make the thing outside in they have created a firearm and disabled it by adding the extra inside plastic; you could skip the second step and pull the outside 100% lower from the machine.
If they do it inside out, that's not possible; if you skip the second step, all you have is the extra plastic that's supposed to be milled out by the customer.
P4L
“Could someone explain what improper molding means? Inside to out vs outside to in? What difference does it make?
Isnt incomplete incomplete, regardless of where the plastic overage is?”
Just guessing but if you go outside-to-in you first build a ‘firearm’ per ATF and then fill some holes which the customer then drills back out.
If you go inside-to-out you never have a part that could function.
Technically, it makes a difference because any lower receiver more than 80% complete is defined to be the “firearm”. Once a receiver passes that point, it must be given a serial number and is still a firearm even if the milled portions are filled in. However, the the parts to be milled out are formed first, they are not a firearm, and if the polymer is molded around the different-colored portions to be milled, the final product is solid and has never been a “firearm” so it does not need a serial number. It’s just easier to do the milling/drilling correctly because you can see what has to be removed and whether you have gone far enough.
This article shows the process for finishing an EP Armory 80% lower. It is clear how it is done, and that there never is a finished receiver until the purchaser does the necessary machining:
http://www.thebangswitch.com/building-an-ep-armory-80-ar-lower/
Thanks. The legalities are not obvious to those not in the know.
Had Enough Yet ?
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