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The gun you bought legally may be a stolen gun, new law needed to protect gun buyers.
11/30/2006
| Trteamer
Posted on 11/30/2006 5:56:24 PM PST by Trteamer
I am going to be going to the legislature to get a gun law passed an I would like to get you FReepers input and advise. It's not an anti-gun law I want to pass, but one to protect us gun buyers........
TOPICS: Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: banglist; firearms; guns
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To: Trteamer
Oh I know. I screw up all the time by not following my own advice lol. I just wanted to give you a heads up because you are communicating with legislative folks.
41
posted on
11/30/2006 7:40:21 PM PST
by
KoRn
To: Cobra64
"Schoolhouse Rock" was a series of educational cartoons on Saturday morning TV when I was young.
Here's a link to the one this poster was talking about.
link
42
posted on
11/30/2006 7:42:53 PM PST
by
perfect stranger
(Tagline tomorrow, tagline yesterday, but no tagline today.)
To: Trteamer
Yeah I had not considered any insurance company.
I would think that a reputable firm would want to make good with you rather than force both of you to give more money to attorneys than this is worth. Have you contacted the firm concerning making good on their sale of defective product to you?
What should happen is for the insurance company that owns the gun, sell it to the store you bought it from and they should make good to you by giving it back to you. [If the gun would show up clean now. They should give you another gun if that gun would not show up clean now.] Of course that is only logical not what will probably happen in the real world.
43
posted on
11/30/2006 7:42:53 PM PST
by
JLS
To: spunkets
spunkets said:
"The gun doesn't belong to you. It was stolen. It belongs to the owner and that's who they legal must give it back to, unless it is unclaimed. " Using the same reasoning, the gun never belonged to the dealer who sold it. That dealer should make good to the purchaser.
44
posted on
11/30/2006 8:04:17 PM PST
by
William Tell
(RKBA for California (rkba.members.sonic.net) - Volunteer by contacting Dave at rkba@sonic.net)
To: Holicheese
I got it right off and I am pretty dense. I can't remember where it is from though.
To: Trteamer
Well if you do want a law it should be a state or local ordinance. Just keep Nancy and Harry out of it.
I don't know about gun dealers specifically, but in these parts most pawn shops are FFL dealers and they have the local police check the temperature of everything they take in that is serialized. Gun shops can do that and probably should.
Caveat emptor, I guess.
46
posted on
11/30/2006 8:13:41 PM PST
by
Clinging Bitterly
(Oregon - a pro-militia and firearms state that looks just like Afghanistan .)
To: Trteamer
18USC922(j)
It shall be unlawful for any person to receive,
possess, conceal, store, barter,
sell, or dispose of
any stolen firearm or stolen ammunition, or pledge or accept as security for a loan any stolen firearm or stolen ammunition, which is moving as, which is a part of, which constitutes, or which has been shipped or transported in, interstate or foreign commerce, either before or after it was stolen, knowing or having reasonable cause to believe that the firearm or ammunition was stolen.
The clear fed crime the thief is guilty of...
47
posted on
11/30/2006 8:21:36 PM PST
by
spunkets
To: William Tell
"That dealer should make good to the purchaser."Yes, but that's a civil matter, as I pointed out.
48
posted on
11/30/2006 8:22:39 PM PST
by
spunkets
To: Holicheese
CONJUNCTION JUNCTION, WHAT'S MY FUNCTION?
49
posted on
11/30/2006 8:32:28 PM PST
by
lesser_satan
(EKTHELTHIOR!!!)
To: spunkets
Thanks spunkets, you are a wealth of information.
50
posted on
11/30/2006 8:44:15 PM PST
by
Trteamer
( (Eat Meat, Wear Fur, Own Guns, FReep Leftists, Drive an SUV, Drill A.N.W.R., Drill the Gulf, Vote)
To: spunkets
18USC922(j)...The clear fed crime the thief is guilty of... Call me cynical - but I don't think your common tweaker type thieves or even professional racketeer type gun runners get high priority at ATF. Their bread & butter is checking for abbreviations on 4473s.
51
posted on
11/30/2006 8:51:40 PM PST
by
Clinging Bitterly
(Oregon - a pro-militia and firearms state that looks just like Afghanistan .)
To: Trteamer
Check your pawn brokers statutes in Colorado. It may aready be on the books and Garretson's may not be aware they are covered by it.
In California, pawn shops and gun shops (really all used merchandisers who traffic in serialized merchandise) are required to report their purchase by the store to the police and hold all firearms for 30 days while the police check the status of the firearm.
However, 30 days was not long enough to check all records back before they were computerized... but it did clear the firearm to be legally sold.
52
posted on
11/30/2006 10:12:26 PM PST
by
Swordmaker
(Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE is "AAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
To: Trteamer
Your right, the gun does not belong to me. The original owner has already gotten paid by his insurance company for the gun and has expressed to me that if he gets it back he will give it to me. The whole thing kind of sucks. Under the law, your gun now belongs to the insurance company... the original owner was compensated for its loss and the legal title passed to the Insurance company. I had some guns stolen about 10 years ago... and one was recovered. The insurance company claimed it from the police and offered to sell it to me for MORE than they paid me on the claim... they said it had appreciated in value in the couple years since it was stolen. I politely asked the insurance company if they had a Federal Firearms License.
53
posted on
11/30/2006 10:16:50 PM PST
by
Swordmaker
(Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE is "AAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
To: Trteamer; harpseal; TexasCowboy; AAABEST; Travis McGee; Squantos; Shooter 2.5; wku man; SLB; ...
54
posted on
12/01/2006 5:49:38 AM PST
by
Joe Brower
(The Constitution defines Conservatism. *NRA*)
To: Trteamer
Here is the problem with what you propose: Many of the guns stolen each year are not reported to police for a variety of reasons. The database on serial #'s is way incomplete. This then becomes a way for the antis to mandate universal gun registration...which is
always a precursor to confiscation. They've got to know where the guns are located so they can go grab them.
Here's a choice of solutions: Either buy the gun from somebody you know personally, or pay to have a used gun #'s "run" or just buy NEW!
Any new law is an invitation for the other side to exploit the situation to our detriment. Just my .02.
55
posted on
12/01/2006 6:01:09 AM PST
by
ExSoldier
(Democracy is 2 wolves and a lamb voting on dinner. Liberty is a well armed lamb contesting the vote.)
To: Trteamer
I'd rather see a Web site where you could run a check yourself anonymously, much as you'd run a CarFacts check when buying a used car. Then every buyer has a measure of protection whether from a dealer or private sale.
56
posted on
12/01/2006 6:08:33 AM PST
by
NonValueAdded
(Prayers for our patriot brother, 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub. Brian, we're all pulling for you!)
To: LibWhacker
Yeah that's it, stand on the US side of the border just outside the Customs location and go to town on the geese. Then if the agents give you a hard time, show them the border and tell them that they have no business doing DNR work.
57
posted on
12/01/2006 6:30:10 AM PST
by
looscnnn
("Olestra (Olean) applications causes memory leaks" PC Confusious)
To: Neo-Luddite
58
posted on
12/01/2006 6:31:07 AM PST
by
looscnnn
("Olestra (Olean) applications causes memory leaks" PC Confusious)
To: Trteamer
There has got to be a requirement that gun dealers check the serial numbers of a gun when they take one in on trade. A simple phone call to law enforcement is all it would take so they can run the number in their database. I don't want any law passed that makes is easier to accept stolen goods. Next time, check the damned serial number on your used gun purchase yourself with the police.
Garretson's sold me a hot gun!
Loosely translated, you bought a hot gun.
59
posted on
12/01/2006 6:48:42 AM PST
by
kerryusama04
(Isa 8:20, Eze 22:26)
To: Trteamer
What you are asking for will likely interfere with private sales of guns, or anything else, for that matter.
I don't know about you, but I always check with the pertinent authority on major used purchases, like guns, or cars.
The internet has a trace you can run on a car for a small fee, and many or most police departments will do the same on a gun SSN....I bought one about ten years ago and ran the numbers...
All this is currently available, and this time you just did not use it. I would take the matter up with the sporting goods store owner, and BTW, you will not get that shotgun back. It will be returned to the owner, or destroyed.
60
posted on
12/01/2006 6:56:37 AM PST
by
Cold Heat
(We blew it..... So back to work we go........)
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