View Full Version : Moving Cross Country with Firearms
mattiooo
06-06-2006, 13:46
So....when I get the job offer, I'll have about 3 weeks to sort everything out.
What is the best way to take my firearms with me?
Anyone have some links or ideas?
I have 5 long guns and 4 hand guns to take, plus lots of ammo.
The route we are planning is from New Jersey to Colorado mostly via route 80.
It will take us through Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska before we get to Colorado.
Thank you,
Matt
JohnTRourke
06-06-2006, 14:24
put them in good bags/carriers/whatever way you use to transport them
put them in your car where they can't be easily seen or stolen.
move
make sure they are not accessable. lock them in the trunk? somewhere, anywhere. if you stop for the night, take them inside with you. (preferably without people seeing them)
keep ammo in back seat or somewhere well away from the guns, no loaded mags anywhere.
KarlPMann
06-06-2006, 18:49
Yeah, what they said. Under federal law you can transport them yourself as long as they remain unloaded and inaccessible (easily accessible). You can have them in your hotel room at night, but must comply with local laws if you take them out of cases/etc. When hitting the Colorado State Line, stop, get out, stretch, grab a gun and put it in cab with you, load it, enjoy the freedom, finish trip. :twisted: Karl.
newracer
06-06-2006, 21:19
When hitting the Colorado State Line, stop, get out, stretch, grab a gun and put it in cab with you, load it, enjoy the freedom, finish trip. :twisted: Karl.As long as it is not a rifle.
HunterCO
06-07-2006, 00:01
When hitting the Colorado State Line, stop, get out, stretch, grab a gun and put it in cab with you, load it, enjoy the freedom, finish trip. :twisted: Karl.As long as it is not a rifle.
Rifle can be loaded just cant have one in the chamber. [wink]
MuzzleFlash
06-15-2006, 00:13
18 USC § 926A. Interstate transportation of firearms
Notwithstanding any other provision of any law or any rule or regulation of a State or any political subdivision thereof, any person who is not otherwise prohibited by this chapter from transporting, shipping, or receiving a firearm shall be entitled to transport a firearm for any lawful purpose from any place where he may lawfully possess and carry such firearm to any other place where he may lawfully possess and carry such firearm if, during such transportation the firearm is unloaded, and neither the firearm nor any ammunition being transported is readily accessible or is directly accessible from the passenger compartment of such transporting vehicle: Provided, That in the case of a vehicle without a compartment separate from the driver’s compartment the firearm or ammunition shall be contained in a locked container other than the glove compartment or console.
MPfiveengineer
06-15-2006, 00:27
When I moved from Texas I put all my guns in a case or a gun sock, put the cases in my safe, packed any open spaces in the safe with blankets, and put the safe in the moving truck first. That way they had my safe protecting them and 24 feet of all my crap if someone broke into the truck. I did keep one pistol accessible; never know what you are going to run into on the road.
mattiooo
06-15-2006, 12:04
Notwithstanding any other provision of any law or any rule or regulation of a State or any political subdivision thereof
I read that first. The question is, what does this quoted bit legally mean?
That I do not have to worry about state/local regulations regarding possession if I am moving through from one place to the other and store them as indicated?
How does this relate to stopping for the night at a motel? Am I still considered moving them from one location to the other?
Thanks,
Matt
samuraii
06-15-2006, 13:15
As I understand it you must store them as indicated. While you are traveling it is legal to drive/pass through the state or subdivision (i.e. Chicago) but you Can not stop there if it is illegal to posses the firearms in that area. When stopping for the night you may bring them into the hotel as long as they stay stored in the same manner that they were in the vehicle. If you take them out of the case/locked container for the evening then it is no longer considered in transport and you must abide by local laws.
If anyone else understands the law better please feel free to correct me.
KarlPMann
06-15-2006, 17:06
That's how I understand it. If you stop at a hotel, and you can legally possess that firearm in that particular area, then you can have it out. If you couldn't legally own it there, then it needs to stay locked up and unloaded. Prime examples are, Chicago, New York, etc. Karl.
MuzzleFlash
06-16-2006, 01:49
Just for safe measure, avoid spending the night in anti-gun shitholes like Chicago. While you may legally recover any firearms under federal law, they may screw with you for the sheer recreation of it. Remember, most of the anti's runing places like Chicago, Newark, NYC, etc. have no respect for taxpayers and will gladly waste their money to mess with you.
Case in point:
http://www.anjrpc.org/fopalawsuit.htm
Just for safe measure, avoid spending the night in anti-gun shitholes like Chicago. While you may legally recover any firearms under federal law, they may screw with you for the sheer recreation of it. Remember, most of the anti's runing places like Chicago, Newark, NYC, etc. have no respect for taxpayers and will gladly waste their money to mess with you.
Case in point:
http://www.anjrpc.org/fopalawsuit.htm
I would avoid those places like the plague. I have family in Illinois that I don't even feel comfortable visiting because of crap like this. What amazes me more than anything about anti-gun cities is that the more anti-gun the city is the less comfortable I'd feel about being there without a gun. That article is apalling and I hope the guy gets every penny.
samuraii
06-16-2006, 09:34
Yeah he does deserve every penny. Especially since he told them about the federal law and they said flat out...we don't care. Then continued to process and jail him. Poor guy was a victim of someone's personal agenda.
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