The process varies depending on the state in which the offense occurred . . . and BATFE does not always recognize restoration of rights anyway. Some states automatically restore all rights as soon as the sentence is completed, some 10 or 20 years later, some require a pardon from the governor, a few require applying to the judge who sentenced them, and some don't restore rights at all (or deny 99% of pardon applications). IIRC, the concept of "prohibited persons" is fairly recent (1968) and unique to the United States. In my opinion it is contrary to the constitution and constitutes double jeopardy or extralegal persecution. If someone is dangerous, but needs to be released, subject them to court supervision indefinitely with "no firearms" a condition of their parole. If someone has completed a sentence for a minor offense that occurred 30 years in the past, they should not risk federal prison because their son wants a .22 rifle to shoot cans.
EXACTLY!




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