If a private party wants to sell me a pistol... and I have a trust and am a trustee... can a transfer be made without going through a FFL for a background check or how does that work?
If a private party wants to sell me a pistol... and I have a trust and am a trustee... can a transfer be made without going through a FFL for a background check or how does that work?
Lessons cost money. Good ones cost lots. -Tony Beets
If you are buying it for personal use, yes a BGC is needed.
If your trust is buying it, ask your trust attorney.
As trustee for the trust you will need to do the BGC -- as well as all the other trustees on the trust.
Make sure you do an acquisition statement for the FFL saying that it is for the trust..
4473 Section A, Question 1:
When the buyer of a firearm is a corporation, company, association, partnership, or other such business entity, an officer authorized to act on behalf of the business must complete Section A of the form with his or her personal information, sign Section A, and attach a written statement, executed under penalties of perjury stating: (A) the firearm is being acquired for the use of and will be the property of that business entity and (B) the name and address of that business entity
What is my joy if all hands, even the unclean, can reach into it? What is my wisdom, if even the fools can dictate to me? What is my freedom, if all creatures, even the botched and impotent, are my masters? What is my life, if I am but to bow, to agree and to obey?
-- Ayn Rand, Anthem (Chapter 11)
To throw in another question. What if the lower is already purchased and is going to be put into a NFA trust. Do I need to transfer it through an FFL to put it into a trust?
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Yes this. Didn't say I would take as the word. Thanks for the great advice Jim.
When a firearm changes legal ownership, state and federal laws must be followed.
In Colorado, as of July 1, placing a non-NFA firearm into a trust requires a 4473 to be filled out, and a background check to be completed, per Colorado state law.
If the only firearm involved in such a transaction is an NFA firearm, the transaction is exempt from a background check under federal regulations - just fill out 4473 but don't have to call for NICS approval, but the application of Colorado state law to such moves is still unclear. Colorado law has added a federal private-party background check requirement to firearms transactions which previously required no federal background check. The only exemption in the Colorado state law is for transactions to or between FFLs, or between immediate family members, or for firearms which are antiques or classified as curios and relics.
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