Dandy smoothing piece!
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The ATF will not prosecute anyone for violating small town small minded rules. If it ain’t Federal they have , 1. No jurisdiction , 2. No interest.Having both purchased and sold antique and newer made muzzleloaders to folks in CALIFORNIA, my experience has been that the laws vary from one district to another. In one area they are without restrictions while in another they are treated as modern firearms and require transfer by FFL.
Unfortunately since the ATF now expects the SELLER to know what laws apply to the buyer and will happily prosecute the SELLER for sending a pre-1899 or muzzleloader into such areas directly to the buyer, that is where the issue lies. Having the buyer simply assure you that no such laws apply does NOT protect the buyer in anyway.
I no longer send anything to CA, IL or any other state that doesn't recognize a pre-1899 or muzzleloading firearm as exempt from FFL transfers.
Sending a exempt firearm to an address in CA where it would be a legal transfer but to a buyer who lives in a FFL only transfer area ( send it to my friend or relative and I'll pick it up there instead) makes you compliant in a "straw purchase", which is also a felony.
Just my 2 cents.
While I'm no expert, researching the gun I had with the hunters star touch mark on the inside of the lock plate, the quasi experts all claimed that is the easiest way to identify one of Curleys guns.If it has the star it should be one of Curly's North Star guns. Not a North Star West gun.
You trust the ATF?The ATF will not prosecute anyone for violating small town small minded rules. If it ain’t Federal they have , 1. No jurisdiction , 2. No interest.
In this instance yes. The federal attorneys would be chewing ATF butt if an agent attempted to arrest anyone for violating a local or state law.You trust the ATF?
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