Someone has a non-restriced G3?!!??

And even if you DID say "uh-huh, it's a HK G3", the person on the phone would only hear "uh-huh, it matches the non-restricted cert that's up on your screen". clickety-clack: transfer approved.

All of those guns that were voluntarily registered when C68 came about will be verified over the phone when they are transferred. CFC will ask a bunch of questions and it will be compared to the FRT disk. This is where it will get noticed as incorrectly registered.
 
And even if you DID say "uh-huh, it's a HK G3", the person on the phone would only hear "uh-huh, it matches the non-restricted cert that's up on your screen". clickety-clack: transfer approved.
Been there, done that, didn't get the transfer. A customer had a NIB HK91 reg as NR, they tried to transfer, not knowing anything about current rules. It is now in our inventory forever as a prohib with no grandfather status.
 
Incorrect, guns are grandfathered as well. This is the reason I could not import a G3 and sell it to a grandfathered owner. Once a 12.X gun enters a businesses inventory it loses it's GF status.


do you have phrohib? might as well go shoot it, have fun, hell rent it out when your at the range, I am sure folks would pay up to blast away.
 
Incorrect, guns are grandfathered as well. This is the reason I could not import a G3 and sell it to a grandfathered owner. Once a 12.X gun enters a businesses inventory it loses it's GF status.

I'm curious, if that's the case how do dealers sell prohibs to licensed individuals - I've seen prohibs in stores (granted not many) I can see a new prohib not being allowed, but already registered ones (which this would be - all be it incorrectly registered, but still registered none-the-less) should be transferrable. It might take a court order, but it should be do able.
 
I'm curious, if that's the case how do dealers sell prohibs to licensed individuals - I've seen prohibs in stores (granted not many) I can see a new prohib not being allowed, but already registered ones (which this would be - all be it incorrectly registered, but still registered none-the-less) should be transferrable. It might take a court order, but it should be do able.
Only by consignment.
 
Back
Top Bottom