Can I have them shipped back to the selling dealer in MT after all is complete, and have the dealer meet me at the border crossing with them and simply take them from there to my residence with a STATT? The dealer is 15 minutes from the crossing, and I'm less than 20 miles from him....it sure would make things easier than shipping.
OR
Pay for them, pay to have them converted, and leave them at the dealer completed until I have amassed a new collection...then have them exported to Canada en mass via one of the previously mentioned exporters? Could end up being 4-5 guns the way I spend money...lol
The first option you mentioned above would only work if the dealer is registered as an exporter with the U.S. Department of State, and gets the proper export license prior to meeting you at the border. Unfortunately, it's just not as easy as it used to be. When my grandpa owned our shop, he or my dad used to be able to just drive a gun to the border at a moment's notice. The good news is, if you go through a registered exporter such as ourselves, we've gotten pretty used to the whole process, and the U.S. Dept of State has been going rather quickly with approvals lately, usually within one week once we get everything submitted.
IMHO this is what the smart people do.
The link posted above from DFAITCan is a good FAQ, but keep in mind it only covers the Canadian importer side. Note that it says:
"the US must issue an export licence to the American exporter. Prior to issuing this licence the US government requires that the Canadian importer present a document from Canada allowing this proposed transaction. To satisfy that US requirement Canadian residents may apply for an International Import Certificate (IIC)."
click here for a link to our document and link of where to apply for an IIC
click here for a document called "Steps for Importing a Firearm into Canada"
Thus, as is suggested, a person can often save some good funds (and thus get more gun) by doing the Canadian import side themselves. But the exporter registration requirement is why most U.S. sellers won't export - the exporter registration is very complex and expensive. So, be sure to be in touch with one of us registered exporters, even if you're making import arrangements yourself. Otherwise the U.S. exporter could find themselves in jail with a hefty fine. And U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (I.C.E.) is not joking around. And I'm not trying to scare you into paying more, just giving fair warning. We've had a family friend arrested and jailed for accidently leaving his concealed carry pistol in his glovebox and heading north for dinner.
Any body else like this idea?
No lets just start another 10 page rant about prices too high bad service...
I say go with sakoalberta give ourselves some time to shop.
Like gunbroker.
Any body else like this idea?
I'd be glad to help out as well. If you can get a group of a dozen guns, I can do it for $100 USD per gun presuming that none of them require gunsmith modification. I'm sure Clay at Prophet River could do a great job with it as well. We can store purchased guns at our shop for several months, no problem, if that's what it takes. Email
export@davessports.com with the subject line "CGN December 09 Group Buy" for more info or to get started. For now, I'll set a contact deadline of Jan 31st, 2010, and see what we can have together by then.
Cheers,