I don't want to be negative here but this is not as much a sure thing as some people seem to think.
Here is the potential "problem" as I see it... if you go to the AIA website and look at what they say about the rifle and the magazines, what you see is that they say the rifle is designed to work with "M14 style magazines". Based on our experience during the nearly 2 years we spent getting a 10 round AR pistol magazine approved I can tell you that this will pose a problem.
It is similar to the situation that Remington ran into with the 7615 pump rifle where RCMP ruled that the rifle was designed/built to use existing design AR rifle magazines and that because of the design of the 7615 there was no such thing as a magazine designed and manufactured for the 7615... nor could there be (that was their position).
AIA is in effect saying that they designed and built the gun to use M14 magazines... M14 magazines are by definition designed and manufactured as rifle magazines... simply replacing the floorplate with an engraved floorplate saying it's a "10 or 20 round AIA Bolt Rifle magazine" may look nice but I doubt RCMP are going to allow that as proof of the design and manufacture... it's no different than taking a 30 round AR magazine and engraving "10 round pistol magazine" on the side... RCMP already ruled that this does not change the magazine from a rifle magazine to a pistol magazine.
If AIA made their own magazines and those magazines were different than the M14 rifle magazines and if AIA marked all of them as AIA Bolt Rifle Magazines and marketed sold them internationally that way then maybe you'd have a shot at this... in fact I'd say it would be an excellent arguement and a good legal challenge if rejected... but reading the AIA website that's not what it seems to say and the pictures of the magazine on the German website link that was posted do not show any markings identifying the magazines as AIA Bolt Rifle magazines so they obviously weren't made with any markings... and again that would be a problem.
This is not the 'slam dunk' that some people seem to suggest it is...
Mark
Here is the potential "problem" as I see it... if you go to the AIA website and look at what they say about the rifle and the magazines, what you see is that they say the rifle is designed to work with "M14 style magazines". Based on our experience during the nearly 2 years we spent getting a 10 round AR pistol magazine approved I can tell you that this will pose a problem.
It is similar to the situation that Remington ran into with the 7615 pump rifle where RCMP ruled that the rifle was designed/built to use existing design AR rifle magazines and that because of the design of the 7615 there was no such thing as a magazine designed and manufactured for the 7615... nor could there be (that was their position).
AIA is in effect saying that they designed and built the gun to use M14 magazines... M14 magazines are by definition designed and manufactured as rifle magazines... simply replacing the floorplate with an engraved floorplate saying it's a "10 or 20 round AIA Bolt Rifle magazine" may look nice but I doubt RCMP are going to allow that as proof of the design and manufacture... it's no different than taking a 30 round AR magazine and engraving "10 round pistol magazine" on the side... RCMP already ruled that this does not change the magazine from a rifle magazine to a pistol magazine.
If AIA made their own magazines and those magazines were different than the M14 rifle magazines and if AIA marked all of them as AIA Bolt Rifle Magazines and marketed sold them internationally that way then maybe you'd have a shot at this... in fact I'd say it would be an excellent arguement and a good legal challenge if rejected... but reading the AIA website that's not what it seems to say and the pictures of the magazine on the German website link that was posted do not show any markings identifying the magazines as AIA Bolt Rifle magazines so they obviously weren't made with any markings... and again that would be a problem.
This is not the 'slam dunk' that some people seem to suggest it is...
Mark