There is a difference between deactivation and destruction. I think the OP is confusing the two.
Well - Canada's "rules" for legal deactivation basically destroys it ...
There is a difference between deactivation and destruction. I think the OP is confusing the two.
Well - Canada's "rules" for legal deactivation basically destroys it ...
Agreed, but the Rules in place, only show consideration for an entire gun (as opposed to the Legal "Firearm")
How do you install pins and weld up an action only (the Firearm), when it is not a fully assembled gun, with the parts that are required to be welded, pinned, etc., attached?
Depending on the action, but welding up the thread area solid where a barrel would attach would pretty much deactivate it. Hard to prove other wise in a court of law... and that is where it would end up if the gestapo charged you...
Yeah. Should...
But has anyone actually tried these dodges?
How is destroying a firearm receiver, a "dodge?"
How does one weld an aluminum receiver to a steel bolt?
I’ve emailed the CFP, hopefully they’ll give me an answer.
Agreed, but the Rules in place, only show consideration for an entire gun (as opposed to the Legal "Firearm")
How do you install pins and weld up an action only (the Firearm), when it is not a fully assembled gun, with the parts that are required to be welded, pinned, etc., attached?
And they also said if you do anything before the compensation plan is in place you won't get a cent.The government has from day one said deactivation ON THEIR DIME is an option. So, what if everyone (or even a very large number) with an OIC banned firearm were to go for that option. There aren't even close to enough gunsmiths to do the work much less by the deadline of this September when the amnesty ends. Delicious.
From a more practical perspective, you sorta don't, but you could probably pick a hidden enough place to put a big, ugly, and interlocking mess of molten metals, so as it would supposedly qualify.
Reporting the deactivation of a registered restricted firearm to the Registrar of Firearms is a requirement of a VALID REGISTRATION CERTIFICATE.
Let that sink in for a minute.
Sounds like that means there are 68,000 AR-15s that could have already been legally "disposed of" outside of the state's purview?
Nice.
The Attorney General of Canada has been arguing vigorously on behalf of the Registrar in Provincial Courts across Canada that the certificates are nullified and according to numerous court decisions, including the Alberta Court of Appeal, the firearms have been unregistered for more than 3 years...
The registrar will now be unable to argue the certificates are valid and owners are therefore subject to the conditions on those certificates.
The AR-15s are in a weird illegal limbo of the registrar's making, aye. The judge in front of me was fine with that though.The registrar will now be unable to argue the certificates are valid and owners are therefore subject to the conditions on those certificates.