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#1 |
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Member
Join Date: January 18, 2005
Posts: 134
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Let's say your buddy has the opportunity to purchase 2 guns of the type you both are wanting and he offers to sell one to you. You are not under any legal prohibition from buying one yourself, but you live some distance away and are unable to travel to the seller's place to buy it yourself.
I know a straw buy is buying one for an unqualified individual, but is the above hypothetical situation considered a straw purchase as well? In my mind this is no different than buying 2 guns on sale and you turn around and sell one for a profit.
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"Excuse me ma'am, does my hankerchief smell like chloroform?" |
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#2 |
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Member
Join Date: July 16, 2006
Location: Kent, WA
Posts: 269
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There is a gift provision, but doesn't seem to fit your scenario. If you're specifically buying it to sell, and make a profit at it, you're close to dealing in firearms without a license.
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Mark Kent, WA |
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#3 | |
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Member
Join Date: January 15, 2006
Location: Plano, Texas
Posts: 2,652
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Quote:
If the straw purchaser signs the 4473 they commit perjury as they were NOT the actual buyer. ATF makes it clear on the 4473 that buying a firearm as a "gift" is completely legal as long as the third party is not otherwise prohibited from possessing the firearm. A straw purchase is not solely "buying for a prohibited person", but buying on behalf of ANYONE else.....from a licensed dealer.
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Need a FFL in north Dallas/Plano/Allen/Frisco/McKinney ? Just EMAIL me! $20 transfers ($10 for CHL, active military, police, firefighters or schoolteachers) |
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#4 |
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Member
Join Date: December 27, 2002
Location: Blood of the Apache
Posts: 472
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If the seller is a dealer then it is a straw purchase because your friend is not the actual purchaser of that firearm and when he has to answer this question on the 4473 he will either have to lie or the truth will negate the transaction. A straw purchase doesn't have to mean that the intended end user is prohibited from taking posession. It means the end user used another purchser to acquire the gun.
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#5 |
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Member
Join Date: October 1, 2010
Location: Near, but not far enough from, Chicago
Posts: 166
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What if the original buyer sells the gun and transfers out of state through an FFL? Is that still a straw purchase?
I ask because my out of state brother in law was looking for some ar15 lowers and I offered to buy one off him if he were able to find any. |
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#6 |
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Member
Join Date: January 8, 2006
Posts: 215
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If the person buys the guns for himself WITH HIS OWN MONEY and later decides to sell or gift one or both of them he is good.
He might buy the guns and five minutes later have buyer's remorse and want to sell one. If no laws are violated in transferring, no problem. It is how you say it more than what you say.
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#7 |
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Member
Join Date: June 23, 2006
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 418
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Edit: Left as is for historic record, see post 24 for modified statement.
Your buddy can buy two with his own money, test shoot both, pick out the one he likes, and then sell the other. Completely legal. (In my non attorney humble opinion.) Jim
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An unjust law is itself a species of violence. Arrest for its breach is more so. -Gandhi Last edited by Fryerpower; February 1, 2013 at 12:52 PM. Reason: see edit note |
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#8 |
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Member
Join Date: March 3, 2011
Posts: 1,796
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Buying any firearm with the intention to turn around and directly sell it to another person is a staw purchase regardless of whether or not the other person is prohibited.
You can buy a gun with the intent to sell it later for a profit but you can't buy one knowing that you're about to flip it for a profit right afterwards to an unlicensed individual (private sale). |
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#9 | |
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Member
Join Date: April 6, 2012
Posts: 8
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#10 | |
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Member
Join Date: January 18, 2013
Posts: 32
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Quote:
Sent from my DROID RAZR |
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#11 | |
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Member
Join Date: December 21, 2012
Location: Pa
Posts: 88
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He who dies with the most toys wins NRA Life Member, Charter Member JPFO Member NAGR, Member GOA, Gunsight Alumni |
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#12 |
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Member
Join Date: December 19, 2012
Posts: 266
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I'm sorry but...
LEGALLY (folllowing all rules and regulations) buying 2* guns in my name with the explicit intent of selling 1 of those to a friend (also following all rules and regulations regarding private transfers) can not be considered a straw purchase, especially if he is LEGALLY able to own the firearm himself. if all rules and regulations are followed then how can IN-REGION geography be used as a means to declare a sale invalid or a "straw purchase"? maybe it's because I'm in NJ and work to understand the draconian nature of the laws here, but because of them you can't accidentally have a straw purchase. we have to fill out STS-033 to get a pistol purchase permit, which is then populated with my info (seller) and his info (buyer) and shipped off to the state and local PD's. the only form I would have completed and he wouldn't have would have been 4473. i don't see how it would be lying. Also I think the instructions for line 10.a are ambiguous... which I can't copy/paste here from the PDF for some bizarre reason. My issue is with the wording of buy vs. gift... if someone gives me money to use to buy a handgun it's Bad; but if I use my own money and gift it to them it's Good? it seems like it's a splitting of hairs as to when money changes hands (and from whose hands it comes from.) To me, 'straw purchasing' as illegal is intent to stop the "he man... I need a gun. go buy one for me" crowd/bad-people, not the "Joe! I'm at CTYM** guns! they got in ONE of that pistol you wanted!" (and Joe can't physically get to the store in a reasonable amount of time for whatever reason.) * note: yes I know I can only "buy" 1 handgun every 30 days in this state (NJ). technically that's not true... i can buy (physically pay for) as many as I want at one time... I just can't have TRANSFERED to my possession mor than 1 handgun every 30 days without trying to get the exemption put through. so I could buy 12 handguns on Jan 1st, but wouldn't physically take possession of the 12th one until December, without the exemption processed. ** note: please tell me someone got that reference. |
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#13 |
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Member
Join Date: April 6, 2012
Posts: 8
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Purchasing and later reselling a gun, as it may or may not relate to a so called "straw purchase", has to do with the original intent and context of the purchase and possible "gifting" or reselling of it. If by chance the gun you sell to whomever was ever used for some nefarious purpose the transfer of the gun would be "investigated" taking into account what the factors were that went into the purchase and its subsequent sale or transfer and whether it meets the "straw purchase" definition. Of course what I'm saying here is in the context of dealing with people on all sides who possess some common sense which all too often is sadly lacking.
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#14 | |
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Member
Join Date: March 3, 2011
Posts: 1,796
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If you buy a gun FOR somebody with the intent to accept cash for it right afterwards, you're performing a straw purchase. |
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#15 | |
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Member
Join Date: April 26, 2004
Location: Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia
Posts: 2,908
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EFI, LLC - 07 FFL / C2 SOT in Inwood, WV - Custom Firearms & Gunsmithing Tank Vest - Molle Vest for Your Motorcycle Gas Tank |
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#16 |
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Member
Join Date: June 18, 2011
Location: Tidewater
Posts: 4,127
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There are two questions here: The expressed question, "Is it a straw purchase?" is easy to answer, and it has been answered. The second, unexpressed question is a little more gray: "Is it ethical/responsible?"
That's a question we toss about in many ways on THR, and it always seems to end the same way, with guys on the "keep it ethical/responsible" side being called wimps by guys on the "if it's not technically illegal then I'm doing it" side, and guys on the IINTITIDI side being called out as less-than-respectful by those on the KIER side. Nobody wins.
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"Please allow me to trade freedom for the appearance of security" is the surrender plea of the defeated. |
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#17 | |
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Member
Join Date: September 1, 2010
Location: St. Louis, MO
Posts: 97
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Quote:
Yes, this is a straw purchase, albeit with good intentions. You should purchase 1 of the firearms as a gift, but I don't know the proper way to do that. I suppose you'd have to get the FFL to hold it while your friend sends him a copy of his ID and use that to fill out the paperwork. Assuming your buddy passes the background check and pays for the firearm, you could then take possession of it on his behalf to transport it to him. Though, given today's market, I haven't seen a single dealer willing to hold anything without payment in hand which means you'd have to pay for your friends gun, which would be a grey area between a straw purchase and a gift, legally. In reality, you could decide to buy two yourself and then realize you don't need two and sell one of them. Doing this repeatedly will constitute a business. Doing this infrequently will probably not land you in any trouble because I don't see the authorities going after everyone selling marked up ARs and ammo on gunbroker and gunsamerica, so I doubt they'll come looking for you. Also, there is no "gun registry" and the only evidence of intent is your testimony in the gunbroker listing, etc. So yes, this is a straw purchase and illegal, but I highly doubt anyone doing this for a friend who is eligible to purchase the firearm, but happens to not be in the right place, will get caught unless they start blabbing about it. |
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#18 |
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Member
Join Date: September 21, 2010
Posts: 233
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Whether it is or isn't a straw purchase, I have no moral objections to the scenario posted by the OP.
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#19 |
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Member
Join Date: April 2, 2009
Location: Southern Illinois
Posts: 693
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As others have mentioned, when determining whether a transaction is a "straw purchase" it makes no difference whether the gun is being purchased for a prohibited person.
But, from a practical point of view, the odds of you being prosecuted for a "straw purchase" go up dramatically if the person you turn around and sell the gun to is a prohibited person. There are two reasons for this: (1) if the transferee is not a prohibited person than it is a "no harm, no foul" situation where its not worth anyone's time to prosecute, and (2) it makes it extremely difficult to prove intent when there was no barrier to the transferee simply buying the weapon on his own from the dealer. Not a straw purchase: You go into a gun store and see a great deal on a shotgun that you know your friend has been saying he really wants. You buy it, hoping to immediately sell it to your friend. Straw purchase: You mention to your friend that you saw a great deal in a gun shop the day before on shotguns and you plan to go there again today to buy one. You ask him if he wants you to buy one for him too. He says yes and gives you money to buy one for him. You go to the store later that day and buy the shotguns. |
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#20 | |
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Member
Join Date: September 21, 2007
Location: Colorafornia
Posts: 8,461
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Emphasis added...
Quote:
A straw purchase is ONLY defined as a transaction where the purchaser lies when answering question 11a on the 4473 form: http://www.atf.gov/forms/download/atf-f-4473-1.pdf
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The Second Amendment of our Bill of Rights is my concealed weapons permit, period! Ted Nugent |
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#21 |
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Member
Join Date: November 21, 2007
Posts: 25
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I know I'm going to catch it from some here but after reading through all of this I'm not buying it. Too many vagaries of intention and too many ways to fall afoul of the law or skirt it for reasons benign or malicious. Call me what you like but I think this is one area I can support the antis on. Background check and recorded transfer for all sales and transfers. "Assault weapon" ban. No. Magazine restrictions. No. Registration. No. Improving databases of prohibited individuals, NICS checks on all sales & transfers, putting serious teeth into prosecution of crimes. Yes. Sorry if it's an inconvenience for someone who just wants to pick up a firearm for their buddy because they just happen to be at the dealer and could pick it up for him. If he wants it that bad he can get his ass down there with cash & ID to purchase it himself. If he's far away or out of state that's not a problem either in this day and age. Call up the dealer, put a deposit down on CC and start the sale then FFL>FFL the weapon to him.
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#22 |
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Member
Join Date: September 21, 2007
Location: Colorafornia
Posts: 8,461
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The only reason you should catch any flak is because you are trying to drift the discussion away from the original topic and onto gun control ideology.
I would point out that the universal background checks that you advocate would not prevent someone from buying two guns from a dealer, one with his own money and one with his buddy's money, only to turn around and hand one of those guns to the buddy. You can't regulate that action away, it will occur regardless of what new law is written. Criminal straw purchases cannot be prevented by writing laws. Few can be caught at the point of purchase by an observant dealer, many cannot. They take place multiple times a day, all across this nation, every day and they are already illegal and almost entirely undetectable. Making them double-nasty illegal with spit on top... won't affect this.
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The Second Amendment of our Bill of Rights is my concealed weapons permit, period! Ted Nugent |
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#23 | |||
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Moderator
Join Date: April 29, 2006
Location: California - San Francisco Bay Area
Posts: 5,667
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Quote:
Quote:
The actual offense is violation of 18 USC 922(a)(6), making a false statement on the 4473 (specifically about who is the actual buyer), and has nothing to do with the ultimate recipient being a prohibited person. See the ATF publication Federal Firearms Regulation Reference Guide, 2005, at page 165 (emphasis added): So, if --
Some more examples --
Whether or not a transaction is an unlawful straw purpose will often be a question of intent. But prosecutors in various situations can convince juries of intent, often from circumstantial evidence. A slip of the tongue, posting something on the Internet, tracks left by money transfers have all, in one way or another, and in various contexts, helped convince a jury of intent.
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"Though boys throw stones at frogs in sport, the frogs do not die in sport, but in earnest." Bion (Greek poet, ca. 100 BCE) |
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#24 | |
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Member
Join Date: June 23, 2006
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 418
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Quote:
We don't need new laws on this. Enforce the existing ones! So back to the thread, I guess I should modify my earlier post to: "Your buddy should buy two with his own money without ever having talked to you about what he found or asking you if you were interested, test shoot both, pick out the one he likes, and then see if you or anyone else wants to buy the other. Completely legal. Jim
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An unjust law is itself a species of violence. Arrest for its breach is more so. -Gandhi |
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#25 |
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Member
Join Date: February 4, 2008
Posts: 107
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Perhaps if, after buying both of these guns, the buyer was to shoot both of them. The buyer would have purchased both guns for the intent of using both of them. Then at some point later, when one of them was sold, it would be a used gun.
That sounds like it walks the line very close, but doesn't seem like a purchase with an immediate transfer to someone else. |
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