jfuller406
Member
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2023
- Messages
- 2
Hello THR,
I am new to this forum, but not new to firearms. I live in Montana and support stuardship RKBA issues as well as safe and responsible ownership.
I am also the executor of an estate (as a family member selected to be the representative, not an attorney, not court appointed) that stipulates a beautiful 1968 Marlin 30-30 lever action complete with gold trigger and cattle ring (picture included for fellow appreciators) be passed to a specific relative. Unfortunately the beneficiary does not meet criteria for gun possession (non-criminal). The beneficiary views the rifle as an important symbol from the deceased with great sentimental value, not to mention it's clearly what the deceased wanted. I have read a fair amount of the State and Fed black and white on this and it seems clear the wish stipulated in the will should not be carried-out in its current form. I saw a thread in THR about official ways to disable a firearm. I am here to crowdsource a better option than destroying a beautiful rifle to carry-out the last wishes of the deceased WITHOUT side-stepping any laws.
My question to the community, is there a way for the beneficiary to legally inherit the rifle without cutting the reciever in three places with a torch?
Thank you for your consideration.
I am new to this forum, but not new to firearms. I live in Montana and support stuardship RKBA issues as well as safe and responsible ownership.
I am also the executor of an estate (as a family member selected to be the representative, not an attorney, not court appointed) that stipulates a beautiful 1968 Marlin 30-30 lever action complete with gold trigger and cattle ring (picture included for fellow appreciators) be passed to a specific relative. Unfortunately the beneficiary does not meet criteria for gun possession (non-criminal). The beneficiary views the rifle as an important symbol from the deceased with great sentimental value, not to mention it's clearly what the deceased wanted. I have read a fair amount of the State and Fed black and white on this and it seems clear the wish stipulated in the will should not be carried-out in its current form. I saw a thread in THR about official ways to disable a firearm. I am here to crowdsource a better option than destroying a beautiful rifle to carry-out the last wishes of the deceased WITHOUT side-stepping any laws.
My question to the community, is there a way for the beneficiary to legally inherit the rifle without cutting the reciever in three places with a torch?
Thank you for your consideration.
