pjeski
Member
This is a good reason to have your trust drawn up by an attorney in your own state familiar with NFA trusts. My trusts are drawn up specifically to allow beneficiaries possession of the NFA items in the trust. A generic trust isn't likely to allow for that.Just one final clarification: although trusts are a creature of state law, under Kentucky law (and as far as I know every other state), beneficiaries don't have a present right of possession. In order for a person to be protected by a trust (and legally allowed to possess the trust's NFA firearms), they have to be listed as a trustee.
Aaron