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#1
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Your right about the suppressor you can attach it to anything you want. The $200 goes to the feds....didn't really know where that went so thanks for clearing that up. I asked the LGS today about it.
the wait I can not speak of, a guy on the force got one about two years ago and took him a long time BUT all the crazy crap was happening then too so that might of had something to do with it. from what my LGS says if you apply the SD DCI gets the application first for approval. Not sure how that works on the legal side. they said it was a mental check or something. I will have to ask next time I talk to a guy at the Capital at DCI. Not sure if that is correct at all. So I think I got this right: You pay the $200 tax "stamp" fill out the form or forms if/when approved you are allowed to buy a suppressor of whatever caliber declared. Not that bad really.....but still the process could be a lot easier like buying a gun. Not sure why this is such a big deal really. Quote:
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#3
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The first hurdle is called the CLEO sign off. You take you completed paperwork to a Chief Law Enforcement Officer and he signs that he knows of no lawful reason Suppressors can't be owned in your area. Most use a Sheriff but not all Sheriffs will sign. Some use Police Chiefs and some use Attourneys General but it is archaic because the CLEO could arbitrarily decide he does not sign NFA forms or only some types of NFA forms. If they are Anti 2A then they can deny a lawful applicant a lawful item for a lawful purpose with no recourse other than to try and find another CLEO or go the NFA Trust route which needs a whole seperate thread. Back in the 1920's the Feds didn't know if a person could legally own a machine gun. So they asked for the CLEO to sign that the person was t a criminal and MGs were lawful in that jurisdiction. Now the Fed does the background check and knowing if they are legal is just a click of the mouse. However they still hold the CLEO sign off for some unknown reason. Imagine having to go to a CLEO and ask for permission to buy any gun and have him say "Nope, not in my county!" Just because he can.
Once you have a CLEO sign off you get pictures and finger prints and send the package along with $200 money order to NFA branch. A couple years ago things were 12 months out. When I did my SBR last year it was down to 4 months. Time depend on amount of applicants and number of processors. When you get the approved and stamped paperwork back you can either proceed with the build or purchase of the suppressor, SBR, or MG. The only difference may be that if you go through a dealer you purchase the suppressor first but the LGS keeps posessionof it till the approved paperwork is returned. Once that happens it is yours to take home. I should note that this is how it works in Florida but the federal end should be the same for all states. However if like ![]()
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CBOB0746 NRA Life Member Florida CWL Since 1992 |
#4
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I would advise going the trust route for many reasons.
A few are that the Trust actually owns it and you can assign any number of trustees who can possess it. If only in your name it can only be in your possession or under your control at all times. The trust also allows you to assign a relative as the trustee should you pass which means they can immediately take possession of if and deal with it in a way they see fit. If only in your name it gets kinda tricky having things done right when the registered owner passes away. Lastly the trust does away with need for fingerprints and pics and signatures from sheriffs and all that. I put all my guns in my trust with my now 9yr old son as the inheritor and my wife as guardian till he's of age to own them himself. Prevents her from selling all 'his' guns for the $200 I told her I paid for them. ![]() I had this gun made specifically with the idea of handing it down to him. That's why I went with a metal frame gun and had to have it threaded. Ruger doesn't make a gun with a factory threaded barrel on a metal frame. The plastic ones don't strike me as lifetime guns. ![]() |
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