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Jenoch

(7,720 posts)
10. As I recall, the purchaser bought the gun in Virginia
Mon Jun 16, 2014, 07:19 PM
Jun 2014

and then traveled to Pennsylvania to transfer it to his uncle at a gun store to do a background check on the uncle. His uncle was not comfortable in choosing/buying a gun so he asked his nephew, a former LEO to buy one for him. The purchaser was trying to do the right thing, but apparently did not know the laws about interstate transfers. I really do not see a problem with what he did. Had he not gone to the gunshop and just gave it to his uncle, that would have been highly illegal.

So Kennedy did the right thing for once, and Scalia and the other criminals on court randys1 Jun 2014 #1
Good for Kennedy. Erich Bloodaxe BSN Jun 2014 #2
I am assuming that is the breakdown, the article didnt say and I didnt pursue randys1 Jun 2014 #3
Not sure how you effectively enforce this. blueridge3210 Jun 2014 #4
Nobody will know unless there is an incident. Starboard Tack Jun 2014 #5
Didn't really answer the question blueridge3210 Jun 2014 #7
The way I see it, no firearms laws are really enforceable, if someone wants to circumnavigate them. Starboard Tack Jun 2014 #8
Strange, a bunch of people blueridge3210 Jun 2014 #9
There's a difference between enforceable and getting caught. Starboard Tack Jun 2014 #11
That makes no sense at all. blueridge3210 Jun 2014 #12
Speeding is enforceable. It happens in public. Starboard Tack Jun 2014 #13
If people are arrested, prosecuted blueridge3210 Jun 2014 #14
Sure, on a very minimal level Starboard Tack Jun 2014 #18
Nice tangent. blueridge3210 Jun 2014 #19
As I recall, the purchaser bought the gun in Virginia Jenoch Jun 2014 #10
The man being prosecuted in this case for a straw purchase Jenoch Jun 2014 #6
The author gets it wrong. HALO141 Jun 2014 #15
I believe the buyer and the uncle lived in different states. Jenoch Jun 2014 #23
It would be but gejohnston Jun 2014 #24
I still don't think he did anything wrong. Jenoch Jun 2014 #25
I am not seeing how this is a "rare blow to gun purchases". ManiacJoe Jun 2014 #16
A foolish dissent by Scalia. Packerowner740 Jun 2014 #17
Wouldn't this be considered a straw purchase too? HockeyMom Jun 2014 #20
No, it is a gift under the Gun Control Act gejohnston Jun 2014 #21
A "Rare Blow"? Really? DonP Jun 2014 #22
Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Gun Control & RKBA»Supreme Court deals rare ...»Reply #10