I think you can ship directly to him if he is an indiana resident and you are shipping to his indiana address.I've got a guy who wants to buy this old (1957) model 62 Winchester receiver. Can I ship this directly to him? Very confusing when reading about this.
I've always wondered if intrastate shipping was allowed since it would be no different than meeting a person and doing the same thing.I think you can ship directly to him if he is an indiana resident and you are shipping to his indiana address.
If it's out of state I think it would have to ship to an FFL, since the receiver is considered to be the gun. And of course you'd have to make sure the FFL accepts shipments from an individual.I don't think the guy is in Indiana. He hasn't emailed me back with his state of residence. I don't think I'm going to do this because this could be a felony on ME.
So if intrastate you can ship a firearm directly to another?If it's out of state I think it would have to ship to an FFL, since the receiver is considered to be the gun. And of course you'd have to make sure the FFL accepts shipments from an individual.
Yes. As someone mentioned earlier, it's no different than a face-to-face deal in that situation.So if intrastate you can ship a firearm directly to another?
Example I buy a gun from a northern INGO member he can ship that directly to me?
State lines in the fact pattern=FFLSo if intrastate you can ship a firearm directly to another?
Example I buy a gun from a northern INGO member he can ship that directly to me?
I've had old non serialized rifles, not sure what the rule isIf that is the serialized part, treat it the same as an entire rifle.
Lots of discussion on shipping rifles here:
Shipping a long gun
Who in the Indianapolis area has the best price on shipping out a long gun? I do know that I can legally ship it to a FFL holder myself after talking to a postmaster yesterday, just don't know if I want the hassle of packaging it up and all that. Any suggestions??www.indianagunowners.com
I've had old non serialized rifles, not sure what the rule.If that is the serialized part, treat it the same as an entire rifle.
Lots of discussion on shipping rifles here:
Shipping a long gun
Who in the Indianapolis area has the best price on shipping out a long gun? I do know that I can legally ship it to a FFL holder myself after talking to a postmaster yesterday, just don't know if I want the hassle of packaging it up and all that. Any suggestions??www.indianagunowners.com
I believe those are considered C&R ( curios and relics).I've had old non serialized rifles, not sure what the rule is
Good idea. Definitely illegal to ship modern firearm across state lines to a non-ffl.I don't think the guy is in Indiana. He hasn't emailed me back with his state of residence. I don't think I'm going to do this because this could be a felony on ME.
Not necessarily. What year did they start mandating all guns get serial numbers?I believe those are considered C&R ( curios and relics).
1968Not necessarily. What year did they start mandating all guns get serial numbers?
So yeah, C&R is automatic at fifty years old.1968
Gun serial number - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
You mean all those guns I've missed out on are now in fact fair game?!?!?!Yes. As someone mentioned earlier, it's no different than a face-to-face deal in that situation.
Can I mail a c&r to aunt and uncle Jim out of state? Just curious. (So was Jim.)So yeah, C&R is automatic at fifty years old.