Skip to main content
Help Center Community Shop

Another 4473 Paper Trail Question

Comments

5 comments

  • pickenup
    I'm not sure I understand your question.

    There would be a lot of happy, gun owning, family members.
    Since he is deceased, the "paper trail" ends on those firearms.

    The auction house would do a 4473, and background check, on the buyers of those firearms.
    0
  • Permanently deleted user
    quote:Originally posted by pickenup
    I'm not sure I understand your question.

    There would be a lot of happy, gun owning, family members.
    Since he is deceased, the "paper trail" ends on those firearms.

    The auction house would do a 4473, and background check, on the buyers of those firearms.


    I guess what I am getting at is are the firearms inherited from the deceased man now considered paperless?
    0
  • Permanently deleted user
    quote:Originally posted by PBJloaf
    quote:Originally posted by pickenup
    I'm not sure I understand your question.

    There would be a lot of happy, gun owning, family members.
    Since he is deceased, the "paper trail" ends on those firearms.

    The auction house would do a 4473, and background check, on the buyers of those firearms.


    I guess what I am getting at is are the firearms inherited from the deceased man now considered paperless?

    Yes, but why the concern if YOU are not going to own them?

    Every gun I had bought from a FFL can be considered "paperless". As long as nobody can find them, and I have claimed them "sold", there is NO paper trail.
    0
  • Permanently deleted user
    quote:Originally posted by freemind
    quote:Originally posted by PBJloaf
    quote:Originally posted by pickenup
    I'm not sure I understand your question.

    There would be a lot of happy, gun owning, family members.
    Since he is deceased, the "paper trail" ends on those firearms.

    The auction house would do a 4473, and background check, on the buyers of those firearms.


    I guess what I am getting at is are the firearms inherited from the deceased man now considered paperless?

    Yes, but why the concern if YOU are not going to own them?

    Every gun I had bought from a FFL can be considered "paperless". As long as nobody can find them, and I have claimed them "sold", there is NO paper trail.


    Oh, just curious, I guess[;)]
    0
  • 11b6r
    With the exception of states that require a purchase permit, when an estate is sold by the auctioneer, the auctioneer is acting as an agent of the deceased (or the family)- so it is the same as a private sale by an unlicensed individual. If a firearm is CONSIGNED to an auctioneer to sell, he needs a FFL, 4473's etc- but selling at the estate, no, no ffl- he is the agent of the private seller. No paper. Just my personal (limited) experience- firearms at auction generally sell for more than they should. Watched a REALLY crappy SMLE go for $450 at one.
    0

Please sign in to leave a comment.

Recent Activity

Didn’t find what you’re looking for?