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Posted: 6/26/2012 10:51:45 AM
THE IMAGE ABOVE IS A PAID ADVERTISEMENT |
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Posted: 6/26/2012 10:56:34 AM
[Last Edit: 6/26/2012 11:09:31 AM by HardShell]
I've never read or heard of a constructive intent prosecution re: SBRs, but that doesn't mean it hasn't happened... and it certainly doesn't mean it can't.
Stripped lowers are cheap, lawyers aren't (even when you're married to one Personally, I keep an extra pistol lower on hand for every extra SBR upper I have, and that is where those uppers reside when not on one of my registered SBRs. Cheap insurance IMHO, but YMMV. ETA: I should probably add that I frequently have extra non-NFA/non-pistol lowers lying around as well without an upper, which may be why I view this so cautiously... that, and I just tend to be cautious in general. |
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Posted: 6/26/2012 12:12:10 PM
Sure, you can all the uppers you want. Just make sure you don't have any regular lowers around looking for an upper. |
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Posted: 6/27/2012 12:50:07 PM
So then would each upper be taxed?
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Posted: 6/27/2012 12:56:17 PM
Originally Posted By skt4271:
So then would each upper be taxed? The lower is the firearm. EVERYTHING else are just parts. You can't register extra uppers or bbls, just as you can't register stock assemblies, pistol grips, magazines, disconnectors, or optics. You register the FIREARM as a Title II weapon, not the trigger springs. Make sense? It's the long way of saying "no" |
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