Anything after 1985 needs to be on the handgun roster to be sold in Maryland. Anything manufactured 1984 and before is not required to be on the handgun roster.
The 1000 foot law is current County law and and they are not adding to it.
https://library.municode.com/md/prince_george's_county/codes/code_of_ordinances?nodeId=PTIITI17PULOLAPRGECOMA_SUBTITLE_14MOCO_DIV6WE_S14-140LOWEPREX
Since he is military and getting stationed here, Maryland won't see any of his money in taxes other than sales tax. As for Housing, that depends on where he picks and what his BAH/BAQ is.
Designated Collector has a specific meaning, it means you don't have to deal with the one gun every 30 days crap.
That is Bonafide Collector, for which the Designated Collector DOES NOT make per actual State Statute. Absolutely no where in State Statute does the Designated Collector, confer...
Nothing in state statute makes the claim that the designated collector letter confers collector status to the holder. It's only purpose is to permit the holder to bypass the one gun in 30 days rule.
The only people trying to make more than it actually is, are those that want to use it to show...
Yeah, um...MSP has said the the letter does not convey that.
It's only purpose is to be able to purchase more than one regulated firearm in a 30 day period.
I don't think it will do much at first, especially in light of fact that they added mens rea to the requirement...
"A FIREARM INDUSTRY MEMBER MAY NOT KNOWINGLY CREAT, MAINTAIN, OR CONTRIBUTE TO HARM TO THE PUBLIC THROUGH THE SALE, MANUFACTURE, DISTRIBUTION, IMPORTATION, OR MARKETING OF A...
The description is a short version, not the actual law. It is the one thing that does not change with any/all of the amendments that may get applied to a bill.
It makes it real easy to understand what the original intent of the bill is/was.
Reading the actual bill language (statute changes)...
If MSP follows how they treat the W&C permit after having been slapped by the Maryland Court of Special Appeals, the permit is valid until either a replacement is received, or the denial process is played out and the denial upheld.
I see no reason why they would treat the HQL different from the...
If you renew before your permit expires, 9 days, 9 weeks, whatever, the new permit still expires on your birthday, three years after your current permit expires. So no, you don't get any extra days of coverage.