thegoose
gun loving fanatic
Will nfa trusts and the purchase of nfa weapons be banned after October?
how about a factory ar sbr
Will nfa trusts and the purchase of nfa weapons be banned after October?
Only if it's under 30" OAL, or has two evil features. The truth is, the vast majority of "serious" AR-15 SBRs will remain legal to manufacture. Only the stupid ones with < 10.5" barrels might run afoul of the ban.NFA laws weren't touched, but the question is how apparent conflicts will be interpreted. Something like a machine gun or suppressor shouldn't be any different, but an SBR AR might be iffy.
Only if it's under 30" OAL, or has two evil features. The truth is, the vast majority of "serious" AR-15 SBRs will remain legal to manufacture. Only the stupid ones with < 10.5" barrels might run afoul of the ban.
SEMIAUTOMATIC CENTERFIRE RIFLE THAT HAS AN OVERALL LENGTH OF LESS THAN 29 INCHES
From SB 281
how about a factory ar sbr
Remember, we Marylanders are blessed with 2 Constitutions, the U.S. and the Maryland one which is subject to wild interpretation. We have to jump through 2 hoops to exercise our 2A rights, and the second hoop keeps getting smaller! If you don't like our gun laws, just wait, they are sure to change.
A SBR is not a rifle. It is a SBR. NFA stuff is viewed differently.
The problem is the definition of an SBR in MD state code:A SBR is not a rifle. It is a SBR. NFA stuff is viewed differently.
The fundamental problem here is that the very definition of "SBR" states that it's a rifle. That gives the AG some wiggle room to apply the copycat tests on them. Do I think that's probably a misapplication of the law? Yes. But I need people to understand that some of these worries are not baseless.(f) Short-barreled rifle.- "Short-barreled rifle" means:
(1) a rifle that has one or more barrels less than 16 inches long; or
(2) a weapon that has an overall length of less than 26 inches and that was made from a rifle, whether by alteration, modification, or otherwise.