We're exempt from the banned list if we buy it ourselves after getting it okayed for active duty use (not going to happen) like LEOs can do.
We're exempt from the banned list if we buy it ourselves after getting it okayed for active duty use (not going to happen) like LEOs can do.
Oh really?.... Tell me more. Like dept letterhead? What level of authority? If I were purchasing "foreign weapons" to do a foreign weapons familiarization class this would constitute using personal weapons for govt business.
MD SB 281 states that military members are exempted from the law. Do they mean the whole law or just portions of it? Who really knows the answer?
Sorry dude, if it is a banned item, you cannot personally buy it after October 1.
You can still inherit a grandfathered banned firearm, however.
So I understand that military and vets are exempt from the training, but what about the exemption from fingerprinting? From what I have read, it just says something like "member of the Armed Forces or National Guard" So would that mean a reservist would be exempt from fingerprinting too since he/she is still a member of the Armed Forces?
Anyone in the military has been fingerprinted, so I don't see a need (aside from harassment and to make money) for them to do it again.
It does not matter how many times you've been fingerprinted before or for what purposes -- it will have to be done again for the handgun qualification license. Most likely, it will be required that the application be submitted within a short time after the fingerprints are taken -- perhaps as little as five days.
Why?
If you are already in the national database why do they need your prints again?
Except for harassment. . .
. . . and $$.
Why? If you are already in the national database why do they need your prints again? Except for harassment and $$.
Anyone in the military has been fingerprinted, so I don't see a need (aside from harassment and to make money) for them to do it again.
So I understand that military and vets are exempt from the training, but what about the exemption from fingerprinting? From what I have read, it just says something like "member of the Armed Forces or National Guard" So would that mean a reservist would be exempt from fingerprinting too since he/she is still a member of the Armed Forces?
All veterans are potential terrorists.
It wasn't me who said it.
NOPE. IT WAS JANET NAPOLITANO, who is the SECRETARY OF HOMELAND SECURITY.
She didn't just "say" it either. SHE PUT IT INTO AN OFFICIALLY RELEASED REPORT FROM HER DEPARTMENT.
According to her, veterans are the lowest of the low, and CAN NOT BE TRUSTED.