Hm. I've been seeing everyone across MDS say AR-9/AR-10 lowers are cash and carry, I'm a little confused now.
They are cash and carry
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Hm. I've been seeing everyone across MDS say AR-9/AR-10 lowers are cash and carry, I'm a little confused now.
This is the advisory that talks about the 77R process for receivers of banned weapons.
This MDSP advisory says its ok to built a lower purchased prior to Oct 1, 2013 into an assault long gun.
Now, if you can build a lower purchased prior to Oct 2013 into an assault long gun, putting an upper on a pre-Oct-2013 lower seems to me to be the same thing.
Wrong thread
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Hm. I've been seeing everyone across MDS say AR-9/AR-10 lowers are cash and carry, I'm a little confused now.
Did you see a price on them?
A completed lower is either a rifle, or a pistol, or a SBR, depending on barrel length and overall length and whether, in the case of a sbr, it has a stock
FWIW, I've bought a half dozen or so, from 3 different places, and every one I bought as a "complete lower", with a stock or a pistol brace, were sold as "Other".
I paid $115 each for two Spikes lowers from 2A back in February. Had to use my Designated Collector Status to be able to buy them both at the same time.
I was under the impression that 556 receivers were 77r (regulated) essentially because "frame or receiver" of a regulated firearm was also a regulated firearm (see section 5-101, definition of regulated firearm and definition of firearm which includes the frame or receiver). So its not because they can be "made into pistols," its because they are the frame or receiver an enumerated firearm on the list.
308 lowers are being treated cash and carry because they are not the lower of any enumerated firearm.
Enumerated firearms on the list are not "regulated" firearms.
They used to be. Now, they are BANNED firearms.
There are no "regulated" long guns since 2013.
That is technically incorrect under section 5-101(r) of the public safety article. Two points. Under that section: 1. Handguns are regulated firearms. 2. And the list of long guns is still in the statute. Now that list of long guns is also banned but they are still all defined by law as “regulated”. It still matters. All those long guns were grandfathered if you possessed them prior to 10/1/13. They are all Still regulated Firearms
You can buy two at once without the DC letter but then you’d have to wait 60 days before your next regulated purchase.
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I was under the impression that 556 receivers were 77r (regulated) essentially because "frame or receiver" of a regulated firearm
And...apply for and get your DC letter well before the 60 days are up
That is technically incorrect under section 5-101(r) of the public safety article. Two points. Under that section: 1. Handguns are regulated firearms. 2. And the list of long guns is still in the statute. Now that list of long guns is also banned but they are still all defined by law as “regulated”. It still matters. All those long guns were grandfathered if you possessed them prior to 10/1/13. They are all Still regulated Firearms
So what happens if I bring a certified upper receiver that is not on the list, i.e.:
5.56 HBAR
7.62x39
5.45x39
300 Blackout?
is that proof that the rifle will be "not regulated"
Well, grandfathered ones are still regulated.
But there are no longer any regulated long guns that can be sold or transferred in the MD.
That was what I was trying to say.