Maybe some of you FFL holders or shop owners can answer this one.

Moderator: carlson1
They don't know.Smokewagon wrote:The poll posted by apowell got me to wonderin'. I have traded and purchased used firearms in gun shops. Just the usual paper work. But how does the shop know if the guns I am buying that were traded in are not stolen? Or that the one I am trading isn't stolen? I've never seen them do anything different than if I'm buying a brand new firearm.
Maybe some of you FFL holders or shop owners can answer this one.
The officer would take care of that for you. It would go in the property room and the person reporting it stolen would be contacted. You unfortunately would be out the gun and related money spent on it.what the proper way to return that merchandise would be
Texas does not have a "possession of stolen property" charge.Smokewagon wrote:I wouldn't be concerned about the money at all. It's the possible trip to jail for having the stolen merchandise in my possession.
Does the officer have the right to "take the firearm and run a check on it" ?Smokewagon wrote:So you buy that got to have used firearm, decide to make it your carry gun, and run a little over the speed limit. You show the officer after your pulled over, your CHL , he decides to take the firearm and run a check on it. I don't like it but I have heard of this happening.
..........Man do you have a problem!
This is a scary thought.
Basically he has a right to disarm a CHL holder if he believes it will be safer for him to do so. Once he takes temporary possesion there is no reason he can't run any checks on it as long as he gives back any legally owned property.BadCo45ACP wrote:Does the officer have the right to "take the firearm and run a check on it" ?Smokewagon wrote:So you buy that got to have used firearm, decide to make it your carry gun, and run a little over the speed limit. You show the officer after your pulled over, your CHL , he decides to take the firearm and run a check on it. I don't like it but I have heard of this happening.
..........Man do you have a problem!
This is a scary thought.
txinvestigator wrote:Texas does not have a "possession of stolen property" charge.
You can be charged with theft if you appropriate property knowing it was stolen.
The receiver is the gun. Everything else is just "parts", and serial numbers on any other part don't count count for anything except collector value.ForbidInjustice wrote:[For some reason, the ported barrel in the Springfield XD-9 in question has a different serial number than the frame. I don't believe that's common coming from the manufacturer, but maybe the barrel was replaced?]