Hi all,
I do NOT have a CHL. I'm from Houston, flying to Virginia to visit a buddy and to purchase a gun from him. I've never purchased a gun this way before and I'm wondering what is the proper protocol?
I've called Continental Airlines and they said it was OK to check-in an unloaded, locked in hardcase firearm. All I have to do is declare it at the check-in counter.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Linh
purchase/transport question
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
ditto above. Let one of our FFLs get on the board Tues.

Carry 24-7 or guess right.
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The proper protocol is to have the seller send it to an FFL dealer in the buyer's state of residence.
That's not just protocol, it's the law. The situation as decribed is an illegal transfer.
Yes, I hold an FFL (although I'm not a dealer).
The $25-40 that it would cost the seller to send the pistol Next Day Air to the buyer's local FFL, is a lot cheaper than air fare to Virginia.
Couple of quick points: you can only buy a pistol from a resident or dealer in your home state. You can buy a long gun from a dealer (but not a non-dealer) in any state, so long as both states' laws allow the sale.
If you were buying a long gun from your buddy while visiting him in Virginia, you could go to a Virginia FFL and do the transfer there. But not for a handgun; current law limits you to processing interstate sales through an FFL dealer in your state of residence.
Kevin
That's not just protocol, it's the law. The situation as decribed is an illegal transfer.
Yes, I hold an FFL (although I'm not a dealer).
The $25-40 that it would cost the seller to send the pistol Next Day Air to the buyer's local FFL, is a lot cheaper than air fare to Virginia.
Couple of quick points: you can only buy a pistol from a resident or dealer in your home state. You can buy a long gun from a dealer (but not a non-dealer) in any state, so long as both states' laws allow the sale.
If you were buying a long gun from your buddy while visiting him in Virginia, you could go to a Virginia FFL and do the transfer there. But not for a handgun; current law limits you to processing interstate sales through an FFL dealer in your state of residence.
Kevin
Yes they are, but they have evolved over the years, and are continuing to evolve.1TallTXn wrote:Those rules are just plain stupid to me.
GCA '68 originally limited purchases of long guns to contiguous states, but that was changed (in 1986, I think). One of the reasons you can't buy a long gun in some states today, is that many states update their laws to match the federal law, then don't change back when the federal laws are relaxed. Thus, some states still limit purchases to contiguous states.
Currently an FFL-01 Dealer can sell a handgun to a resident of his state, or a long gun to a resident of any other state, if both states' laws allow it. He can sell guns at his licensed premises, or at a gunshow in his home state (but not in another state).
There is pending legislation that will change this, and allow dealers to sell handguns to residents of other states (so long as both states' laws allow it), and will also allow them to do business at out-of-state gunshows.
Kevin