? on selling a firearm in Pa

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  • platoonDaddy

    Ultimate Member
    Jun 30, 2011
    4,157
    SouthOfBalto
    Of course in MD a SKS with detachable magazine is regulated, and I doubt it is in Pa.

    What are the laws (FFL needed or face-to-face) about a MD resident selling a SKS to a Pa resident?
     

    Curmudgeon

    I H8 stinkbugz
    Sep 6, 2010
    333
    York, Pennsylvania
    FFL needed for this interstate firearms sale, the FFL can be in either state. Your SKS is not restricted here (unless it is full auto).

    Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 4
     

    platoonDaddy

    Ultimate Member
    Jun 30, 2011
    4,157
    SouthOfBalto
    Face to face can only be done between residents of the same state. That is federal law.

    Thanks, just located the following

    Sales between individuals

    For transactions that don't involve federal firearms licensees, such as private transactions, federal law is less strict when it comes to minimum age.

    In a private transaction, federal law prohibits the transfer or the sale of a handgun or ammunition, for use only in handguns, to individuals under 18 years of age. Although, there are certain exceptions in federal law, that if met, would allow an individual to transfer a handgun or ammunition, for use only in handguns, to someone under 18 years of age.

    There is no federal law concerning minimum age for the transfer or sale of a firearm that is not defined as a handgun, such as rifles, semiautomatic rifles, short-barreled rifles, shotguns, short-barreled shotgun, etc., for transactions that don't involve federal firearms licensees.[8]

    An individual who does not possess a federal firearms license may not sell a modern firearm to a resident of another state without first transferring the firearm to a dealer in the purchaser's state.[9] Firearms received by bequest or intestate succession are exempt from those sections of the law which forbid the transfer, sale, delivery or transportation of firearms into a state other than the transferor's state of residence.[9] Likewise, antique firearms are exempt from these sections of the law in most states. (Antique firearms are defined as those manufactured pre-1899 by US federal law, or modern replicas thereof that do not use cartridges. State law definitions on antique firearms vary considerably from state to state.)

    http://mdshooters.com/newreply.php?do=newreply&p=2647590
     

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