Record of purchase. Nothing more. It does not mean that you own or possess a handgun. It only means that once upon a time you purchased it.
Someone knows...It’s sort of like a receipt for a meal at McDonald’s. You purchased it at some time what you did with it thereafter is not known or knowable.
OK, so as long as it has a serial number and isn't reported stolen it's GTG? If it's in your possession?No, because if you sell the gun, the record of your purchase of the gun does not disappear. Ugly sally guns that are legally passed around could be on a dozen peoples names in MD.
You could sell it out of state through the legal FFL process into a state that does not require any documentation and sold still again within that state with no documentation. Who knows where that gun is now?
Sometimes you don't even need a serial number, if the gun is old enough. (That really annoys the bureaucrats, BTW. Tough.)OK, so as long as it has a serial number and isn't reported stolen it's GTG? If it's in your possession?
Transferred to you, not registered. And the firearms that are listed as transferred to you will ALWAYS show transferred to you, even if you transfer them to someone else.What is there then? Is it just registered or not?
No SN required to transfer a firearm in Maryland. If there is no SN (Pre-1968 firearms) they put NSN in the Sn field.OK, so as long as it has a serial number and isn't reported stolen it's GTG? If it's in your possession?
Corrected for actual record.Record ofpurchasetransfer. Nothing more. It does not mean that you own or possess a handgun. It only means that once upon a time you purchased it.
Yeah, insufficient infringement.It still feels like something in the process is missing.