Yea I know a new one you can't get but a use one is different . I seen two for sale in Calif one in a gun shop in Livermore and another I am serious looking at from my fflYes, it doesn't pass muster unless you are law enforcement. Stupid Kalifornia compliance stuff.
That exactly what I didn’t know so that the rule thanks so much for clarifying this to me makes sense now I understand. The one in the store I seen was really an old one maybe that’s considered an antique . But thanks again for clearing this up for me have a great daySo the roster compliance issue is only for store sales. If its a Private Party sale that is owned in CA, then you can buy almost any gun roster or not.
Also, PP sales are also not bound by the 1 in 30 scheme (although that is now moot with the latest 9th circuit ruling). Last year I got 3 pistols in one transfer...WOOHOO!
That exactly what I didn't know so that the rule thanks so much for clarifying this to me makes sense now I understand. The one in the store I seen was really an old one maybe that's considered an antique . But thanks again for clearing this up for me have a great day
Sorry you loss you gun maybe one day you will found one in a transfer good luck my friendA little story about my Walther PPKS. I purchased it new, early in my law enforcement career. After retirement, I went through an ugly divorce, and my ex wanted my entire gun collection, as a way to hurt me. She really wanted the Colt Python, but I had a sales receipt showing I purchased it a week before my marriage, so she could not touch it.
My Walther was the only gun she could demand, but it had lots of sentimental value since I wore it in an ankle holster for 20 years. Well, yup, she got it, but I never released the magazines, so it was unshootable for her, since extra mags were hard to find. A year later, she was hurting for money, so I offered her $1000 for my gun back, but she sold it to some gangster in Texas for $100. This ripped me to the core. I wanted to buy a replacement, but being retired, I am no longer able to purchase a new one.
You can buy them through private party, shouldn't be hard to get an LEO to buy one and sell it to you at $3k markup...LEOs are exempt from the handgun roster.Yea I know a new one you can't get but a use one is different . I seen two for sale in Calif one in a gun shop in Livermore and another I am serious looking at from my ffl
That there is criminal in itself. I just spoke to my wife today, she wants to get divorced, and I don't really care one way or the other, but she's worried that if she's living overseas and something happens legally to my property, it could present some logistical problems. She plans to quit-claim the property to me, and then we'll do a "friendly" divorce. We both agree, we don't want to be mad at each other, where your divorce sounds like Romancing the Stone...After retirement, I went through an ugly divorce, and my ex wanted my entire gun collection, as a way to hurt me.
My wife considers everything I owned before we were married to be mine. She even gave me her grand piano, which I have in storage at the moment.She really wanted the Colt Python, but I had a sales receipt showing I purchased it a week before my marriage, so she could not touch it.
That is a tough pill to swallow there...she deserves to have her knee caps broken!but she sold it to some gangster in Texas for $100. This ripped me to the core. I wanted to buy a replacement, but being retired, I am no longer able to purchase a new one.
Well, it gets worse in CA, because many of the LEO were buying handguns off the roster to sell privately. This is a loophole that leaves the residents paying astronomical prices on this weapons, which the majority of people use lawfully, to defend themselves. I have dreamed of owning one since the 70s, when my step-dad bought one...and for various reasons the sheriff in Ventura County told me they destroyed it...which I don't believe. That sheriff almost destroyed our family over this. Magically, nobody knows what happened to a stainless Colt 45 wtih all gold plated parts, a sawed off and choked at 20" shotgun we used to keep under the counter in our liquor store, a Smith & Wesson 38 special, and the PPK 380. The Sheriff says they destroyed all of them, despite the officer knowing they were not registered.You can't just stroll into a dealer and buy a new one because it’s not listed on the state’s handgun roster. But if someone already owns one in the state, they have the option to sell it to another resident through a private transfer. Sounds stupid right?