And your legal reference for that statement (let's use a Texas penal code since that's the base of this forum).mamabearCali wrote:jmra wrote:Fixed it for you. I assume you wouldn't someone arbitrarily deciding you shouldn't be allowed near firearms without due process.mamabearCali wrote:This may all be true, but a 17 year old who has a bad temper (swinging on a bus driver) a drug problem (pot and drank), and a tendency towards crime (burglary tools found and jewlery on him in school) and has been convicted of crimes barring him from possessing a firearm has no business being near a pellet gun. A rubber band gun or water pistols was all he was mature enough for.
A 17 year old is not supposed to have firearms without adult supervison period.
ETA: found it for you.
TX Penal Code 46.06
(a) A person commits an offense if the person:
(2) intentionally or knowingly sells, rents, leases, or gives or offers to sell, rent, lease, or give to any child younger than 18 years any firearm, club, or illegal knife;
(c) It is an affirmative defense to prosecution under Subsection (a)(2) that the transfer was to a minor whose parent or the person having legal custody of the minor had given written permission for the sale or, if the transfer was other than a sale, the parent or person having legal custody had given effective consent.
So a minor (say a 17 year old) can in fact accept the sale of (possess) a firearm with the parents written consent. Written permission is not even required if it is a loan or a gift. All that is required then is effective consent. There is no possible way to stretch "written consent" or "effective consent" into "adult supervision".