Re: California AG to Feds - No Dangerous Guns for You
Posted: Thu Aug 01, 2013 9:19 am
Actually no. If you move to CA, you can take non-approved firearms with you, and keep them, or sell them when you get there to anyone you want. You just cannot buy a new one at retail. You cannot carry an unapproved firearm if you could get a CCW permit.cheezit wrote:yes but that list also limits imports in to the state, meaning they can buy them but cant have in caJALLEN wrote:The Approved Handgun Roster is a compilation of guns that can be sold at retail to ordinary citizens. Those guns have the required features and have been tested to meet CA requirements. LEOs can buy guns not on the list. Once a LEO buys a non-approved firearm, it can be sold to anyone. Only approved firearms can be listed on CCW permits, and only 3 can be listed at a time.
All she appears to be doing is restricting sale of non-approved guns to state LEO's, if that. Frankly I wish the manufacturers would ban sales to CA, but that is a different discussion.
I did this with a HK45. I lusted for an HK45 after fondling one at the Cabelas up the road a few years ago. I put out the word, to my LEO friends, that I was a buyer with ready money. Months and months later, a LEO needed some quick cash for a vet bill, and offered me an unfired HK45. Perfectly legal, went through DROS, ten days later, I had an HK45.
When we got an offer on the house about a year ago, I realized that it would be terrible to take this gun, now legal in CA, out, so I offered it up on CalGuns, which touched off a foodfight for dibs on it. I can buy another one here, no problem (except for ammo!). Of course, then that offer fell through and I was HK45-less. Ah, well.
A person who plays his cards right, faced with a move to CA, could conceivably cover some or all of the costs of moving by some well thought out acquisitions, to be resold once there, almost always for a premium, depending on how popular. This is handguns only. Also ten round magazines are the max, no taking real ones into CA! I don't know how many sales you can do without being termed a dealer, which might be a problem.