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I have several questions rolling around in that empty space where a brain should be....
Back in early November I bought a AR-10 an a AR-15 and did the Oregon background checks using my information. Later at home the Warden, my wife, decided the AR-15 was hers exclusively. Do I need to fingerprint her? Pay for a background check? Or just let it slide? I opted for the slide route as it was easiest.
But that makes me think of a hypothetical situation Two people are married, one a convicted felon with no gun rights, does that mean the innocent spouse cannot own or possess a gun? Can they keep it by the bed? If not does that not infringe upon the innocent ones rights? Why do they have to live differently from anyone else. What if they were married before the felony conviction? and the innocent party already had a gun?
Possibly some of these questions were on the background check, I don't recall.
It certainly seems to me that the background checks are chock full of holes
Back in early November I bought a AR-10 an a AR-15 and did the Oregon background checks using my information. Later at home the Warden, my wife, decided the AR-15 was hers exclusively. Do I need to fingerprint her? Pay for a background check? Or just let it slide? I opted for the slide route as it was easiest.
But that makes me think of a hypothetical situation Two people are married, one a convicted felon with no gun rights, does that mean the innocent spouse cannot own or possess a gun? Can they keep it by the bed? If not does that not infringe upon the innocent ones rights? Why do they have to live differently from anyone else. What if they were married before the felony conviction? and the innocent party already had a gun?
Possibly some of these questions were on the background check, I don't recall.
It certainly seems to me that the background checks are chock full of holes