"Transporting to (number, street, city, county, state, and zip). The address where the NFA firearm is going to be transferred to."3. There would literally be nothing to charge you with if you filed for a 5320.20 that encompassed the entire state. They say you have to put an address on the form. Thats it and thats as far as the enforcement goes. .
This is where one would hope common sense would kick in as to what the plain English is asking for.
If "transporting to" is true (state only is allowed) then why not the other? "Transporting from", and requiring your home address?
Food for thought, hu!
Heck... by your interpretation ... there is nothing stopping you from entering coords for entire chunks of U.S states.. Why limit yourself??
Note that there is a difference between the legal definitions of "travelling/traversing" and "destination". Or in the case of a dot20... an "authorized destination".
3. Of course they could. Failing to properly fill out a gooberment document... they "could" null and void your permission slip and charge you with illegal interstate transport of an SBR. They may also charge you if your destination is not within a reasonable distance from the authorized location on your dot20.
"There is always room for interpretation of laws."
If by that you mean that many believe it is always possible to redefine plain English to mean whatever a person wants it to mean... "my own reality trumps all"... that does seem to be a very common belief these days. If facing a judge... good luck with that.
An interesting mental exercise, but not exactly worthy of continuing to repeat previous discussions on a subject already beaten to death in the not so distant past. I'm done.