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Great. Now I'm both slightly drunk and nostalgic 
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Great. Now I'm both slightly drunk and nostalgic![]()

Where you at with that?
Have one for me!!!!
Gawd I miss beer....![]()
HOWEVER: Once a stolen firearm is entered into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) database, it shows as stolen until recovered. Firearms are not purged from the system due to the passage of time.After 3 years, stolen property is no longer considered " stolen ".
( if it was reported stolen)
Purchased a pistol on a GunBroker auction, from FFL gun shop. When it arrived here came up stolen. Local LE got the gun, I got a receipt. Upon contacting the gun shop turns out they had bought it in a lot from their local Police dept. That PD had never cleared it out of the NCIC database. Got an apology and a quick refund.HOWEVER: Once a stolen firearm is entered into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) database, it shows as stolen until recovered. Firearms are not purged from the system due to the passage of time.
This! There's no way I would let anyone behind a gun counter take my gun and tell me to go away!Yea no joke. I would have waited at the shop for LE to show up. If the pawn shop didn't call them I would have.
Lets just say, dont put off going to the doc...ended up being type 2 beetus kicking my a$$...getting under control now, but A1C was sky high and I had dropped almost 50 pounds...Where you at with that?
I keep thinking about trying non alcoholic wine , but it's probably terrible.
D'oh! I personally know of two stolen guns which were not entered until one was taken as evidence, and one which was not entered because the caliber (required for entry) was not listed.Purchased a pistol on a GunBroker auction, from FFL gun shop. When it arrived here came up stolen. Local LE got the gun, I got a receipt. Upon contacting the gun shop turns out they had bought it in a lot from their local Police dept. That PD had never cleared it out of the NCIC database. Got an apology and a quick refund.
I second this ^^^ from personal experience. There is no such thing as a "three year rule" with respect to stolen firearms. It doesn't matter when the piece was stolen, it stays on the list until cleared by a law enforcement agency. After a recovery is made, it's supposed to be returned to the agency that initially reported it. Once returned, that agency typically attempts to return it to the owner who reported it stolen. If that attempt isn't successful, I suppose there are agency protocols for disposing of it.HOWEVER: Once a stolen firearm is entered into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) database, it shows as stolen until recovered. Firearms are not purged from the system due to the passage of time.
It's important for agency employees to record and report the appropriate data. It's also important for officers in the field to know what they are looking at. It very important for owners to report the correct information: make, serial number and caliber. Some guns have kind of squirrelly situations, like US Carbine M1. Who made it can be a source of confusion to some officers, even if they see the maker's name under the rear sight. And what what maker was recorded on the original report? If the owner said, "M1 Carbine" instead of an actual manufacturer, it may never match up. Also, mistakenly reported names for makers might screw things up. Like a model vice maker name, "1911" instead of "Kimber."I personally know of two stolen guns which were not entered until one was taken as evidence, and one which was not entered because the caliber (required for entry) was not listed.
Melancholy sucks eh!Great. Now I'm both slightly drunk and nostalgic![]()
Just before New Years I drove past a trailer for sale on the side of the road. Turned out that it was my trailer that had been stolen over 5 years ago. While I would have loved to have the thief arrested, the guy selling the trailer wasn't him. He was selling it for a friend who had been given the trailer, so they weren't really out anything.So, in summary, if a legal seller shows up to sell or transfer a handgun and the gun has been unbeknown to him stolen years earlier, the FFL is going to confiscate the firearm for the law.
Kinda sucks that now the original owner that had the gun stolen and the present owner "both" loose out financially.
Bad guys win????
Lost my taste for Black Butte years ago, but there are other micro brewers making non-alcoholic IPAs and such these days. Not too bad, either.Hah! Luckily there's an alternative, and it actually tastes good (if you like dark beer)
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The first time I visited Portland in 2009 I "found" Deschutes while waiting for my missus to pick me up from Eugene.Lost my taste for Black Butte years ago, but there are other micro brewers making non-alcoholic IPAs and such these days. Not too bad, either.![]()
Yes. This is what happens. And a risk with guns having no pre-BGC history.So, in summary, if a legal seller shows up to sell or transfer a handgun and the gun has been unbeknown to him stolen years earlier, the FFL is going to confiscate the firearm for the law.
I OCCASIONALLY wondered about this at the time - and usually when I traded/bought a 'new' gun FTF.Before the BGC era that we are in now, there was no way to determine beforehand if a gun was a stolen piece. I'm positive there are many stolen guns out there in the hands of unwitting owners.
Likely true for guns handed down to family members that bypass the BGC process.Unfortunately a LOT of them will probably remain unknown as stolen possibly forever.