Sunday, April 12, 2009

Registration in Maryland

Tam was mentioning Pelosi's fantasy of a federal firearm registry and she is dubious there would be much compliance. Much like Canada's registry system was abandoned as useless. I foolishly commented on Tam's post that a NICS check is sort of a registry already, if the feds kept the records permanently, despite laws that say they can't.

This was muddle headed of me. And I knew better if I had applied some brain sweat to the thought. When your gun dealer calls in a NICS background check to see if you are a prohibited person, and thus not allowed to purchase a gun, the gunstore is only telling the feds that "Joe Blow is here to buy a gun, is that ok?" The gov't goes thumbs up or thumbs down. They have no idea WHICH gun you are looking at (I am almost certain. Tam will hopefully smack me down if I'm off. She actually WORKS in gunstores and such.) The gunstore isn't phoning in the serial number of your desired boomstick. For all the feds know you changed your mind and cancelled the sale after the check. Kinda silly, but it's possible. If they kept these records, all they should know is "Joe Blow had a NICS check run on him 4 times since 2002 at Bob's Blastomatic Sporting Goods and Bait Shop." If the Feds got concerned about Joe Blow they have to go to Bob's and check his records to know what Joe Blow bought. That's how the Feds trace weapons.

But the State might do something different. Massachusetts might know the serial number of all of JayG's guns.

Maryland is also a stickler.


There is a nice breakdown of Maryland gun laws in About.com


Here are the important "registry" bits:

Maryland does regulate the sale, transfer, rent and possession of regulated firearms, which consist of handguns and assault weapons. A person who is not a regulated firearms dealer may not sell, rent, transfer, or purchase any regulated firearm without going through a regulated firearms dealer. Alternatively, the prospective seller/transferor and prospective buyer/transferee may complete the transaction through a designated law enforcement agency.



So no private transfers without 'permission.'

Like:

Purchase of a handgun or assault weapon from a regulated firearms dealer is subject to disapproval by the Secretary of the Maryland State Police during a seven-day waiting period. The buyer must complete an application form that is sent by the dealer or law enforcement agency to the Secretary of the State Police for investigation.

The applicant is required to provide information regarding the buyer’s eligibility to purchase or possess a handgun, and a description (including a serial number) of the handgun being purchased.

and

Any manufacturer that ships or transports a handgun to be sold, rented, or transferred in Maryland must include in the box with the handgun a separate sealed container holding a spent casing from that handgun. A handgun dealer must confirm compliance with this provision. A handgun dealer shall forward the sealed container holding a spent casing from the handgun that is subsequently sold or transferred to the state police.

So if you buy a handgun in Maryland, the State police have a record of that handgun's serial number, they have your name and other identification, and if it was a new handgun they have a spent shell casing. They have also given you permission after running their own check. You can be ok-ed by NICS, but the State may have some reason to deny. They don't often deny when NICS OKs, and you can appeal.

So if the feds pass a gun-registry law and it sticks, Maryland might just hand over their database to the US Justice Department, and bingo, they know about my purchases. Well, the handguns and any assault rifles, yes.

3 comments:

  1. Seth from MassachusettsApril 12, 2009 at 5:40 PM

    I can tell you a little something about Massachusetts as I live there and have bought guns.

    When you buy a gun the dealer goes online and registers the gun with the state as part of the purchase process. So the state knows exactly what you have even before you leave the shop! You also cannot buy amunition without showing your license or Firearms Identification Card. FID's are shall issue, licenses to carry are at the whim of the local police chief.

    A new requirement in the past couple of years is when you renew your license/FID the police take a fingerprint scan. The dealer now has a fingerprint scanner. When you buy a gun the dealer scans your fingerprint which the computer imediately compares with the print in the state databse. In case they cannot get a readable print you are issued a PIN. No scan or pin, no sale. Also you cannot leave either gunshop or home without a trigger lock on the gun. You must sign a statement which is rubber stamped on the 4473 that you have a trigger lock!

    And to top it off, when it's time to renew your card or license the notice comes with the return address "Criminal History Systems Board"! Don't know whether to be amused or offended by that one!

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  2. For a basic NICS check they do tell the FBI folks whether it's a handgun or longgun, but that's the most they know as far as what type of gun you bought.

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  3. I could have sworn that they used to have to give make/model/sn, but maybe that was just in CA. They have their own background check that they make purchasers pass (and pay for, BTW), so that may be what I was thinking of.

    Here in sunny SC, if you've got yourself a CWP you still have to fill out the 4473 with all the right answers, but nothing gets called in. They figure they already know you're a good guy.

    Makes life much easier. If you've got a real gun clerk instead of some drone you can be out the door in like 5 minutes, gun in hand.

    Handguns included.

    Envy me....

    ReplyDelete

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