• Silencers

    by Published on 04-07-2012 02:01 PM     Number of Views: 224 

    How to fill out an ATF FORM 4 (5320.4)

    THE FORM HERE

    FRONT OF ATF FORM 4
    1. Type of Transfer
    Put a checkmark or X in the box next to $200 as this is the price for the transfer tax on a silencer.
    2a. Transferee’s Name and Address
    This is your full name and address. If you put a P. O. Box here, they will kick the form back and make your put a physical address in there. Use only physical addresses. If filling out this form for a corporation or trust, use the address listed in the corporation or trust documentation.
    2b. County
    This is the county you live in NOT THE COUNTRY YOU LIVE IN.
    3a. Transferor’s Name and Address
    ONLING
    10017 Somerset Drive
    Loveland, OH 45140
    3b. Transferor’s Name and Address
    (513) 239-7471
    3c. Leave it blank

    3d. Leave it blank

    4a. This is where you put the Manufacturer of the silencer and the address of the manufacturer. If you are unsure of what to use, leave it blank

    4b. Type of Firearm
    SILENCER or SBR
    4c. Caliber
    Put your silencers caliber or SBR in here
    4d. Model
    Put the Manufacturers model name here (not all silencers or SBR have a model and in that case, this can just be left blank or write NA in there.
    4e. Of Barrel
    This is seldom used with muzzle or screw on silencers and is more often used on integral setups, but mostly it is left blank or NA in there.
    4f. Overall
    This is the overall length of the tube of the silencer.
    4g. Serial Number
    This is the big deal…Make SURE it’s legible and fits exactly what is shown on the silencer or SBR itself. Don’t leave out zeros in front of number ie… if the serial number is “TX 0052” and you put in TX 52, ATF will kick it back. When and if you chose to call to check on your transfer, read this entire number to them or they will not know anything about your transfer. Say the serial number is TX ZERO ZERO FIVE TWO, not TX FIFTY TWO.
    4h. Leave blank

    5. Leave blank

    6a Leave blank

    6b Leave blank

    7. This is your Dealer’s federal firearms license number. If you don’t have it, leave this blank. You can use FFL EZ CHECK to make sure your dealer is still licensed with ATF at this website https://www.atfonline.gov/fflezcheck/

    8a. EIN
    This is your dealers Employment Identification Number, CALL US FOR IT.
    8b. Class
    This is the Special Occupational Tax (SOT) class status of your Dealer. If he is a regular dealer the number 3 (hence the phrase “Class 3 dealer”) will be used. If he is a manufacturer the number 2 is used.
    OUR IS A 2
    9. Circle I DO
    This allows you to call and ask ATF where you are in the transfer process if you get anxious. (304-616-4500)
    10. DON’T SIGN HERE. Your dealer must sign here.

    11. This is for the dealer to fill out

    12. This date is for the dealer to fill out

    BACK OF ATF FORM 4
    13 and 14 IF YOU ARE AN INDIVIDUAL (not a corporation or trust)
    Answer the questions in block 13 and 14 with an X or a check
    13 and 14 IF YOU ARE FILLING OUT THE FORM AS A CORPORATION OR A TRUST
    SKIP 13 and 14 and proceed directly to 15. Corporations and Trusts need not fill out anything on the back of the ATF Form 4 EXCEPT Section15.
    15 Transferee's Certification
    Name of Trust
    For the reasons write: "Hunting, Collection, other lawful purposes"
    Signature
    Date
    If you are an individual you will write you name in the blank where it says Name of Transferee. In the next two blanks you can put in “Firearms Collection” on one of the spaces. Sign where it says Signature of Transferee and date the form.
    16 Photograph Section
    Corporate and Trust transfers skip this step.
    Grab your digital camera and have someone snap a picture of you. Make sure the picture shows your upper body from about four inches below your neck to over the top of your head and hair. Remove headgear. You can generally put the picture into your computer and use the print wizard in Windows to print out wallet size pictures of you. Cut them with scissors so they fit in the area provide and glue or tape them onto the form. Any picture used cannot be more than one year old.
    17 Law Enforcement Certification
    Corporate and Trust transfers skip this step.
    This presents more trouble for some people than others. It’s generally a matter of explaining the reason behind the section so that the Law Enforcement person signing the form understands it. By signing it, they are saying that they have jurisdiction over you and they have no information that having the silencer would place you in violation of the local and state laws. Note that it does NOT say using it, only possession. The CLEO (chief law enforcement officer) is not responsible for your use of the silencer. That is your job. You may still have a problem
    getting this section signed. There are other people in the law enforcement community that may sign for you. Generally, a Police Chief, Sheriff (NOT A DEPUTY), Prosecuting attorney, State attorney General, or anyone else ATF may approve. If all else fails, you can obtain the silencer by starting a trust or forming a corporation. This can be expensive in some cases, but has it’s advantages.

    The first blank in the Law Enforcement Certification section is for your full name. The next line is for the CLEO’s signature and title. You can date the form or the CLEO can. You can fill out the remainder of the information or the CLEO can.

    This must be done TWICE. ATF likes everything in sets of two.

    ATF FORM 5330.20’s Certification of Compliance with 18 U.S.C 922(g)(5)(B)
    THE FORM HERE

    This form is also commonly referred to as the Citizenship Certification Form. This form can be found from the ATF website. You should be able to fill out the form from the Adobe reader. If not, simply print and fill it out.
    In section 1: You put your Name or Corporation/Trust name here
    In section 2: You put your name no matter if you are applying as an individual or a Corporation/Trust.
    In section 3: Write “USA” Sign and date the bottom of the form
    This ALSO must be filled out TWICE!


    FBI Fingerprint Cards (FBI-258LE)
    THE FORM HERE

    Corporation and Trust applicants need not bother with these. Your dealer has these in his possession and you need to ask for at least 4 of them. You can alternatively order these forms from ATF. If you order from ATF, order at least 100 of them.

    You absolutely, positively MUST use the correct fingerprint forms to avoid delay in your transfer. Don’t try to use whatever you local jail has handy. Even if you have been fingerprinted before, you still have to do this. You have to do this for EVERY single silencer or SBR you obtain.

    ORDER FBI-258LE (FBI FD-258LE - NFA, Imports ORI WVATF0100)

    If the ORI section of the card you are using doesn’t look like this


    DON’T SEND IT IN.

    Filling out the Fingerprint cards:
    Start above the ORI section (where it says Martinsburg, WV) and put your LAST FIRST and WHOLE MIDDLE name in there.
    Fill out Sex, race, etc…
    Fill out your citizenship as USA and put your Social Security Number in the blank below Armed Forces No. Leave the other numbers blank.

    Under APPLICANT you sign the first blank and write your physical address in the blank below it.

    The section below this is for THE PERSON TAKING YOUR FINGERPRINTS TO FILL OUT, NOT YOU!!! The person taking the prints writes the date, signs and puts HIS OR HER employer and address in this blank. You don’t put your own employer and address in, as this will get the card kicked back. In Reason Fingerprinted…write NFA PURCHASE

    Do two fingerprint cards that are identical, remember ATF likes everything you send them in twos. You let the fingerprint taker do his or her job and make sure you obtain clear prints or they won’t accept the card. If they are blotched, get another card done.

    Some places charge for this service.


    Corporate/Trust Documentation
    Your Secretary of State website will likely have a place where you can look up your Corporation or Trust and print a document called “Certificate of Good Standing” or something that shows you are current. If you don’t have this, send the ATF the first page of your Trust or Articles of Incorporation/LLC agreement. Failure to do this will result in delaying your transfer or getting it denied.


    Almost to the end
    Now that your paperwork is completed you need to write a check to Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives or simply BATFE.

    Sending your paperwork in: Double check your paperwork!

    It’s time to mail it or take it to your dealer. DON’T SEND IT TO ATF YOURSELF. You have to make sure all the data is there and the dealer has to physically sign the Form 4’s. He will likely look over the forms for you, sign them, and submit them to ATF. Of course you can mail them out to ATF after the dealer signs them. Send them to the address on the Form 4 just above box number 1.

    Your dealer will contact you
    Your dealer will contact you when your paperwork is cleared and only then can you go pick up your silencer. You will be required to fill out an ATF Form 4473 (the usual form when you buy a gun over the counter) when you pick up your silencer. The NICS check is not required for NFA transfers.


    Hope this was helpful
    Thanks
    Steven F. Ling
    by Published on 11-20-2011 05:19 AM     Number of Views: 278 

    OVERVIEW:
    Laws that went into effect in May, 1986 made it illegal for 'civilians' to own fully automatic firearms that were manufactured after that date. Most fully automatic weapons manufactured and registered before May, 1986 may be owned and sold to individuals. The full-auto guns that may be owned by individuals are called 'transferable'.

    Purchasing a transferable machine gun, you must meet certain requirements which are normally the same as when you purchase another firearm. You must fill out special form called a "Form 4" and pay a one-time transfer tax per weapon.

    The taxes are $5.00 for all other weapons (know as AOW) or $200.00 for a silencer/suppressor, machine-gun, destructive device, short barreled rifles or a short barreled shotgun.

    MORE SPECIFIC:
    Class III includes, but is not limited to: machine guns, silencers, destructive devices, all other weapons (AOW: cane guns, pen guns, etc.), short-barreled rifles (SBR), short-barrel shotguns (SBS).

    1. You must be at least 18 years old to buy a handgun (having no felonies, violent misdemeanors, dishonorable discharges, etc.).

    2. Call your local CLEO (chief law enforcement officer - sheriff, police chief, etc.) and ask what his procedure is for signing Form 4

    Make sure that he will sign for you BEFORE you buy the NFA item. If he won't sign, you can't get the item. Make sure you can own it BEFORE you buy it, as payment must be made in full before it is ordered. As you need the serial number before any paperwork can be processed to begin the transfer.
    by Published on 11-20-2011 05:10 AM     Number of Views: 269 

    States where silencers are legal

    by Published on 11-20-2011 04:51 AM     Number of Views: 248 


    A Bit of Historical Background

    In 1909 Hiram P. Maxim invented one of the first metal silencers for reducing sound levels in firearms. Silencers were innovatively marketed as the gentleman's way of target shooting. They turned out to be quite popular, and sold quite well through the 1920s, and into the early '30s. The Great Depression of the 1930s left many people out of work, leading some to poach game in order to keep their families from starving. Concurrently, crime in the 1930s rose dramatically. It was in this context that attempts were made at passing legislation prohibiting handguns and machine guns. The Second Amendment to the U.S. constitution, however, prevented such legislation, and the courts struck it down. Eventually the concept of taxation was used to evade the wording in the Second Amendment.

    "Can't Ban - Tax It!"

    In 1934 a bill was passed levying a tax of $200 (4 times the price of a Thompson submachine gun at the time. For more info see Kickback link "Lex Morgenthau".) on future sales of machine guns. Short-barreled rifles and shotguns, cane guns and silencers were also thrown into the bill, almost as an afterthought. The BATF was set up, and one of its functions today is to collect such a tax. So much of the controversy dealing with Title II weapons is not that they are illegal, but that a tax will be levied on their ownership. Owning one which is not properly registered and taxed is a violation of federal tax code (tax evasion) a felony punishable by large fines and up to ten years in prison.

    In the interim, included in that tax collection effort has been the process of fingerprinting, photo identification, and a background check for evidence of criminal activity and/or mental defectiveness. Typically, the most populated states (CA, NY, & NJ) are very restrictive and have their own laws preventing the ownership of firearm silencers. Today 33 states allow the possession or use of firearm silencers or suppressors. Seventeen do not. Title II weapons are tightly regulated and controlled by the federal government and its agents in the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. In general, state, county and municipal entities may own and use machine guns, silencers and destructive devices in any state.

    Each weapon or device will carry its own model, make and serial number, as an aid to identification and tracking of the piece. For identification purposes a silencer is considered to be a weapon by BATF, even though its purpose is to reduce the sound of a firearm's report, not to discharge a projectile. We are not here to issue a moral or fairness judgement, but merely to report what exists in today's bureaucratic world.

    Bureaucratic Hearing Protection

    While a number of Title II weapons exist on today's market, some continue to be made today. They are manufactured by federally licensed, Class II manufacturers. These individuals and companies have applied to the federal government for the required licenses and permits, have been interviewed at least once by a BATF agent, have been fingerprinted, and have been the subject of an extensive security and background check by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. While one must hold a Federal Manufacturer's License to build weapons and devices, one must also hold a Special Occupational Tax (SOT), the full value of which costs $1,000 a year to maintain. When a licensed Class II Manufacturer constructs a weapon or device it is immediately serial numbered and registered with the National Firearms Act Branch of BATF on a Form 2 document. These are either faxed or mailed in duplicate to the NFA Branch, and normally take from 20 to 30 days to be properly documented. An agent of the NFA Branch will approve the form and return a copy to the manufacturer.

    Image at right: The famous "Dr. Shush" logo of original Maxim silencers - the gentleman's way of target shooting. Not until today the firearms noise control topic has been found again as a solution against shooting range noise pollution and for ensuring effective shooters' hearing protection.

    Law enforcement agencies will gain access to the registered weapons and devices through a Form 5, which may be filed with the NFA Branch by another agency, a Class II manufacturer, or a Class III dealer. These normally take about 20 days to clear. A physical transfer will not be allowed to take place until the proper paperwork has been received. Law enforcement agencies often maintain NFA-registered devices in their inventory. When a weapon or a device is issued to sworn officers those devices remain under the control and ownership of the agency. Departmental policy sometimes allows an individual officer to actually own a Class III weapon. That weapon may be transferred to the officer on a tax-free Form 5 document, or on a $200, tax-paid Form 4. Qualified individuals may also obtain Title II, Class III weapons through the use of the tax-paid Form 3. This requires two fingerprint cards, two Form 4s, a law-enforcement approval, a $200 check paid to the U.S. Treasury, and an extensive FBI background check.

    A cut-away model of Maxim silencer.

    A Form 4 normally takes 90 days to process, and a transfer will not be allowed to take place in any state which does not permit individual or corporate ownership of such a device. Dealers and manufacturers transfer weapons between themselves on a tax-free Form 3, which takes approximately 30 days to process. Again, a physical transfer shall not take place until the appropriate form has been approved by the NFA Branch of BATF. A Class III Dealer or a Class II manufacturer may file form 5 transfers to law enforcement entities anywhere in the U.S. Form 4 transfers can only be filed for qualified individuals and corporations within a dealer or manufacturer's state of residence.

    Right: Sound Tech Dark Star suppressor for centerfire rifles.


    U.S. Military and Police

    Military ownership and distribution of NFA weapons is not normally controlled or affected by the NFA Branch. Each military entity has its own rules for the distribution and control of these devices. Some groups exercise extremely tight control. Other groups are less formal, and do not serially number their weapons and devices. Those without numbers and markings of any kind are said to have been sanitized, or sterilized. While we won't dwell on the quantities of sanitized weapons that have been kicked out of low flying aircraft over foreign soil, we will say that control of NFA weapons and implements of war is extremely tight inside the U.S.; while the reverse of that may have at times been true outside U.S. borders.

    Left: White's integral Ruger MKII suppressor.

    In general, sound suppression devices for firearms are legitimately used by law enforcement agencies for a number of purposes. The largest quantity are used daily by animal control officers and contractors in municipalities, parks, botanical gardens and airports. Firearm sound suppressors are also used heavily by animal control personnel in agriculture, forestry, reservoir and waterway management. In most cases stealth is not so much an issue as is public relations.

    In tactical use firearm sound suppressors are primarily employed by entry teams in buildings, as the discharge of any weapon inside a structure will cause both temporary and permanent hearing loss if hearing protection is not employed. While head phones and ear muffs are available, many officers refuse to use them, as they prevent the detection of suspect movement inside a structure to a large extent. In addition, there is again the aspect of public relations, and the reduction of firearm noise also reduces the amount of PR fallout if deadly force has to be employed. Firearm sound suppressors are also used on police sniper rifles, not so much to totally eliminate the sound of discharge, but to soften its intensity, mask the source and allow the shooter(s) to see bullet strike.

    Right: Ruger 10/22 rifles with Soud Tech suppressors.