I had seen on this board that United Airlines was tagging checked baggage which contained firearms with a string of letters like this FFFFFFFFFF on the baggage tag. This would be in violation of GCA '68 as amended by the Brady Crime crap act of 1994 and is Sec 922 (e). I had not had this problem on United flights until I left Austin, Tx to return to Indianapolis, In over the Independence Day weekend. Granted that the bag was a rifle hard case so even without the FFFFFFFFF's it was obvious what was in the bag so it really wasn't that big a deal. I decided to do my civic duty and report this GCA violation to the BATF office in Indy. The first guy I got ahold of was a total bozo. He denied that was the law and that each airline had their own procedures. I did not have 922 (e) in front of me so I looked it up and called back. This time I actually got ahold of an agent with some intelligence. He knew the law, knew the section, and admitted that I was right. However, they choose not to enforce that section so long as the tagging was not obvious, as it was in the days of the external international orange 'steal me' tag. Selective enforcement at its finest. I tried to agree with him and noticed that 922 (e) only required notification if the firearm was travelling in interstate commerce. I mentioned the fact that I was only bringing them up here for my personal use and they were not for sale, therefore they were not passing in interstate commerce so the tagging was not illegal. He then told me that it did not matter if I was going to sell the firearms or not, the fact that I took them across a state line meant that they were travelling in interstate commerce. So LawDog and you other JD's and LLB's out there, how about it. Would you please explain what interstate commerce is? Also, since I live in Texas, if I ship a firearm to another city in Texas (lets assume the common carrier does not take it out of state) must the firearm still be declared since it is intrastate? Didn't the 5th Circuit judges mention this recently in the Emerson case?