"Approved list"? What approved list?ripnbst said:I was doing some research and there are a very select few rifles that are on the *approved* list. If I were to buy a lower I would make darn sure it was a component of one of the *approved* rifles.
Not legally you can't. Once you build it, it will be an "assault weapon" as far as the State of Connecticut is concerned. You didn't legally own it -- in Connecticut -- as of April 5, 2013, the date their new laws became effective. Ergo, unless their new laws are struck down, you simply cannot obtain by buying, importing, or building any new firearm that fits their definition of "assault weapon."bmadddd7 said:Why do you think I would get a stripped lower shipped in... To just look at it? It is the only regulated part of an AR and if I can get my hands on that then I can build one. These laws are a crock.
What do you think the State Police do with those forms, stick 'em in a box without looking at them?bmadddd7 said:I understand that but do you really think they would pursue me for that or even review the form? Idk maybe it's not worth it... Not sure yet
The NRA knows and is involved. The NRA is participating in the lawsuit against the new laws, filed by the CCDL and several individual plaintiffs.bmadddd7 said:I'm trying my man, support the NSSF!! Inform the NRA and try to get them involved.
They could start by looking it up in their database, which they compile using those DPS-3 forms that were linked to a couple of posts above. Of course, IF you ever lived in another state you could have bought it elsewhere without having had a DPS-3 submitted but, since you're going to have it transferred through a Connecticut FFL, they'll have the exact date you acquired it right at their fingertips.bmadddd7 said:And how will they know when I obtained the rifle? I have two AR's that I purchased before the law and I have nooo idea how to register them or whatever nonsense the law makes us big bad law abiding citizens do.