lockinload
New member
I want to send/give my daughter a gun for Xmas. It was purchased new by myself. Am I breaking any laws shipping her the gun? Colorado to California.
Walther PK380.
Walther PK380.
I think there are some Federal exemptions for direct transfers from parent to child
Just keep in mind that, by shipping it or handing it directly to her, YOU are breaking Federal (as well as possibly state) law. If she accepts delivery, or takes the hand-off in person, then SHE is also breaking Federal law. Which turns a well-intended gift into TWO felonies.brickeyee said:There are no such exceptions.
The only real exception is that if you bequest a gun the receiver can come ad get it from the executor of the estate.
But since you are not dead it is not a bequest.
You need to find an FFL in her state to accept the gun and then transfer it to her.
You would be committing a federal felony by violating 18 USC 922(a)(5), and your daughter would be committing a federal felony by violating 18 USC 922(a)(3).lockinload said:...So what if I gave it to her here and she drove home with it?...
Actually, the major complications are a result of federal law, not California law. If you were still a resident of California, since your daughter is a resident of California, you could just hand her the gun; and she would simply need to file a form with the California DOJ. But since this is a transaction involving residents of two different States, federal law makes things much more complicated.lockinload said:...I am so glad I left that state when I did....
No! There is no is not such exemption under federal law.natman said:I think there are some Federal exemptions for direct transfers from parent to child,...
A parent to child transfer is exempt from the roster. The trick is finding a California transfer FFL who understands this.natman said:...I'm pretty sure you can't send in a handgun that isn't on the CA approved list...
No, not if the transferee is a resident of California. Federal law (18 USC 922(b)(3)) requires that the transfer comply with the laws of both the State in which the transfer takes place and the State in which the transferee lives. As a practical matter, the transfer laws of California are such that the Colorado FFL would not be able to satisfy them.Don H said:...A long gun can be transferred to your daughter by a FFL in Colorado. Verify that it is not an "assault weapon" under CA law...
natman said:I think there are some Federal exemptions for direct transfers from parent to child, but I'm not going to look them up because you've got a different set of issues because your daughter is in CA.
She'll have to have a CA handgun license. http://ag.ca.gov/firearms/hscinfo.php
I'm pretty sure you can't send in a handgun that isn't on the CA approved list.
http://certguns.doj.ca.gov/
And you'd have to send it to a CA FFL. Shop around, FFL fees in CA are steep.
You would probably be better off arranging to have a CA FFL order a gun that is on the CA list and having her pick it up there, saving you handgun shipping, which is expensive, and FFL fees.
Good luck.
As shown by the link that natman provided, he was referring to the California Handgun Safety Certificate (HSC) as a handgun license. For the purposes of this thread it's pretty much a waste of time to debate whether the HSC may be properly referred to as a "license."EOD Guy said:....There is no such thing as a California handgun license...natman said:....She'll have to have a CA handgun license. http://ag.ca.gov/firearms/hscinfo.php....