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Pretty happy with my Surgeon.
I know it isn’t your intention, but isn’t that creating an SBR? Sure you take it off right away.... but may want to be careful where you post that hahaWhen I remove a factory Remington barrel, I start by cutting it off in the saw about 4" past the end of the action. Next I cut a groove with a .062 wide tool to minor diameter about .010 from the receiver. Then I heat the front of the receiver to about 180 degrees and unscrew the barrel with a pipe wrench. Why be delicate when handling shit?
Intent is a significant element of almost all criminal law, including the NFA. He's fine.I know it isn’t your intention, but isn’t that creating an SBR? Sure you take it off right away.... but may want to be careful where you post that haha
Intent is a significant element of almost all criminal law, including the NFA. He's fine.
https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/general-vs-specific-intent.html
Most crimes require general intent, meaning that the prosecution must prove only that the accused meant to do an act prohibited by law. Whether the defendant intended the act’s result is irrelevant.
That doesn't mean they would need to show his intent was to make an SBR. That means they would need to show his intent was to cut off the barrel. Ignorance of the law is no excuse.
I get what your saying, and in the acedemic viewfinder I agree in totality. But I offer this and wonder the outcome:
Example:
You walk in to my joint with a barreled action that you attempted to pull apart. The barrel has seized to the receiver. Threads have started to gall, but we can save the action if we machine the tennon slug out of it.
So, I fixture the receiver, and whack the barrel off, leaving only a couple inches. Your action is a rifle action. At that very moment the BATFE walks in, tells me they are here for an audit, and that I am to cease all work until the easter egg hunt is over.
An inspector notices the action in the machine and makes an issue of it. He calls an agent who arrives later, then I'm what? Cuffed and stuffed for an NFA violation? Are you arrested as well?
If it is truly as black and white as what has been described, I would expect to see at least a 1/3rd of the gunsmithing community doing time in prisons. This example is a routine occurance in gunsmithing. I personally would have a life sentence as my shop is a known "go to" when stuff goes horribly wrong. I have lost track of the number of stuck barrels I have had to remove by this very process.
It is unfortunate that we live in a society with a government that even makes this a relevant topic, yet here we are. It'd be nice to say no DA's office would ever prosecute something like this, or that no judge would ever rule on it. That however would be extremely arrogant and foolish to do.
Thoughts encouraged. Interesting topic.
Sorry for the "D"-rail on the original post.
If it is out of the stock (witch it would have to be) It's a pistol.
I got to thinking about it and deleted the post. I was thinking about an AR upper and lower. A lower is classified as other not a rifle.Not true and a great way to get cuffed up.
I get what your saying, and in the acedemic viewfinder I agree in totality. But I offer this and wonder the outcome:
Example:
You walk in to my joint with a barreled action that you attempted to pull apart. The barrel has seized to the receiver. Threads have started to gall, but we can save the action if we machine the tennon slug out of it.
So, I fixture the receiver, and whack the barrel off, leaving only a couple inches. Your action is a rifle action. At that very moment the BATFE walks in, tells me they are here for an audit, and that I am to cease all work until the easter egg hunt is over.
An inspector notices the action in the machine and makes an issue of it. He calls an agent who arrives later, then I'm what? Cuffed and stuffed for an NFA violation? Are you arrested as well?
If it is truly as black and white as what has been described, I would expect to see at least a 1/3rd of the gunsmithing community doing time in prisons. This example is a routine occurance in gunsmithing. I personally would have a life sentence as my shop is a known "go to" when stuff goes horribly wrong. I have lost track of the number of stuck barrels I have had to remove by this very process.
It is unfortunate that we live in a society with a government that even makes this a relevant topic, yet here we are. It'd be nice to say no DA's office would ever prosecute something like this, or that no judge would ever rule on it. That however would be extremely arrogant and foolish to do.
Thoughts encouraged. Interesting topic.
Sorry for the "D"-rail on the original post.
Does an in exhaust business get fined every time they take the exhaust system off of a car and replace it in a state that requires emissions testing and standards?