"Nobody even ever has to see the amendment except the notary and the people being added"
Why wouldn't you have to include the amendment to the trust (presumably removing the people) with the trust on the next purchase submission? The trust has been changed by the amendment.
In what you quoted I am specifically talking about the amendment(s) to add trustees after the forms are filed and approved and trustees are being added to give them access to things already in the trust because this is the specific case klidiggity (whatever his name is, no offense) was talking about in his post that I quoted.
If the NFA are already in the trust access can be given to people using an amendment that no legal entity other than the notary needs to see and nobody has to send in pictures or fingerprints or money or anything.
Amendments to add people to a trust for NFA items already in the trust do not need to be sent to the ATF or the sheriff or any law enforcement agency.
Removing people is a new question you added and not included in the answer to the original question klidiggity asked. BUT, removing trustees from a trust is generally the same as adding them and no legal entity needs to be notified of trustee removal.
For NEW PURCHASES.
If the trustees are active in the trust when filing then yes the trustees need to be included in the application.
If trustees are removed from the trust before filing who's to say they were ever there at all. How trustees get removed depends on how the trust is written. The way some trusts remove trustees is just by shredding the amendment(s) that added them. So no amendments exist to be sent in.
Truth is it depends on what kind of trust you have and who made it and yada yada ... but the bottom line is there are a lot of ways to skin the cat.
This was valid back in 2016, I don't know if it still is but it depends on how the trust is written. In this instance, for example, none of hte amendments adding trustees need to be shredded or sent to the ATF. Create an amendment to blankently remove all trustees then just shred that removal amdendment once the application is done to put them back in. Trustee amendments don't need to be sent, just the amendment to say there are no trustees.
Trusts are magical devices which no one can truly fully explain how all of them work without seemingly contradicting ideas because they take many forms depending on who wrote them and what's in them. Amendments can exist but not count ... it's a whole Schrödinger thing.
Since July 13, 2016, the ATF requires fingerprints, pictures, and a law enforcement notification for all NFA applications. Only you, the creator (settlor) of the trust, must comply with these requirements if you follow the instructions below. The amendment and instructions below apply only to...
nfalawyers.com
Since July 13, 2016, the ATF requires fingerprints, pictures, and a law enforcement notification for all NFA applications. Only you, the creator (settlor) of the trust, must comply with these requirements if you follow the instructions below. The amendment and instructions below apply only to trusts drafted by NFA Lawyers, LLC.
Once you have your approved tax stamp in hand, you can shred this amendment and your co-trustees are back on your trust and may possess all NFA weapons in the trust.