...what a customer would do if someone came up and ordered "Give me your jewelry" and then decided he wanted more... [Read]
I'm also wondering if all "raw materials" used are totally broken down so they no longer meet the legal definition of a "firearm," and so that no possession and transfer edicts are violated...
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
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As far as federal law is concerned, a firearm IS the receiver. All the other parts can be shipped mail-order, subject to more stringent state or local restrictions. Unless magazine size become limited again, which doesn't seem likely.
Yes, but this is New Jersey. I half expect possession of unregistered grips to be a felony.
they can proudly say, ‘I am wearing a gun that will never protect someone’s loved one.’
There. I fixed it.
Looks like the "raw materials" are broken down so far you can't tell they were ever a gun. If they were. I'm a-thinkin' the actual supply chain involves backyard smelters in China.
http://calibercollection.com/shop/
Great Ghu, anyone brain-dead enough to pay $200 for a single steel bangle (http://calibercollection.com/shop/steel-bangle/)...
I see a few more product line possibilities.
Injection-molded plastic (for the Glocks favored by PDs) KIA bracelets stamped with names of innocent victims shot by cops. (NYC should provide lots of material.)
NORML could market hemp fiber bracelets with the names of imprisoned nonviolent drug possessors.
Heck, papier mache jewelry memorializing the dead Constitution.
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