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Please call us at (702) 202-9595 if you cannot find an answer to your question.
A firearm trust is a revocable trust that allows firearm owners to protect, and pass their firearms and related devices to family members or friends after their death with minimal challenges. Like other types of trusts, a firearm trust is a legal entity that acts as the legal owner of the firearm. Named beneficiaries of the trust will be legally permitted to continue using the firearms after the death of the owner, provided that they are not prohibited persons under law.
Maybe. Some are probably OK, but some are horrible, or even criminal. The whole point of having any kind of estate plan is to make things easier on your loved ones. Dealing in firearms incorrectly can not only cause problems, but one wrong move can result in a person committing a felony.
All firearms and related and regulated devices should be added to a Firearm Trust. Any legal firearm can be included in a Firearm Trust, although this type of trust is most commonly used for weapons that fall under the National Firearms Act of 1934 (NFA) or Title II of the Gun Control Act of 1968, because of the difficulty and tax consequences of transferring these devices. Some common examples of NFA weapons include: short-barreled rifles, machine guns, short-barreled shotguns, silencers or suppressors, destructive devices, and the vague ‘any other weapon’, such as pistol braces.
Including all firearms and devices, not just NFA firearms in a Firearm Trust, can help prevent legal complications that may arise attempting to directly transfer ownership of firearms to family or friends.
Firearm laws are complicated. Firearms are items that must be handled properly and carefully when the owner dies, or becomes incapacitated. Firearms are regulated property, and thus unlike most other property people own. Violation of the laws or regulations governing the transfer or possession of firearms, even unintentionally, and you or your executor or trustee could easily commit a felony.
Yes. Firearm Trusts provide an extra layer of safety to firearm owners, and those who succeed them in ownership, and therefore to the public. A firearm is unlikely to be available or passed to a prohibited person if it is held in a Firearm Trust. A trustee of a Firearm Trust assumes a special obligation under the law when they manage firearms in a trust. Well drafted Firearm Trusts make the parameters of that obligation clear. The result is better informed gun owners, trustees, executors, beneficiaries, and improved public safety.
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Nothing on this site constitutes legal advice, or forms an attorney-client relationship. What you find here is general legal information. Every situation is unique. Call us.
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