Jacksonville FL, St. Augustine, Orange Park, Jacksonville Beach, Ponte Vedra Beach
April 16, 2008

Tennessee NFA Gun Trust Lawyer: Class 3 Firearms Trust

Tennessee has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the (NFA) National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a Tennessee NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in Tennessee or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 firearms Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

If you are a lawyer licensed in any state and would like to work with us to provide NFA trusts to clients in your state, please Contact David Goldman a Florida Gun Trust Lawyer.

April 16, 2008

Florida's Govenor Signs NRA backed Gun Law

Florida Governor Charlie Crist today signed important National Rifle Association (NRA)–backed legislation into law that will protect the existing rights of law-abiding gun owners. House Bill 503 preserves the self-defense rights of law-abiding men and women as they travel in their cars to and from their daily activities.

“Customers and workers should not have to choose between protecting themselves or following the political policies of an anti-gun business,” said NRA Past President Marion P. Hammer. “The right to protect oneself must be maintained no matter where you park your car.”

This legislation protects the rights of gun owners to possess a firearm in any private motor vehicle in a parking lot, and prevents businesses from searching private vehicles of customers or employees.

“This is a great day for the people of the state of Florida,” concluded Hammer. “Their right to keep and bear arms for self-defense and other lawful purposes has been restored.”

April 15, 2008

Virginia NFA Gun Trust Lawyer: Class 3 Firearms Trust

Virginia has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the (NFA) National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a Virginia NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in Virginia or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 firearms Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

If you are a lawyer licensed in any state and would like to work with us to provide NFA trusts to clients in your state, please Contact David Goldman a Florida Gun Trust Lawyer.

April 10, 2008

Workers Allowed to Keep Guns in Cars

The Florida Legislature has passed a bill allowing employees to keep gun in their cars while at work. Currently employers have been able to prohibit employees from keeping guns in their cars while on company parking lots. The new bill will allow workers to leave their personal weapons in their vehicles on company owned parking lots.

April 5, 2008

Louisiana NFA Gun Trust Lawyer: Class 3 Firearms Trust

Louisiana has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the (NFA) National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a Louisiana NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in Louisiana or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 firearms Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

If you are a lawyer licensed in any state and would like to work with us to provide NFA trusts to clients in your state, please Contact David Goldman a Florida Gun Trust Lawyer.

April 4, 2008

Mississippi NFA Gun Trust Lawyer: Class 3 Firearms Trust

Mississippi has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the (NFA) National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a Mississippi NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in Mississippi or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 firearms Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

If you are a lawyer licensed in any state and would like to work with us to provide NFA trusts to clients in your state, please Contact David Goldman a Florida Gun Trust Lawyer.

April 3, 2008

Ohio NFA Gun Trust Lawyer: Class 3 Firearms Trust

Ohio has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the (NFA) National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a Ohio NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in Ohio or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 firearms Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

If you are a lawyer licensed in any state and would like to work with us to provide NFA trusts to clients in your state, please Contact David Goldman a Florida Gun Trust Lawyer.

March 22, 2008

Blogging from China

I am currently in Shanghai China for the next 5 days and then heading to Osaka and Tokyo for 3 nights each. I am planning to keep posting new issues to my blog while I am gone. In addition, I will be responding to emails and will be available over my VOIP number for calls or issues that need immediate attention. Feel free to continue to send in your questions. I wanted to apologize upfront for any additional delay in responses. Please be conscientious that it is 12 hours ahead of EST and this along with being on vacation means I will typically respond to any issues between 8AM - 12 PM EST or 8PM to -12AM my time.

March 19, 2008

Nebraska NFA Gun Trust Lawyer: Class 3 Firearms Trust

Nebraska has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the (NFA) National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a Nebraska NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in Indiana or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 firearms Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

If you are a lawyer licensed in any state and would like to work with us to provide NFA trusts to clients in your state, please Contact David Goldman a Florida Gun Trust Lawyer.

March 19, 2008

Supreme Court Hears Arguments in D.C. Gun Ban Case

The Supreme Court heard oral arguments in District of Columbia v. Heller, a case the Court has stated is "limited to the following question: Whether Washington, D.C.'s bans [on handguns, on having guns in operable condition in the home and on carrying guns within the home] violate the Second Amendment rights of individuals who are not affiliated with any state-regulated militia, but who wish to keep handguns and other firearms for private use in their homes."

The case came before the Supreme Court on appeal by the District of Columbia, after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia declared the city's gun bans unconstitutional.

The Court of Appeals decision--consistent with the views of the Framers of the Bill of Rights, respected legal commentators of the 19th century, the Supreme Court's ruling in U.S. v. Cruikshank (1876), numerous court decisions of the 19th century, the Supreme Court's ruling in U.S. v. Miller (1939), the position of the U.S. Department of Justice, and the vast majority of Second Amendment scholars today-concluded that "the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms. That right existed prior to the formation of the new government under the Constitution and was premised on the private use of arms for activities such as hunting and self-defense, the latter being understood as resistance to either private lawlessness or the depredations of a tyrannical government (or a threat from abroad)."

In today's argument, the Justices aggressively questioned advocates for all sides, including Walter Dellinger for the District, Solicitor General Paul Clement for the Department of Justice, and Alan Gura for the plaintiffs challenging D.C.'s law.

Some justices' questions clearly suggested where they stand-as when Chief Justice John Roberts, questioning the District's Dellinger, scoffed at the idea that a citizen awakened by an intruder in the middle of the night could "turn on the lamp . pick up [his] reading glasses," and disengage a trigger lock. Dellinger back-pedaled from D.C.'s longstanding position that its laws prohibit self-defense, claiming that D.C. actually supports citizens having functional firearms for defense.

Justices extensively questioned all three attorneys on the meaning and effect of the Second Amendment's "militia clause," with Dellinger taking the extreme position that unless a state "had attributes of [a state] militia contrary to a Federal law," the Second Amendment would have no effect as a restraint on legislation. Several justices seemed to disagree strongly with that view, with Justice Antonin Scalia noting that even if the militia clause describes the purpose of the Second Amendment, it's not unusual for a law to be written more broadly than necessary for its main purpose.

Justice Anthony Kennedy questioned the attorneys very actively, especially on the importance of self-defense in the Founding era. Justice Kennedy suggested that even the Supreme Court's 1939 Miller decision-which gun control advocates have often wrongly cited as protecting only a "collective" right-was "deficient" and may not have addressed the "interests that must have been foremost in the Framers' minds when they were concerned about guns being taken away from the people who needed them for their defense."

Plaintiffs' attorney Gura-in addition to responding to many hypothetical questions-noted that the Second Amendment was clearly derived from common law rights described by Blackstone and other 18th Century commentators. Although the militia clause "gives us some guide post as to how we look at the Second Amendment," Gura said, "it's not the exclusive purpose of the Second Amendment."

NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre and NRA-ILA Executive Director Chris Cox (who both attended the arguments) commented, "Washington, D.C.'s ban on keeping handguns and functional firearms in the home for self-defense is unreasonable and unconstitutional under any standard. We remain hopeful that the Supreme Court will agree with the overwhelming majority of the American people, more than 300 members of Congress, 31 state attorneys general and the NRA that the Second Amendment protects the fundamental, individual right to keep and bear arms, and that Washington, D.C.'s bans on handguns and functional firearms in the home for self-defense should be struck down."

Amicus briefs filed with the Supreme Court in support of the Court of Appeals' decision included those by the National Rifle Association and the NRA Civil Rights Defense Fund; Vice-President Dick Cheney (in his capacity as President of the Senate) and Members of Congress; the state attorneys general; and noted Second Amendment scholars. All the briefs in the case are available at www.nraila.org/heller.


Listen to the audio recording of the oral arguments (RealPlayer required)

View the transcript (PDF format)

March 18, 2008

Indiana NFA Gun Trust Lawyer: Class 3 Firearms Trust

Indiana has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the (NFA) National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a Indiana NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in Indiana or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 firearms Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

If you are a lawyer licensed in any state and would like to work with us to provide NFA trusts to clients in your state, please Contact David Goldman a Florida Gun Trust Lawyer.

March 5, 2008

NFA Trusts - Certificate of Trust will not work

The BAFTE will no longer accept a certificate of trust with a Form 1 or Form 4 application for the purchase of Class III items. According to the person in charge of reviewing all trusts, all applications without the declaration of trust will be rejected.

There are many unique issues with Class 3 ownership and the typical trust does not deal with these issues. Please review the information on NFA Firearms Trust to protect yourself and your family from the $250,000 penalty and 10 years in jail which are associated with the improper transfer or possession of these items.

To find a lawyer in your state who can help with a NFA Firearms Trust please Contact an Estate Planning Lawyer

February 27, 2008

North Dakota NFA Gun Trust Lawyer: Class 3 Firearms Trust

North Dakota has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the (NFA) National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a North Dakota NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in North Dakota or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 firearms Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

If you are a lawyer licensed in any state and would like to work with us to provide NFA trusts to clients in your state, please Contact David Goldman a Florida Gun Trust Lawyer.

February 22, 2008

Interstate Transfer of Class 3 NFA Firearms

Often I receive inquiries from individuals looking to create a NFA Firearms Trust to purchase Class 3 Firearms. Several times these individuals are looking to keep these Firearms in their vehicle, motor home, or boat. Individuals, Trusts, Corporations, and LLC's must get permission to transport these items interstate.

The NFA has an Application to Transport Interstate or to Temporarily Export Certain national Firearms Act (NFA) Firearms.

A written request and prior authorization from ATF to transport interstate or in foreign commerce any destructive device, machinegun, short-barreled rifle, or short-barreled shotgun is required under the provisions of Section 922 (a)(4), Title 18, U.S.C., and Section 478.28, Title 27 CFR, a letter of request, in duplicate, containing all information required on this form, may be submitted in lieu of the form.

The registered owner of NFA firearm(s) shall complete two copies of ATF Form 5320.20 and forward the forms to the Director, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, 244 Needy Road, Martinsburg, WV 25405 (Attention: NFA Branch).

The original of ATF Form 5320.20 will be returned to the registered owner. Approval authorizes the registered owner to transport the designated firearm(s) only during the time period specified in item 3. THE AUTHORIZATION DOES NOT CARRY OR IMPORT RELIEF FROM ANY STATUTORY OR REGULATORY PROVISIONS RELATING TO FIREARMS OTHER THAN 27 CFR 478.28.

In the event item 2 is checked “yes” and the firearm(s) is not returned to the original location by the date specified, the registered owner shall submit a new application on ATF Form 5320.20 to receive approval to return the firearm(s).

If a contract or common carrier is used to transport the firearm(s) a copy of ATF Form 5320.20 shall be furnished to the carrier and shall be in the possession of the carrier for the duration of the transportation. This will meet the requirements of sections 922(e) and (f) of the Gun Control Act of 1968.

Privacy Act Information
1. Authority. Solicitation of this information is made pursuant to the Gun Control Act of 1968 (18 U.S.C. 922(a)(4)). Disclosure of this information by the applicant is mandatory if the applicant wishes to transport in interstate or foreign commerce any destructive device, machinegun, short-barreled shotgun, or short-barreled rifle.

2. Purpose. To determine whether the proposed transaction of the listed items is reasonably necessary and consistent with the public safety and applicable State and local law.

3. Routine Uses. This information will be used by ATF to make the determination set forth in paragraph 2. No information obtained from an application, registration, or records required to be submitted by a natural person in order to comply with provisions of the National Firearms Act or regulations issued thereunder, shall except in connection with prosecution or other action for furnishing false information be used, directly or indirectly, as evidence against that person in any criminal proceeding with filing of the application.

4. Effects of Not Supplying Information Requested. Failure to supply complete information will delay processing and may cause denial of the application.

February 20, 2008

Alabama NFA Gun Trust Lawyer for Firearms Purchases

Alabama has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a Alabama NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in Alabama or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 items Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

If you are a lawyer licensed in any state and would like to work with us to provide NFA trusts to clients in your state, please Contact David Goldman a Florida Gun Trust Lawyer.

February 18, 2008

South Carolina NFA Gun Firearms Trust Lawyers

South Carolina has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a South Carolina NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in South Carolina or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 items Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

If you are a lawyer licensed in any state and would like to work with us to provide NFA trusts to clients in your state, please Contact David Goldman a Florida Gun Trust Lawyer.

February 18, 2008

Wisconsin NFA Gun Trust Lawyer

Wisconsin has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a Wisconsin NFA Firearms Trust, please Contact us and we can help make sure your trust deals with the many unique issues surrounding owning these firearms in a Revocable Trust

If you live in Wisconsin or another state and wish to create a NFA trust to protect your family and purchase NFA Class 3 or Class 1 items Contact a NFA lawyer in your state

February 14, 2008

Pennsylvania National Firearms Gun Trust (NFA Class 3)

Pennsylvania has joined the growing list of states in which we have a relationship with a lawyer who is familiar with the National Firearms Act's requirements relating to the formation of trusts to purchase Class 3 weapons. These include silencers, short barrel rifles, and machine guns.

If you are looking to create a Pennsylvania NFA Firearms Trust, please