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SobeysBags OP t1_iujzmde wrote

Reply to comment by ozzie286 in In the Maine News? by SobeysBags

Not incorrect, and not exportation. Totally different thing. It in the article. Sorry.

In the U.S., it is illegal for an American to transfer, sell, trade, give, transport or deliver a firearm to someone they know is not a U.S. resident, which includes Canadian tourists. Anyone found in violation may face fines or up to 10 years in prison, depending on the details of the offence. https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/924

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ozzie286 t1_iuk3x8c wrote

That statute is dealing with guns being transferred for the purpose of being used in a crime, not gun transfers in general. Besides, what do you think exporting is?

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SobeysBags OP t1_iuk69mb wrote

Exporting is leaving the country. Not a transfer wholly within the USA between two American citizens. In this situation one party is a foreign national with no means or desire to wait for exportation with all the costs and background checks that entails. That's the crime, knowing they would smuggle them across the border, especially in a place like houlton, which isn't exactly a firearm import/export hub, and the Canadian had no status in the usa and this is a situation where am American cannot sell or give a firearm to them. Which is the issue presented in the article, and what law enforcement believed happened. This is the RCMP conclusion, and I'm inclined to believe them, and I think the victims deserve some kind of answer and action.

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ozzie286 t1_iukbgfz wrote

The more I read those articles, the more I think they're designed to stir up discontent. They're peppered with inaccuracies and bad legal takes that make Maine and the US look worse, and completely disregard the RCMP's failings and his acquisition of RCMP uniforms and 4! clones of RCMP cars, at least one of which was so accurate that multiple RCMP officers mistook him for a fellow officer.

I'm not saying the guy did nothing wrong, but you seem to want him crucified and the whole Maine legal system overturned over what was a small part of a much larger crime.

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