ATF at Your door

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Wow, this one done exploded, LOL. How about saving us the trouble of quoting the ENTIRE POST right above you. Rather, take an extra few moments and clip out the salient points you are referencing.

Now then, this is more news-to-me that may also be to others. It's from a blogger I subscribe to, who just posted about this same original event (emphasis mine)....

(For review, GCA 68 requires dealers to submit to F Troop a multiple-purchase report whenever an unlicensed individual purchase two or more handguns from them within five business days. With no basis in statute, in 2011, F Troop extended the reporting requirement to autoloading, centerfire rifles with detachable magazines in the states of Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas. Savvy gunners usually either split their frequent purchases among dealers or ask sympathetic dealers to delay the additional transfer beyond the window of five business days. I'm unaware of any requirement for F Troop to follow up on each report. Personally, I know only one person who made the simultaneous purchase of two handguns of the same model, knowing that a multiple-purchase report would be generated, and that person was never contacted by F Troop.)
 
Joe_Blacke said:
If they came to my door politely asking, as they did here, I’d be happy to comply. No harm showing them I still possessed the same guns the form already tells them I own. Not complying would be far worse as I can guarantee you would be flagged for further investigation as straw purchase/unlicensed seller.

I’ve done multiple purchases before and honestly expected a visit at some point. As long as they are polite, not arrogant, badge heavy jerks, the best route is to let them do their job.

Now I wouldn’t let them inside. I wouldn’t let them hold the firearms, but just inspect the make/model/serial.

They are at least trying to be proactive. Finding the bad actors before bad stuff happens is a good thing.

If they were actual law enforcement,...
If they were not the enemy,...
If, if if,...

Your answer is reasonable,...but this agency is neither reasonable or even legal. NEVER GIVE THE ENEMY AN EVEN BREAK. Any and all minutes and hours they spend going round and round with you or me doing the legal judo thing are minutes and hours they are [highlight=yellow]not[/highlight] spending shooting dogs and phucking Lady Liberty in the bung hole.

I'm entirely happy to be an obstructionist stick in the mud for these cheese-diks. Phuck em'.
 
The funny thing is Mr. i WeNt tO tHe AcAdeMy's statement of "not complying would be far worse as I can guarantee you would be flagged for further investigation"

IE - Make them do their damn job instead of fishing by coercing consent for a search they don't have any factual business doing.

The one good thing about the proliferation of things like doorbell cameras and cloud connected easy to setup home security is now these a**holes can be recorded easier, and these "visits" can be sent viral on the internet so that way this type of behavior is thrust into the the mainstream and the general public can learn about their rights.

Funnily enough, after this event has become mainstream - the ATF nor the local law enforcement want to talk about it. That tells you plenty.

I don't care if by some extent what the dingles in Delaware is legal - that doesn't make it right. As for Mr. Academy's list of supposed "Facts" as being admissible as sufficient cause for investigation - living in a state with high amounts of straw purchases, trafficking, etc - Delaware isn't on those lists according to the ATF - they have all the actual info right on their website which is just a further demonstration of these "officers" just harassing a law abiding citizen.
 
Joe_Blacke said:
TheAccountant said:
Joe_Blacke said:
You do realize that on the Multiple sale form it states your name, address and the guns you are buying. That is the same thing as registration.

RS is the lowest level in the stand of proof. You’re equating it to PC which it is not. RS is very easy to satisfy. All I need are articulable facts.

You have to have articulable facts that a crime is about to be or was committed. Purchasing any amount of firearms isn’t a crime, so the purchase itself cannot be the only fact that gives rise to reasonable suspicion.


Yep. Easily articulable facts. But only that there is the “potential” of a crime. Your definition is close to PC-Facts that a crime was committed and this person was the one who committed the acts. PC is the standard for arrest or a warrant. RS is just the standard to investigate.

“Reasonable suspicion is a standard lower than probable cause, and it doesn't require anywhere near 50% certainty that the detainee has done something illegal.“. https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/what-reasonable-suspicion.html

Purchasing multiple guns isn’t a crime. However, we have historical evidence that people involved in gunrunning make multiple purchases. People most likely to be involved in gunrunning will make multiple purchases.

Doesn’t mean that everyone that makes multiple purchases is a gun runner. It just means you fall into a pattern. If called out in court it is easily defended:

Follows a similar pattern of those who are involved in illegal gun running

Lives in an area known for gun running

Lives in an area that allows for unrecorded face to face transfers

Lives in an area that has forums and other online websites where one can advertise guns for sale.


All of that are articulable facts. All are reason to investigate.

All of those apply to 7 million people that live in Arizona. From the MCAO:

Reasonable suspicion means that any reasonable person would suspect that a crime was in the process of being committed, had been committed or was going to be committed very soon.

That’s reasonable suspicion, not PC.
 
The standard is what a reasonable officer believes. That is also based on training and experience. To an officer is it “more than a hunch”. Is how the court looks at it.

A person doesn’t have powers to investigate crime. Only the police can investigate/arrest. Hence the standard is a reasonable officer.

Of the people in AZ, how many make multiple gun purchases? What model? Is it one commonly purchased by runners? Does this person have a history of multiple purchases that stands out from an average person (did they buy 12 cheap Lorcins for example)? Have they made multiple purchases is a short period of time? Do they buy only from FFLs who have problems with compliance inspections or have sold multiple guns that have previously been used in crimes? Has this person previously bought a gun that was later traced to a crime?

These are the things cops look at. One or two may not mean anything. The more that get answered wrongly, the more the smoke starts to look like fire. Until you actually see the “fire” (crime) you live in the world of suspicion and act accordingly.

None of these is evidence of a crime, but the start to possibly develop a pattern or profile. That is why the RS standard exists. If cops couldn’t investigate until they have evidence enough for arrest, almost no arrests would get made.

What a cop can do with RS is dependent on a lot of things. When it comes to someone in their home, they are limited to basically asking questions and permission. That is what happened in this video. As of now we don’t have the full backstory as to what caused them to do the check. It may be he won the multiple sale lotto and got randomly drawn for a visit/inspection. Maybe the SAC wants a follow up on every multiple sale. Maybe there was other things that led up to RS and made LE want to go ask. Right now we simply don’t know.

As of yet I still don’t see not complying with their request being a better option. It might be more satisfying, but nothing more. You can paint with a broad brush, and hate all cops (which seems to be the favored position on sites like these), or even the ATF as a whole. But I’ll prefer to look at the individual and their actions. Hence my stance on their politeness and demeanor. They didn’t give the vibe that they were gun hating, citizen hating, zealots.

As I look at all these mass shootings, I see the need for something more proactive happen before the shooting starts to interrupt the planning/execution cycle. Pretty much all these shooters had something identifiable as to being a ticking time bomb. Sadly it only comes out after people are dead. How to find the bad guy in the sea of non-bad guys is the ultimate needle/haystack. Especially doing it without violating civil rights. No real investigative tool exists. Unless there is a way to actually stop the shooter before they can hurt others, the only option that government would take is more legislation, more regulation and less freedom.
 
We have the backstory. They stated it in the video, they received an email from the fed, likely ATF.

They had no grounds to do anything. “Politeness and demeanor” is crap, stop me out in the middle of some situation, yeah, come to my house, that’s a huge kiss my a$$, no politeness and demeanor.

He should have simply, respectfully refused to answer, could have been nicer and said Warrant, Lawyer, goodbye, but he could also have gone as far as called the county sheriff to kick their a$$ of his private property and he would have been totally within his rights.

Yeah, I been there too and I know how to intimidate people into saying stupid stuff that incriminates them but if they say nothing, they leave you with nothing.

I’m on a DHS list for software I have for ballistics matched to an electronic rifle scope, is that reasonable suspicion, probable cause or just a pile of crap.
 
Doc said:
The only crime I see here is this isn’t in the RKBA sub forum.

Actually, I posted this video in that forum this morning. Lol. This is the thread that took off. Haha.
 
Joe_Blacke said:
The standard is what a reasonable officer believes. That is also based on training and experience. To an officer is it “more than a hunch”. Is how the court looks at it.

None of these is evidence of a crime, but the start to possibly develop a pattern or profile. That is why the RS standard exists. If cops couldn’t investigate until they have evidence enough for arrest, almost no arrests would get made.

No one is saying there needs to be direct evidence, no one is debating the difference between RS and PC. Pretty sure we have a handle on that.

The SCOTUS defines "reasonable suspicions" as :

Reasonable suspicion has been defined by the United States Supreme Court as "the sort of common-sense conclusion about human behavior upon which practical people . . . are entitled to rely." Further, it has defined reasonable suspicion as requiring only something more than an "unarticulated hunch." It requires facts or circumstances that give rise to more than a bare, imaginary, or purely conjectural suspicion.

Reasonable suspicion means that any reasonable person would suspect that a crime was in the process of being committed, had been committed or was going to be committed very soon.

Reasonable suspicions isn't based solely on an officer's "training and experience" there skipper. If you read the actual SCOTUS definition it says "any reasonable person" - why you ask? Because the courts realize that an officer has a high probability of being "unreasonable" and operating off an unsubstantiated "hunch" due to their "experience and training." There are many legal cases that set this precedence, and that is why it is worded the way it is. Officers need to be able to recognize this when judging what is "reasonable."

So just because a law abiding citizen may live in an area where straw purchases are higher, and they buy multiple guns - that isn't enough under the definition to qualify as "reasonable suspicion" - I am pretty sure a judge would agree.

Joe_Blacke said:
What a cop can do with RS is dependent on a lot of things. When it comes to someone in their home, they are limited to basically asking questions and permission. That is what happened in this video. As of now we don’t have the full backstory as to what caused them to do the check. It may be he won the multiple sale lotto and got randomly drawn for a visit/inspection. Maybe the SAC wants a follow up on every multiple sale. Maybe there was other things that led up to RS and made LE want to go ask. Right now we simply don’t know.

Actually we do know exactly what led to this. The ATF officer says so right in the video to why they are checking.


Joe_Blacke said:
As of yet I still don’t see not complying with their request being a better option. It might be more satisfying, but nothing more. You can paint with a broad brush, and hate all cops (which seems to be the favored position on sites like these), or even the ATF as a whole. But I’ll prefer to look at the individual and their actions. Hence my stance on their politeness and demeanor. They didn’t give the vibe that they were gun hating, citizen hating, zealots.

Actually, most of us don't hate cops. We just really like our rights, and we don't like them being bent or abused by "law enforcement" fishing expeditions and/or harassment and intimidation. The person in the video straight up said in an interview he felt coerced into allow consent and that he was intimidated by having three armed officers randomly knocking on his door.

armed american news said:
the homeowner believes he was coerced into giving his consent for what was legally a search of his property, even though no enforcement action was taken against him.

“I was embarrassed,” the homeowner said. “My neighbors saw the whole thing – guys in these police vests standing in my yard. I was really uncomfortable. I felt really confused, like I was in some way being accused of something even though I didn’t commit a crime. It was quite embarrassing. I knew they couldn’t come in, but I didn’t know what to do. I didn’t want to get put on some watch list. We just got new gun laws here. I didn’t want them coming back again. I felt like they were invading my privacy.”


Joe_Blacke said:
As I look at all these mass shootings, I see the need for something more proactive happen before the shooting starts to interrupt the planning/execution cycle. Pretty much all these shooters had something identifiable as to being a ticking time bomb. Sadly it only comes out after people are dead. How to find the bad guy in the sea of non-bad guys is the ultimate needle/haystack. Especially doing it without violating civil rights. No real investigative tool exists. Unless there is a way to actually stop the shooter before they can hurt others, the only option that government would take is more legislation, more regulation and less freedom.

Being proactive doesn't mean hassling/intimidating/harassing law abiding citizens. Seems to be norm that the majority of these "mass shooters" are already known to law enforcement - and nothing is done about it.

The kid in the Chicago suburb was well known to local law. He had already had weapons (knives) confiscated due to mental health issues, but Daddy Dearest the Politician co-signed his FOID allowing him to buy the guns, and most likely used connections to get it done. Funny how so many warning signs and actions (Articulable Facts) get nothing done.

The Uvalde shooter had a well known history of mental issues, harassment, and violent behavior. No one did anything.

The FBI was warned about the Parkland shooter a month before he committed his crimes. They didn't do anything, despite being informed of multiple issues that should have raised some concern.

Until parents and other officials (school, medical, etc) actually report these people - and in the cases they do - law enforcement actually acts, nothing will get done.

Instead of using intimidation to coerce consent to a search based on no reasonable suspicion of a law abiding person - that time could have been better spent actually doing something useful, like I dunno, following up on people being reported for verifiable reasons of suspicion or doing real "investigations." Amazing that you consider it "acceptable" for three law enforcement personnel be sent to a house to question and search someone with no suspicion of wrong-doing while I am sure their time could be better spent on more "promising" leads.......

Your "proactive" stance is fine - as long as it doesn't involve situations like the video in Delaware, or due-process circumventing red-flag laws.
 
I surprised this thread has stayed civil with the back and forth. Good job gents!

I definitely don't agree with showing them anything without a warrant, however I can also see how this homeowner would be caught off-guard and intimidated enough to just comply to get them to go away rather then thinking about what is rights are. Another thing to think about is what would it be like if he no longer had said firearm? Not sure if how private party sales work in Delaware but what if he sold it private party after purchase because he didnt like how it shoots? Certainly a plausible situation here.

Also maybe he was a new gun owner, just got into guns and got excited and bought 2 at the same time. ATF knows he is new and what better way to intimidate then show up at your door demanding to see your guns or else. Scares that guy off of never buying anything else in the future? Win win for them. I know I went HAM after getting into firearms and bought multiples within days, Not sure what I would have done if the ATF showed up at my door like that shortly after buying those and new to firearms.
 
Apparently the dude had bought seven or so firearms since January, which I don't think is a "large" amount of purchases at all. I hardly think 1 a month denotes any sort of illegal activity.
 
lol, thats not a lot of firearms for someone who collects and shoots, and well, who knows what, i've probably over the years purchased as many as five and six hand gats at once, quite a bit, gifting to my daughters and significant others, needless to say, have never (knock on the noggin) had a visit, but have had an inquiry on my C&R lic.
and just recently, had an inquiry in regards to one i sold at my downsizing sale, so, don't remember who i sold to, but some reason they were checking it out.

not sure what i would do, i tend to not be real cooperative when authorities show up unannounced to my compound, the missus, is even less cooperative. so again hard to say, lot depends on demeanor of individuals as i really don't have squat to hide, that can be proved, lol, just kidding.
here s hoping the boys and gals from alphabet depts dont visit ya.
rj
 
https://www.amazon.com/Ninamar-Door-Come-Warrant-Natural/dp/B07WSQLGYY/ref=asc_df_B07WSQLGYY?tag=bngsmtphsnus-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=79989588513670&hvnetw=s&hvqmt=e&hvbmt=be&hvdev=c&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=&hvtargid=pla-4583589115188562&psc=1
 
Watched this video earlier and my first gut reaction was to say any inspection of my private property will need to be done by the regular manner if I am suspected of a crime. I'm also in the same vein of never speak to anyone in regard to questioning by law enforcement. I've seen people's comments get twisted and turned around.

My old attorney friend's advice was always say "I will not make any statements without my council being present"
 
smithers599 said:
https://www.amazon.com/Ninamar-Door-Come-Warrant-Natural/dp/B07WSQLGYY/ref=asc_df_B07WSQLGYY?tag=bngsmtphsnus-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=79989588513670&hvnetw=s&hvqmt=e&hvbmt=be&hvdev=c&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=&hvtargid=pla-4583589115188562&psc=1

I like that :D
 
so I have a question on this.

I bought some lowers, filled out the 4473 (as required), and produced my CCW.

Since I have a CCW, does the FFL still submit the form for multiple purchase? He didn't have to phone in my background check, so I wonder if he is required to send the form, or if it is optional.
 
cool arrow said:
so I have a question on this.

I bought some lowers, filled out the 4473 (as required), and produced my CCW.

Since I have a CCW, does the FFL still submit the form for multiple purchase? He didn't have to phone in my background check, so I wonder if he is required to send the form, or if it is optional.

I'm keeping everything I can to 80% stuff, no paperwork involved at all. I just finished two more Glock 17 clones Tuesday :mrgreen: When they have sales, I buy cheap and stock deep.


Have a great, gun carryin', Kenpo day

Clyde
 
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