EXCLUSIVE: Inside the FRT Settlement with Rare Breed

Welcome to ArizonaShooting.org!

Join today!

admin

Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Apr 30, 2018
Messages
1,128
Location
N. Phoenix
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.

In this exclusive interview, James Reeves sits down with Rare Breed President Lawrence DeMonico and attorney Josiah Contarino to discuss the controversial settlement with the federal government over the Forced Reset Trigger (FRT). Why did Rare Breed settle instead of pushing for a binding decision from the Fifth Circuit or Supreme Court? Is the settlement enforceable? What does this mean for the future legality of FRTs, and can gun owners rely on this agreement for protection? We cover everything: the lawsuits in New York and Texas, the government’s fraud charges, the judge’s ruling, and what comes next for Rare Breed, the ATF, and the FRT.
 
He just reinforced what most thought. Not our 2A hero, just a guy that seized an opportunity in the market and fought for it.
He can pass on "handgun" frt's, there are ways for people to accomplish the same thing without touching their patent, frt in some form originated in the 30s I think so its a long existing public ip thing, so I'm sure it'll come along eventually now that it's a more legally safe environment to invest into. That we can thank them for at least.
I'm thinking a braced handgun like the flux chassis with an frt would be a damned good time. Odd he wouldn't agree but likes scorpions and MP5s so much.
 
Back
Top