Last weekend, an auction held at his Florida home saw the item, described as "a one of a kind Trump Glock from the 45th President of the United States Donald J. Trump," go up for bidding during a charity event. Pictures circulating on social media show the gun being presented at the auction, with news website Meidas Touch saying that bidding for the item began at $10,000.

However, the transaction could land the former U.S. president in considerable trouble, given that federal law prohibits those under indictment from transacting firearms. Trump is embroiled in active legal proceedings, having testified at a civil trial over the New York investigation into financial fraud at the Trump Organization. The former president has denied all wrongdoing and repeatedly said that the ongoing federal and civil cases against him are part of a political witch hunt.

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Well, yeah? We do it daily.

    Say I want a suppressor. OK, there's some weird legal shit here.

    I can do the paperwork and pay my $200. That can is only good for that particular gun, and only as long as I own it.

    So I create a trust, another legal fiction like a corporation, and put the gun inside that trust. Yes, it's a legal "bucket", kinda like a corporation. (That's really sloppy, but you get the idea.)

    Now I can pass the trust onto my heirs, and they get to keep the gun/suppressor combo.

    Yes, it's really that dumb. And yes, it works that way.

    • perviouslyiner@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      So does that help for Trump's situation? I saw ATF rule 41f closed some loopholes around NFA items by requiring background checks on people using trusts to receive NFA weapons, but does it help with plain old pistols too, if a natural person isn't allowed to have them?