Nothing wrong with PPT, unless your hiding something.
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Failed Background Check
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Failing Background Check
You can fail the background check for several reasons other than crimminal offenses. Your DMV record is checked first to see if you have unpaid fines, failures to appear warrants etc. Unpaid child support will also get you a denial along with unpaid state taxes.Comment
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Stop making **** up.
Those things will only get you denied if you let it go so far that your license is revoked or suspended in which case you would need to get CA ID
Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk 2Artist formally known as CEO of Tracy Rifle and PistolComment
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Originally posted by jakejake527Totally different if you didnt know something changed in your background or an error happened. Not everyone does a background check on themselves before buying a gun.
You are right, not everyone does a background check on themselves before buying a gun, but most of us do know about our own backgrounds - and know if there is or could be an issue with them.
If you have a clean background, there is no reason why you should have any worry about anything going wrong with a transaction, unless what you are trying to tell us is that you are the kind of person who worries about these kind of things all the time. :ike you worry about being pulled over for a traffic violation and that your license might have been suspended on accident or that there could be an erroneous warrant out for your arrest.
If you are so worried, and just have to know before - go and pay for the pre-purchase check - although remember that information is always being updated, so make sure you make the transaction immediately after the pre-purcahse check, because if you wait some error might be made and then you'll have to start all over again...Comment
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COMPLETE B.S.Comment
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Again, and I highlighted it for you. YOUR BACKGROUND...how is that the seller's responsibility in any way? If you can somehow prove to me that it was in any small way the seller's responsibility to know that you would pass your background check I will agree with your misguided idea of being owed your money back for failing a background check.Originally posted by jakejake527Totally different if you didnt know something changed in your background or an error happened. Not everyone does a background check on themselves before buying a gun.
Unless you were talking to yourself....which is weirdAny man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. - H.L Mencken
Hokey religions and ancient weapons are no match for a good blaster at your side, kid. - Han Solo
"Moms Demand Action" sounds less like a gun control group and more like the title of a porn flick from the mid-90s.Comment
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I'd wager these fees are on guns they sell not PPTs.Comment
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Isnt there a thread in 2A for people who have been denied for stupid reasons? I thought I read that some people were denied for owing money on traffic tickets? And for child support?
Im not arguing one way or the other but I could have swore I read somewhere that in CA they were delaying people for the dumbest reason.A note to the NSA or anyone gathering information on me, this disclaimer is for you..."Everything I type on this website Is purely fictional and for entertainment purposes only. None of it is true."
Also, sometimes I type in CAPS to emphasize a POINT. Please dont interpret that as YELLING. Sorry if I HURT any fuzzy little bunny's FEELINGS out there.Comment
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????
I assume you own a gunshop and need the revenue.
Plus, reputable gunshops are hard to find with all the asshattery you see in them.
ppt is the best way to get used guns without being ***-raped.NRA Certified Rifle Instructor
NRA Certified Range Safety OfficerComment
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It happens believe it or not. Look up Shirey v. Los Angeles County Civil Service Commission, (B238355 May 6, 2013).How does something just change in your background without knowing it?
Sorry, this doesn't look to be all a hypothetical situation. Sounds like you are holding back what really happened. Sounds like the recent DOJ delays got you.
If it was just all for learning "what if" then you could have just done a google search with this:
site:calguns.net dros denied
This dude caught a DV case in 92, was convicted of a lesser charge. Then went on to become a deputy sherrif only to have his agency determine that he was in fact, inelligable to own a firearm. His rights were restored, and he became a cop. And they changed their mind years later. So it happens.There are 3 kinds of people in this world.
The wise, learn from the mistakes of others.
The smart, learn from their own mistakes.
The others, well......they just never learn.
"Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, Give Me Liberty, Or Give Me Death!"
Patrick Henry.Comment
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There are 3 kinds of people in this world.
The wise, learn from the mistakes of others.
The smart, learn from their own mistakes.
The others, well......they just never learn.
"Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, Give Me Liberty, Or Give Me Death!"
Patrick Henry.Comment
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The firearm is not yours until it is released. By law it goes back to the seller if you fail the background check. You will have to contact the seller to get your money back. If they refuse you can take them to court.
It is also a crime both in the state and federally to attempt to buy a firearm if you are prohibited, this is even stated on the paperwork, getting your money back will be the least of your worries.
Sent from my SGH-T999 using Tapatalk 2Last edited by JDay; 05-10-2013, 3:37 AM.Oppressors can tyrannize only when they achieve a standing army, an enslaved press, and a disarmed populace. -- James Madison
The Constitution shall never be construed to authorize Congress to prevent the people of the United States, who are peaceable citizens, from keeping their own arms. -- Samuel Adams, Debates and Proceedings in the Convention of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 86-87 (Pearce and Hale, eds., Boston, 1850)Comment
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This was because of Lautenberg which was a retroactive ban on anyone convicted of DV that passed in 1996. Certain DV charges did not prohibit firearms ownership before 1996. A new law was written and then they did. No one changed their minds, just enacted a new law. (Federal)It happens believe it or not. Look up Shirey v. Los Angeles County Civil Service Commission, (B238355 May 6, 2013).
This dude caught a DV case in 92, was convicted of a lesser charge. Then went on to become a deputy sherrif only to have his agency determine that he was in fact, inelligable to own a firearm. His rights were restored, and he became a cop. And they changed their mind years later. So it happens.Artist formally known as CEO of Tracy Rifle and PistolComment
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