So I want to buy handguns in Vermont...

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OtG

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I've just moved here (Burlingtron, the City of the Future), and I'd rather not have to travel all the way back to New Hampshire to buy handguns.

So what do I need to do? Change driver's license? Other proof of residency?
Live here for 6 months?

Thanks,
 
Vermont doesn't require a permit for any kind of carry, so I'd guess (note: GUESS) that a driver's license would do it. If you moved to Vermont 6 months ago and haven't changed your license, you are most likely in violation of the law anyway.

And if you actually have moved to Vermont, you can't legally go back to New Hampshire to buy a handgun because if you put a NH address on the paperwork and sign it, you just made a false statement to the federal government.
 
Vermont doesn't require a permit for any kind of carry, so I'd guess (note: GUESS) that a driver's license would do it. If you moved to Vermont 6 months ago and haven't changed your license, you are most likely in violation of the law anyway.

I've only lived here for a month or so (moved in Jan. 1st), but I guess I'll have to go about changing my license.


And if you actually have moved to Vermont, you can't legally go back to New Hampshire to buy a handgun because if you put a NH address on the paperwork and sign it, you just made a false statement to the federal government.

Eek. I hadn't thought of that. Good point. Some of my mail still goes to NH (parent's house), but I do indeed live here in VT.

Oh well. So much for sales-tax-free handguns.
 
Why not change the laws so that law-abiding citizens can buy handguns in any state? I can buy beer in any state. I can buy a car in any state. Why can I not buy a handgun in any state?

How about the ability to carry a handgun in any state as long as we are correcting the laws so that they are what they should be!!

Luke
 
Why not change the laws so that law-abiding citizens can buy handguns in any state? I can buy beer in any state. I can buy a car in any state. Why can I not buy a handgun in any state?

Weird, isn't it? My background check doesn't appear differently in VT than it does in NH. I'd guess the big stumbling block would be states like Mass. or NJ, that have a bunch of weird handgun restrictions.
 
Why not change the laws so that law-abiding citizens can buy handguns in any state? I can buy beer in any state. I can buy a car in any state. Why can I not buy a handgun in any state?
That, of course, is the way it SHOULD be. We can buy long guns in any state, just not handguns. It is ridiculous, and it isn't constitutional, but we need to get the SCOTUS to SAY that it isn't constitutional.
 
The last time I checked Vermont allows residents to purchase firearms in contiguous states provided the purchase is legal in that state.

I moved to Vermont about six years ago. I gladly changed my driver's license and insurance when I got here. Insurance was cheaper and coverage was better. I think if you are a fulltime resident here you might have a problem with your auto insurance if you got into an accident and you are not legally licensed and insured in Vermont.
 
Why not change the laws so that law-abiding citizens can buy handguns in any state?
There's nothing to change. You can buy handguns in any state. You just have to have it shipped to a dealer in your home state to take posession of it.
 
Picture license or some other form of picture ID. I still have the old style license without pic, so I use my passport. Picture, paperwork, cash and carry out. I do it on my lunch break. Powderhorn Sports in Williston is a good gun shop.
 
Actually if you look at the BATF website they do say that you can buy a pistol in two differant states if you have a residency in both states. If you have moved to Vermont you really don't have to do anything specific. It sounds like it will probably be up to the dealer if there is not a specific state law requiring a DL. Get a new DL and I am sure you will be fine.


(B12) What constitutes residency in a state? [Back]

The state of residence is the state in which an individual is present with the intention of making a home in that state. A member of the Armed Forces on active duty is a resident of the state in which his or her permanent duty station is located. If a member of the Armed Forces maintains a home in one state and the member's permanent duty station is in a nearby state to which he or she commutes each day, then the member may purchase a firearm in either the state where the duty station is located or the state where the home is maintained. An alien who is legally in the United states is considered to be a resident of a state only if the alien is residing in that state and has resided in that state continuously for a period of at least 90 days prior to the date of sale of the firearm. [18 U. S. C. 921( b) and 922( b)( 3), 27 CFR 178.11]


(B13) May a person who resides in one state and owns property in another state purchase a handgun in either state? [Back]

If a person maintains a home in 2 states and resides in both states for certain periods of the year, he or she may, during the period of time the person actually resides in a particular state, purchase a handgun in that state. But simply owning property in another state does not qualify the person to purchase a handgun in that state.

http://www.atf.gov/firearms/faq/faq2.htm#b12
 
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