Well, OP does say that the person told him that his son was around, which implies the intended purchaser is likely an adult. Why beat the guy down?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Yes they are---it's why so few people pass the Louisiana statewide notary exam on the first try...The Louisiana notary program is far different than other states where what you are saying is completely true. You'd be genuinely surprised how far a good notary can take you before you really have...
I'm not sure it works the same way as other written works...IANAL, but with the hundreds/thousands of people out there reusing stock documents and making modifications to existing legal docs created elsewhere for their use, I'm pretty sure someone would have raised that red flag by now and many...
This is true, but they can draft documents from scratch per your request...that doesn't constitute legal advice so far as I know...A trust by itself is a standard doc; the NFA pieces are what is unique, but it wouldn't surprise me if some of these trusts that are being written for clients by...
What about this piece of the legislation:
This seems different than the normal firearm free zone legislation, so wouldn't a separate sign be required for this? I have never seen a sign related to body armor at any school entrance...
I bet Debby is a notary, which is completely qualified/licensed to construct trusts in the state of Louisiana. Not trying to take a lawyer's bread, but it's common for lawyers to come out vocally stating they are the only source for such documents when a notary can indeed do it, often cheaper...
I am confused...I just searched for "cabelas", "cabelas 22", and "cabelas 22lr", and the first 3 pages of results turned up no revelation that I could find that is relevant to cabelas stocking of 22lr...maybe I'm dense, but could you please either chunk out a link or PM me what you're referring...
Guys, I'm not talking about a notary who is unsure of how to do this...the newer statewide notary exams cover creation of trusts, and the exam is rather difficult for the uninitiated as it includes drafting documents like this from scratch. I don't think I'd feel uneasy about one of these...
Is that one trip with connections, or three separate trips? If one trip, you really only need to worry about Lafayette (and Memphis if it's round trip and you fly back from Memphis)…since it would be a checked bag, you don't get it back at each airport, so you wouldn't be going through that...
It's really a matter of how far you want to go, and how much you want to spend/improvise…
You CAN build a basic lower with nothing but hand tools, don't even need a vice…you don't need the purpose built stuff to assemble a lower, but from what I've seen some tools would make the job...
It's probably also worth mentioning that a notary/lawyer wouldn't need to sign a document they draft like this anyway, other than to notarize the signatures of the parties involved, in which case, their signature itself can serve as their seal. That's my impression of how it works anyway...
Dan beat me to it, but this is not true. If that were the case, notaries who provide bills of sale that they draft (I know many use canned docs, but whatev) and then notarize would be committing crimes…and that happens far too often to be a crime.
No, I don't see the grey area...in Louisiana (unlike pretty much every other state in the country) a notary has the ability to draft documents and get paid to do it. I would think your military induced notary commission is referred to as an ex-officio notary, which as you have noted limits what...
yeah, it's gotta be the distance thing….thought I was missing something special about the mechanics of the NFA trust, but I think now it was a much less technical reason as to why it went that way
In Louisiana, notaries can draft trusts and many other documents that people tend to go to lawyers over…has anyone on here gone to a notary instead of a lawyer for creation of their NFA trust? If so, can someone recommend any notaries in the Baton Rouge area that are doing this?
Also, I've...
From http://www.legis.la.gov/legis/Glossary.aspx
A legislative instrument scheduled for hearing by a committee may be voluntarily deferred upon the request of the author or member handling the instrument. An instrument voluntarily deferred without objection may be rescheduled for committee...
Hey, maybe we've all jumped this guy prematurely…maybe he's machined the lower and there is also a registered drop in auto sear included in "what you see here"…probably not, but maybe...