![]() ![]() ![]() Gun dealers/FFLs must comply with Federal and State statutes and regulations. Here are some salient points, based upon my reading of USC and ILCS laws, and the current ATF Federal Firearms Regulations Reference Guide … ![]() InterestedBystander is essentially correct. So even if you dont live in a home rule suburb if you have firearms laws on the books its likely you would win the case.īut some Cook County home rule suburbs do note that Blair Holt assault weapon ban is still in effect in that specific suburb, like Schaumburg. There has been past non firearm cases that ruled in favor of a non home rule town ordinances overriding Cook County. Because Des Plaines has thisĪbout guns, but no mention of any of the county ordinance youd only follow Des Plaines home rule laws. There is someone here that did get a few SBRs registered in Des Plaines, than was denied their latest application so not even the ATF knows what the law is.įor the OP, the way home rule works is first the town must have home rule (not all Cook County towns do) and second they need some laws on the books that pertain to firearms. #SHOOT POINT BLANK HODGKINS LICENSE#This despite, Id assume, meeting Northbrooks own complex dealer licensing scheme (in Chicago and Northbrook you need a per cost federal, state, and town license to sell). In Northbrook Optics Planet straddles the Lake/Cook line on the Cook side and had to stop inventorying anything that the Cook ban applied to. Im going to assume the lawyers did their homework. No idea how HR logistics apply to businesses.I havent seen a Cook Suburb that explicitly overrides the ban in their ordinances, anyone else know of one?Įver been to Maxon in Des Plaines? Guns for sale there violate Cook Countys Blair Holt ban being sold, shot there, walked from a parked car no longer transporting into and out of the facility? Thats in Cook County, but Des Plaines is a home rule so the Blair Holt ban does not apply. There are also gun shop location restrictions. They still have a concealed carry law on the books. OakLawn doesnt have much on books.says what you cant have but not what you can so who knows how that would play out. Ive read people have had SBR applications denied even though they are in an HR town and LE is good with it but not having anything on books nor LE statement in writing ( which they would not give) my understanding is it gets overridden by the county. Someone please show me an HRA town that has a law on books that it's ok for residents to own/possess/sell so called AW or anything on their county (in this case Cook) AWB list. FWIW there has yet to be a clean test case (ordinance violation that sticks without any other charges). Make the decision that fits your legal budget and lifestyle. Heres the ordinance, not a lawyer so the best advice I can give is read it yourself in its entirety. But the dealer likely doesnt want to hear you intend to buy the gun intending to violate the ordinances. So theres no probable cause to have your door kicked in. Like, your hunting cabin, gun range locker, etc could be outside Cook County. This is perfectly legal as a permanent residence doesnt need to be the address the gun legally stays at. Most are nice enough to sell Cook/Chicago banned guns to people with Cook County addresses on their FOIDs without giving them a hard time. Gun store employees are not lawyers, so its best they dont add any legal commentary on the transaction. ![]() The included magazine is by Cook County and Chicagos dumb legal definition a high capacity magazine. It has a few features that make it banned like a threaded barrel and a pistol grip. ![]()
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