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Yeah, we know its about someone elseNot about me, but ive always wondered as i know people who have asked and thought about it, Say the person didnt have there License and brought a gun second hand from someone and went to a skirmish or weekend event with it, would there be any backlash?
None at all, tell your "friend" to go & play, as long as he doesn't act like a dick, transports them to a site sensibly & doesn't let them be seen in public, he'll never be asked whether he is entitled to have them.Not about me, but ive always wondered as i know people who have asked and thought about it, Say the person didnt have there License and brought a gun second hand from someone and went to a skirmish or weekend event with it, would there be any backlash?
Obviously, but it sounds like the OP's "friend" may already have got his hands on a rif, & may be concerned that he'll be found out somehow for obtaining one without having a suitable defence.any comeback on being a dick will happen whether the person has UKARA, another valid defence or not
If you're not waving it about in public like a dick
was wondering how you wave your dick about in public?
With ease if blessed like mewas wondering how you wave your dick about in public?
Actually the VCRA is only concerned with the actual sale (or to be pedantic - manufacture as well) so the VCRA consequence (big £ fine) would be with the seller, and the seller would need to show they were reasonably satisfied with the purchasers ‘VCRA defence’.....if an issue does arise and you don't have a valid defense then the consequences of not following the system are on you.
Kilts help.
The transaction has no consequences for the buyer (as long as they're 18+). It's entirely on the seller.
However, if anyone is ever prosecuted and convicted for selling an airsoft RIF, I'll eat a bottle of BBs.
Not necessarily in one sitting.
Any idea on what FPS and ROF you're aiming for?![]()
the seller would need to show they were reasonably satisfied with the purchasers ‘VCRA defence’
Picture yourself as a bobby and imagine you've stopped someone who's got a RIF in their boot.
Now imagine the same scenario, but 'I'm going to an airsoft game, and here is my UKARA number to prove I'm a regular player'.
Gut instinct, who are you going to trust first? For me, it's the person with the UKARA.
or the vehicles reg is flagged as being associated with a "person of interest".
Actually the UKARA wouldn’t check that a person had no intention to do something like armed robbery at all, as a patient criminal could easily decide to play 3 games and get registered, only to go and alleviate the local post office of its stamps.As far as I'm aware, it isn't illegal to own a RIF without a UKARA. UKARA is just a way for people to check that, effectively, you're not a knob that's going to hold up a store with a toy gun.
Or Maybe they'll just buy a real steel lethal firearm from fellow committed criminals, which in some cases might be cheaper too lolActually the UKARA wouldn’t check that a person had no intention to do something like armed robbery at all, as a patient criminal could easily decide to play 3 games and get registered, only to go and alleviate the local post office of its stamps.
UKARA only shows you’ve got a previous penchant for playing with toy guns at a fixed location three times in a row.