-
Deceased August 5th, 2016
once a machine gun always a machine gun
pretty sure that'swhat the ATF says.
...
from one of the auction sites for a bm 59,
"Up for auction is a Beretta BM59 Type E Semi-Auto (select fire components have been removed); This is the Beretta version of the M1
Garand. Newly professionally re-built and blued. Rifle has only been test-fired since build, runs great. Bore is good, but slight pitting in chamber area - fine if 150/ or lower gr. brass ammo is used. Original military stock is rough, but no cracks. Sold as-is. See pics (BM59 is top rifle in pics - bottom gun is a BM62, nfs). Comes with 1 - 20 round mag. Lots more pics available upon request. Payment with USPS money order only. $50 s & h + ins. to continental US only. Do not bid if it's not legal to own in your state - it's up to you to know. Must ship to your FFL. Please email with any questions prior to bidding, no refunds or returns. Thanks for looking.
[Information added 02/23/2009 5:36:55 PM]
Reserve price is $999.00, which will include shipping "
...
seems to me
http://pics.gunbroker.com/GB/123345000/123345900/pix173214250.jpg[/IMG]
if it was once a machine gun the thing is still unlegal
Information
|
Warning: This is a relatively older thread This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current. |
|
-
03-15-2009 02:48 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
I think you are correct. My department received some M14s form the Federal Government a few years ago. They are semi-automatic, but must be registered as machine guns. I'm not too familar with the BM59 but I think it would be the same situation.
-
-
Deceased August 5th, 2016
-
Legacy Member
Not exactly. The words "Once a machine gun, always a machine gun" won't be found in either the CFR or ATF regs & rulings. But, that's generally the way that they have ruled in the past, especially in regard to M-14 type rifles.
I would not possess the rifle in question without a written ruling from ATF, listing the rifle by serial number, stating that it is legal to possess.
But, for those who believe otherwise, I have a travel tip: If you end up in the stockade at Eglin AFB, stuff your towel under your cell door at night, or else you will wake up with snakes in your bed.
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
BM-59's made as semi-auto were legally imported several years ago and do not come under the NFA. I suspect this is one of those, but I would certainly make sure before bidding.
The OAMNAAMG phrase is a kind of shorthand, but that is what the law says. Prior to 1968, the NFA defined a machinegun as a gun that fired more than once for each pull of the trigger. But the then-ATTD, alarmed by the number of unregistered machineguns brought back by WWII GI's, established what they called the DEWAT (DEactivated WAr Trophy) program. Anyone with an unregistered machinegun could weld it up and it would not only be no longer a machinegun, it would not be a gun at all.
Immediately, gun importers like Sam Cummings, with access to thousands of machineguns, imported them, welded them in bond and sold them as "Dewats".
Naturally, some were opened up ("rewatted") and used in crime. In addition, the press blew the thing out of all proportion, so that Congress, in the 1968 law, in addition to banning mail order gun sales and imposing other restrictions, changed the machinegun definition so that any weapon designed or originally made as a machinegun could never become a non-machinegun or a non-gun. The change was a rebuke to the Treasury Department's DEWAT program, whose legality had always been questionable.
Jim
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
The receiver is the only "real" thing thats the machine gun. The BM 59's were built on semi auto receivers, so therefore they are not considered a machine gun. I own a Bren. The kit was from a real full auto machine gun. The receiver was torch cut into three pieces. I sent the kit to Texas Wholesale and they put the receiver into a jig, configured it into a semi auto, and now I have a semi auto Bren. There is no way that it can be fired into a full auto mode.
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
ltcboy ,not all BM59's were semi auto . There are quite a few that are select fire .
I cannot get a close up of the left front of the receiver to tell for sure, but I believe, that the rifle in question is most likely a semi auto only rifle, the rifle would need the round cut in this area for the selector mechanism as well as a few other features. These are often made from welded or unwelded M1
garand receivers.
You can have a M1 receiver converted to a semi BM59 by CMP
armory for $450. Golden State and National Ordnance made some of the from welded M1demills back in the 60's and 70's.
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed

Originally Posted by
ltcboy
I own a Bren. The receiver was torch cut into three pieces...they put the receiver into a jig, configured it into a semi auto, and now I have a semi auto Bren. There is no way that it can be fired into a full auto mode.
Well, ltcboy, that is just what MKS did with those M14s and they went to jail. If the receiver retains the original serial number or any identification as a BREN gun, I think you and the welder could be in trouble. It is not a machinegun because of how it can fire but because the receiver was originally a machinegun. That is the whole point of OAMGAAMG. The fact that the gun can't fire full auto is irrelevant, because that is no longer the definition in the law.
Jim
-
Legacy Member
The Bm-59 was/is a select fire weapon. Beretta made a semi auto only version deginated as the BM-61 (IIRC)
-
-
Legacy Member
Gun sold. This looks like trouble, even if only semi-automatic. One to be happy to have missed.
-