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Thread: Drill Purpose Rifle L59A1 UK Legal Status

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    Legacy Member tlvaughn's Avatar
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    I am amazed at the hurdles some of you must jump over just to acquire a piece of history. I ordered another L59A1 this week, and below was the process:

    I ordered the rifle on Tuesday, called the company and gave them my credit card info, faxed them my C&R, they shipped it Wednesday, and UPS is delivering it today.

    No intent to rub it in, just amazed at the different laws in diffrent countries. It's a shame it isn't this easy for all of us!!
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    Legacy Member Mk VII's Avatar
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    You won't get total costs now, only legal aid minimum rate.

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    Legacy Member Kev G's Avatar
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    Sorry to reserect this thread but has the status been challenged or any progress been made since the last post ?

    ATB KG

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    Deceased January 15th, 2016 Beerhunter's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kev G View Post
    Sorry to reserect this thread but has the status been challenged or any progress been made since the last post ?

    ATB KG
    If you mean has the law been changed, the answer is no and so the L59 continues not to be within the specification of a deactivated firearm laid down by the 1968 Firearms Act (as Amended). That is to say each and every L59 is therefore still liable to challenge and has to be defended in its own right.

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    Peter Laidler's Avatar
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    Get one KG then have it examined by someone who's competent to do so, then take it AND the examination certificate to the proof house who will agree with what's been said 100% and issue you with a letter to that effect BUT that they can't certify that it's deacted to the HO spec but that it is totally incapable of blah blah blah AND that the specification actually exceeds the laid down spec...........

    Then take the paperwork to your local plod and request that in the light of the proof house opinion and the the UKicon MoD fact (we only deal in facts your honour......) they remove it from your FAC.

    The problem as I've heard is that there are some 'L59's' that are simply purporting and dressed-up to be L59's. But unless they conform to the last EMER, they ain't. This thread isn't going to die. But the answer is simplicity itself

    As the great Mr Kalashnikov told an Engineers Conference. '............it's easy to make things complicated. The difficulty is making complicated things easy'. I wish I'd invented a) that saying and b) his rifle

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    Legacy Member Kev G's Avatar
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    Peter I was thinking more in the line of an L54 so will start in new thread in the Bren forum.
    Just interested to find out if anyone had taken up the challenge and if so how they had fared ?

    ATB KG

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    Deceased January 15th, 2016 Beerhunter's Avatar
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    Same law for a Bren, just different rules. For example, to benefit from the Act, the Barrel Group must be welded to the Body Group. If it is not then the Proof House can't pass it as deactivated and so it has to take its chance in court.

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    Peter Laidler's Avatar
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    The irony of the Bren DP saga (only real, MoD spec L54/5's of course) is that they were actually being sold as deactivated, off certificate during the 80's BEFORE there was even such a category as 'deactivated', for the princely sun of £57 or so. This was on the basis that they were not firearms as defined and as such, exempt from the act. Mind you, when you could buy the real McCoy as a single shot firearm or a smooth bored shotgun for the same, then quite understandably, Mr Pannell didn't sell many!

    I saw one recently that had been purchased as an L54 DP Bren prior to the 'ban' and subsequently re-submitted for certification. Just the barrel welded in and it passed. But was there even a need for it to have been re-submitted on the basis that the law isn't retrospective?

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    Deceased January 15th, 2016 Beerhunter's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Peter Laidlericon View Post
    I saw one recently that had been purchased as an L54 DP Bren prior to the 'ban' and subsequently re-submitted for certification. Just the barrel welded in and it passed. But was there even a need for it to have been re-submitted on the basis that the law isn't retrospective?
    Not in my opinion, that is to say, providing the owner was ready to fight, in court, any constabulary that said that he/she was is possession of a Section Five firearm or parts thereof.

    I remember in the pre-1988 Firearms Amendment Act that some constabularies did not like Deacts and took every opportunity to prosecute.

  10. #10
    Legacy Member Kev G's Avatar
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    Just to muddy the waters but would appreciate any comments or opinion on the status of 'relics' if that is the correct classification for ground dug rusty/damaged weapons ?
    As part of my collection I would like to bring back from Franceicon a Dunkirk Bren or SMLE that has been dug up.
    How rusty or damaged does it have to be before it is considered a relic and isn't considered a firearm ?

    ATB KG

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