Apples to elephants?
I suppose you wouldn't find any examples of trusts causing or resulting traffic infractions.
I was asking a legitimate question. Are there any actual "horror" stories involving online trusts?
I am on the fence as far as an online trust or face to face with a lawyer.
Yes, I guess there are but they are rare? They were primarily with Quicken and Legal Zoom. One I heard about settled with the guy losing his firearms rights but no jail time. I read it online so the info is only as good as the source. It does imply that for every one you know of that is faulty (they got in trouble) there are hundreds that still are under the radar. ATF, if not mistaken, recommends not to use online trusts. Forgot where I read that too. It's been years since I got my trust.
They said that what happens is that ATF will okay faulty trusts as they don't have the time to look at all of it. I guess you'd be okay if they did catch errors or were responsible for missing them. One clerical error can render it null and void. So what happens is ATF okays the deal, you get the can. Everything is fine until one day for whatever reason it ends up in police hands and/or you have to go to court over it. THAT will be the FIRST time it's ever read completely by someone that knows what they are looking at, and guess whose fault it always is? Hope that one person isn't the prosecutor trying to nail your ass.
Say you loan it to a felon for the weekend. You can do that with your trust you know. It exempts you from wrongdoing in the event you are lied to by a friend and you make him a beneficiary. He can get busted, thrown in jail, and now you have to go get your can back. They'll give it back to you no problem --provided the paper it's on is good. If not, you not only are in possession of an illegal NFA item, you also transferred it.
Chances are you will be fine. But those are chances. If your trust is faulty, you are in possession of an illegal NFA device, period, whether you get caught or not. That's a chance too.
That's the only reason to go to a lawyer. Peace of mind. $200-$250 will get you the regular trust, one a bit more high speed like mine for $500 and a full estate plan for $1000 from my lawyer. He'll also call me when this Obama shit settles and we know what we are dealing with, as well as answer random questions.
Do you REALLY want to bitch and whine over the cost of fucking tax stamp? Really, all considered? Funny, some of you wouldn't get within a mile of a non-registered drop in auto sear, but have no problem using a trust you don't understand yourself. Go figure.
I've chimed in here before, but just for the sake of the fence sitters. Some of these online trust guys have their minds made up already and are simply looking for justification from others. They also don't want to consider the fact they may be sitting on illegal items, and so they champion their bad decisions "sticking their heads in the sand" as it were. I have a buddy this way, love him to death but I can't tell him a goddamn thing.
Unless you fully have 100% trust in this online trust shit, you need to go to a lawyer that specializes in NFA trusts. What surprised me is that regular estate lawyers won't even touch these --they claim they don't know enough about the specialized law to do it.