Re: Suppressor Purchase (FL Specific)
guntrustlawyer.com might be a good place to start. I 'JUST" sent a response to a friend about this question, take what you can from this:
I would start HERE:
http://www.mdshooters.com/showthread.php?t=7074
Post #10 outlines the trust.
Post #14 links to a sample trust.
Post #110 (and many others) are from a local attorney, who has some good things to say.
Several people are using the sample trust with good results.
I found several other samples and threads online that mentioned "language specific to NFA regulations" and edited the sample trust to get my own (PM me, I'll send you copies):
Which I edited and submitted 4 months ago for two suppressors. Look for the NFA-specific language referencing 1932 NFA.
Still waiting. I called ATF's NFA branch about a month ago (ph: 304.616.4500) with the SN of one of the cans I'm waiting for and was told the paperwork went "pending" July 28, 2011.
Last I heard my examiner, Dana Pickles, is working on paperwork from July, so it could be days, or months yet. No telling. If you've done NFA transfers you know the drill. Wait times of 4 to 6 months are "normal".
I got the idea from the FFL dealer I use to handle NFA transfers. The last time I did a transfer, since Maryland has "consolidated" (i.e. - made it MUCH more difficult to get done) the paperwork process into only ONE of their state police offices, it requires I take, literally, an entire day to get photographs, fingerprints, paperwork submitted for their approval ("not disapproved") which takes another month to get returned.
A trust requires none of those things. You basically complete the trust form, amend it if necessary with NEW items added to the trust and submit it anew.
Local attorney I spoke with wanted $500 for a cookie cutter format trust she says has worked. I'm a doctor. I charge usual and customary fees, I don't believe in raping patients and telling them I'm doing them a favor.
My dealer suggested I start with guntrustlawyer.com
I also spent (spend) a lot of time on:
http://www.snipershide.com forums (there're a couple of threads dealing with this issue),
http://www.snipershide.com/forum/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=2623250
and
http://www.snipershide.com/forum/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=1308858
also on
AR15.com
silencertalk.com
and I used to hang out on subguns.com until it became a more or less private/favorites forum for about ten guys.
I have heard of people spending as little as $150 with out of state attorneys which is reasonable to me. This being Maryland, this close to DC, reasonable is a fungible term of the lawyer's art, "usual and customary fee" is how lawyer "price gouging" was explained to me once.
"Funding the trust." This is really vague and there are about as many definitions and recommendations as there are lawyers.
Two basic methods: open a bank account with the trust's name, OR, since you are in a sense funding the trust with property, which is in essence "value," that in itself "funds the trust." It's like saying you use money to buy gold, but is gold - bullion - money? Or an object of varying value which you buy WITH money? But if you put physical gold in your estate planning, it adds value (i.e. - money) to your estate.
So I chose the latter. I put the cans in the trust as funding.
As far as paying for NFA items goes, since you are the principle actor for the trust, you are in a sense, the trust itself, you can buy anything you want and put it IN the trust. Just keep detailed notes for tax
purposes if/when it comes to that.
Keep in mind if you have NFA items you already own that are registered on an ATF form 4, you (the trust) will have to pay another $200 transfer tax to get the item registered TO the trust.
In this instance you and the trust are NOT one in the same, but the trust is considered under the law to be a person. It's how corporations are, by tradition, by law, and by recent US Supreme Court ruling, "people." Of course they are. No different from a union. But that's a little off the track here. The trust is, effectively, an individual.
I'm not a lawyer, but I can twist a tale or two, spin a political position with the best of 'em.
Hope this helps.