Originally posted by Bingolong
THAT is a Stevens .410
You are almost right. It is a Stevens No. 35 Off-Hand Shotgun. Google it up.
It is, beyond doubt, a shotgun. It is
classified by the NFA as "any other weapon", a typically legalese term used as a catch-all for those guns that didn't immediately fit into the other descriptions in the National Firearms Act of 1934. But it is a shotgun nonetheless. Your first hint might have been that it shoots
shotgun shells.
As for registration, yes, that's true. However, other hand-held
shotguns like the Taurus Judge do not have to be registered.
A Stevens No. 35 Off-Hand Shotgun can be purchased today by anyone that can muster up the whopping $5 transfer tax the NFA requires.
BTW, you seem to be confused about legal and illegal weapons. For example your response to my question about the Miller weapon being a shotgun was:
"And how do you explain Miller's gun being considered a shotgun? Clearly it wasn't shoulder fired. The buttstock was cut down to basically a pistol grip."
It wasnt, it was illegal, it was "any other weapon". So is the stevens 410.
If the Miller shotgun was classified as "any other weapon" it wouldn't have been illegal at all. It would merely have required registration and a payment of the $5 tax.
But once again, you are simply wrong. The Miller gun would have been classified as a "Short Barreled Shotgun" under the NFA, not "any other weapon". As such, it could be legally owned if registered and the appropriate tax paid.
For example, you could buy this SBS right now:
From this site
here for$780 + transfer fee.
Once again, I am reminded of the amount of study and depth of knowledge you show with regards to this entire subject.