for fucks sake, don't talk about it if you have it. It's worth more than what you'll get for it, since you have to sell it illegally.
Give it to your first born son when he's old enough, never mention it to anybody, not your wife, not your buddies, not your family.
If you inherited it, you'd be the worst scum to sell it for profit like just another junkie.
Joseph Jackson
Auctioning inherited guns isnt actually illegal, you can do it even without license
But you should know that, sage for larp
Ethan Moore
Since it's illegal, you're not going to be able to sell it to some law abiding stranger.
If you have a close friend, who's both a gun nut, and otherwise law abiding, and rich, that's your best bet.
You're not going to get the price you would get for a transferable StG-44 in the US, just forget about that. And criminals don't want to pay a lot for it, but they certainly will steal it, if they ever find out you have one.
Maybe 1000-2000 €, you're not going to get any more, unless you're willing to take some extreme risks of selling it to strangers over the internet. And then you're most likely going to get thrown in prison instead, lose the gun, and get assfucked daily for the next years.
Justin Sanchez
keep it for when the time comes
Eli Adams
Okay.
Isaiah Butler
Way more than you think. There are only a few left in existence. It'd be priceless and illegal in every country.
Jayden Diaz
I will pay you 15,000 usd, smuggle it part by part into America via mail
Matthew Jackson
It would be legal on American soil, the only problem is that since you arent a citizen you dont have a 2nd amendment right. Atleast until you get here. I would disasemle it down to its smaller parts and ship each part over to Merica' have one of your burger friends reassemble it, sell it and give you the money. It would easily fetch 40k. It also probably hasn't seen combat being that so few were made.
Levi Sanders
you better keep that thing if you inherited it. that's a family heirloom - you keep that thing and give it to your son when he gets old enough.
Tyler Morgan
>There are only a few left in existence. There are truckloads of them floating around Eastern Europe and the Middle East. The only reason they're expensive in the US is because of the Hughes Amendment to the NFA that prevents any guns from being added to the MG registry. If your full-auto gun wasn't registered before 1986, it's illegal, no matter how old it is or how you acquired it.