Man, that’s why I provided the Merrill link… Had I provided an attorney commenting on trusts, they’re also selling the service. I can’t tell if you’re being intentionally obtuse
I could have provided you gun-related articles saying the same but I assumed you'd make the argument of " 60% of their products are sold ot Trust holders". I dunno what you want dude.
(figure assuming LE and Military account for 40% of revenue)
https://www.merrilledge.com/article/protect-your-assets-with-trust
a trust doesn't protect an action, it protects an asset. You're yelling into the wind.
https://silencerco.com/blog/benefits-of-gun-trust
Should I pass away, and AR's/suppressors be deemed illegal...they would be transferable...
The ATF has acknowledged they were incorrect in advising that non trustees were ineligible to possess NFA items even with supervision:
https://bearingarms.com/ryan-petty/2023/01/26/atfnfa-guidance-on-non-owners-n66642
...if that's how you set up the Trust. The trust truly only adds an added level of protection - much like purchasing a piece of property through an LLC. One individual can be both the Settlor and Trustee, you are by no means required to list beneficiaries or other responsible persons.
You're...
There is a grace period - once you've filed you are good to go. Now, if they come back with a rejection, you've supplied the address you reside and where the weapon is being held. The ATF has said that at that point they would come seize your firearm.
You would have to name them on the trust which creates separate issues. Formerly friends could shoot your cans, in your presence, without their names on the trust.