Tigerstripe said:
yeah, ill never sell mine. if i go first my wife gets it then my son.
people do things like not reporting income all the time when selling cars.
Yes, but most people selling cars do not make a profit on the sale of the car. You buy a new car for $20K, 10 years later you sell it for 2K, you have a loss. You can not deduct personal losses, with some exceptions for capital loss items, but even then the loss deductions are limited so there's really no benefit to trying to deduct a personal loss on your 1040, which is why most people don't report them. There's no IRS reg saying you have to report a loss, but there are plenty of regs saying you have to report taxable income.
What Mike says is correct. If an agent gets hold of you and wants to make an example out of you, and believe me they do it intentionally for the "shock" value that it imparts to everybody, they are going to run you through the grinder. Best not to fool around with it and if you do keep track of your costs, you will be surprised that you aren't really making as much on it as you thought.
Remember how they've been hammering Willie Nelson for years? That's all to keep the rest of us in line.
I would expect, since these NFA trusts appear to be relatively new inventions, that the IRS will eventually get around to focusing some audit effort on them, then when they do get hold of some violations, they will make the lives of the poor individuals involved so difficult that they will wish they never heard of the word "trust". It's just the way they work, and they do it on purpose to intimidate the rest of us. They don't have anywhere near enough resources to audit every return filed every year, so they find the "high risk" returns, focus on them, find the problems or potential violations of law, press those home, and make the lives of the taxpayers involved a living hell. All with the goal of making the rest of us think twice about violating the regs. Kind of like speed limits, we all violate them but only the driver that gets caught in a radar trap is the one that has to pay the fines. If you know there's a radar trap up the road, you slow down. Same with tax returns. I'm just recommending file the returns when you have a taxable gain. It would appear to be a high exposure area with the subject matter that is owned by the trust, so everybody will be looking closely at it. I m not a lawyer but I am a CPA licensed both in SC and in NY. If I owned any of the Class 2 weapons, I would probably go the trust route also but I'd file the necessary federal and state returns when required. just my $.02.