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					Originally Posted by  ICU 812
					 
				 
				A friend just told me, and I guess it is so:  Texas has legalized firearms suppressors, and Gov Abbot has directed state law enforcement agencies to ignore Federal law regarding these silencers. 
 
So thet must make Texas a "Suppressor Sanctuary State". 
 
 The principle is the same. One cannot be legal and not the other as well. 
			
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 The most recent update to Texas suppressor law - which is superceded by Federal law controlling suppressors. 
 
The 
National Firearms Act (
NFA), 
73rd Congress, Sess. 2, ch. 757, 48 
Stat. 1236, enacted on June 26, 1934, currently codified as amended as 
I.R.C. ch. 53, is an 
Act of Congress in the United States that, in general, imposes a statutory 
excise tax on the manufacture and transfer of 
certain firearms and mandates the registration of those firearms. The Act was passed shortly after the repeal of 
Prohibition. The NFA is also referred to as 
Title II of the Federal firearms laws. The 
Gun Control Act of 1968 ("GCA") is Title I. 
All transfers of ownership of registered NFA firearms must be  done through the National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record (the  "NFA registry").
[2] The NFA also requires that the permanent transport of NFA firearms across state lines by the owner must be reported to the 
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF). Temporary transports of some items, most notably suppressors, do not need to be reported. 
  
                                     
Silencers are Not Prohibited Weapons in Texas
                                                                                                          
                                                                       New Texas law, HB 1819, addresses key components regarding possession of a silencer.
 In Texas, it is legal to possess a  firearm sound suppressor, or silencer, if you meet the requirements set  fourth under Texas law. HB 1819 does nothing to change this. What HB  1819 does do is ready the state for the possible change in federal  silencer laws. Texas legislatures are hopeful that changes in federal  law will make silencers available for purchase under the same conditions  as one would purchase a firearm. HB 1819 prepares state law for this  potential change at the federal level.
 Currently, the Texas Penal Code  requires that silencers are registered with the Bureau of Alcohol,  Tobacco, Firearms, & Explosives (BATF). This is because the federal  National Firearm Act requires it. BATF registration is quite an ordeal.  There is currently a nine-month approval process and $200 in fees that  registration applicants face. However, the federal law referred to as  “Hearing Protection Bill,” may change that. The bill would exempt  silencers from ATF registration and remove silencers from the  requirements of the National Firearm Act. This means that a person,  under federal law, would not have to go through the lengthy and  expensive BATF registration process. 
 If the Hearing Protection Bill is  passed before the Texas Legislature meets again, people wanting to  purchase silencers will not have to register with BATF under federal  law, but would still have to register with BATF under Texas law or face a  possible felony charge. That is the problem that HB 1819 addresses. If  the law passes at the federal level, HB 1819 makes it so Texas would no  longer require BATF registration as well.
 HB 1819 only allows further ease of access to silencers. Again, note that silencers are currently legal in Texas as long as:
 
- You are not a convicted felon, not under investigation for family violence, and not diagnosed with a mental illness;
 
- You register the silencer in the National Firearms Registration; and
 
- Send a record of silencer purchase to ATF.
 
AUSTIN, Texas (May 10, 2019) – On Friday, the Texas  House passed a bill that would decriminalize firearm sound suppressors  under state law and end some state enforcement of federal laws  regulating them in the Lone Star State.
Rep. Tom Oliverson (R-Houston), along with a bipartisan coalition of three cosponsors, introduced House Bill 2286 (
HB2286)  on Feb. 25. Under the proposed law, state agencies could not adopt any  rule, order, ordinance, or policy to enforce a federal statute, order,  rule, or regulation that purports to regulate a firearm suppressor that  does not exist under the laws the state. It would also repeal a  provision in current state law making it an offense to possess,  manufacture, transport, repair or sell a firearm suppressor unless it is  registered by the National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record.
On May 10, the House passed HB2286 
by a 92-46 vote.
As  originally introduced, the legislation would have effectively ended all  state enforcement of federal laws relating to firearms sound  suppressors, but an amendment on the House floor would allow law  enforcement agents to enforce such laws “if the officer is cooperating  with an agent of the federal government as a member of a task force.”  This opens up a huge loophole. In effect, state and local law  enforcement officers would continue to fully participate in the  enforcement of “silencer” regulations. Joint federal-state task forces  are the norm, not the exception.
The Senate should reconsider this amendment language.
Suppressors  simply muffle the sound of a gun. They do not literally silence  firearms. Nevertheless, the federal government heavily regulates  silencers under the National Firearms Act. The feds charge a $200 tax on  the purchase of the devices. Buying one also requires months-long waits  after filing extensive paperwork with the federal Bureau of Alcohol,  Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
The repeal of state  suppressor restrictions in Texas would not alter federal law, nor would  it end federal enforcement, but it would remove a layer of law hindering  access to these harmless devices. The widespread easing of  suppressor regulation would subtly undermine federal efforts to  unconstitutionally regulate firearms. As Texas activist Tom Glass put  it, “It would not stop feds from attempting to enforce, but at least it  would get Texas law right.”
As we’ve seen with marijuana and  industrial hemp, a federal regulation becomes ineffective when states  ignore it and pass laws encouraging the prohibited activity. Or when the  state decriminalizes and people start ignoring the federal prohibition  without any further state “permission” to do so.
Either way, the  federal government lacks the enforcement power necessary to maintain its  ban in such a climate, and people will increasingly take on the risk of  federal sanctions if they know the state will not interfere. This  increases when the state actively encourages “the market.”
Less  restrictive state gun laws such as HB2286 can have a similar impact on  federal gun laws. It will make it that much more difficult for the feds  to enforce federal gun control, should the people defy it, and increase  the likelihood that states with few limits will simply refuse to  cooperate with future federal enforcement efforts.
State actions  like HB2286 lower barriers for those wanting to the option of defending  themselves with firearms and encourage a “gun-friendly” environment that  would make federal efforts to limit firearms that much more difficult.
I am not sure if the Bill passed the Senate and was signed by Gov Abbott.   In the absence of confirmation - I would assume Not. 
Listening to a "Friend" on complex legal matters such as this could get one 5-20 years in Federal Prison if caught with an unregistered suppressor and convicted of the offense in Federal court. 
The "Principle" regarding "sanctuaries" is absolute BS propagated by a deluded DPST.  
No way are People and Supressors equivalent. 
 Unless You DPST's give apes and suppressors voting rights!!!!
My apologies - did not intend to hijack thread.