Nothing. Why do you think something would happen?He is a lot brighter than you are.
Very few guns in the US are "registered". Only in a few of the commie states is what you would call registration. Since Florida is a free state none of my 50 are and I can sell them to whoever I want to as private sales as long as I am not doing it as a business. That is called freedom.
If I bought one of my firearms from a LLC dealer then there is a record of who the dealer sold it to but it stops there. I can sell my firearm and there is no requirement to keep any record or provide any information about the sale to the authorities.
If you are going to make comments on this you really need to know what you are talking about. That way you won't look so dumb.
Bullshit. All guns purchased by a licensed dealer is in effect registered per Federal Law. Yes you can sell a firearm to whoever you want but there is a paper trail that leads to YOU and when is investigated by law enforcement is will come back to you. You moron. And no one ever said such a private sale had to be reported to the authorities. But it is illegal even in Florida to sell to a minor, a felon or a non-resident. So if you are stupid enough to sell to a anyone prohibited from legally owning a firearm, you are part of the problem.
I've co-owned a gun store for over twenty years and I currently have my FFL.
Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence Gun Law Information Experts
The paper trail stops at you. There is absolutely no requirement for you to do any background check on anybody you sell a firearm to (at least in Florida and other free states I lived in). There is no procedure or documentation required to assure that the person you sell the firearm to is not a felon or non resident. Of course if you sold to a 10 year kid it would be hard to prove that you didn't know it was a minor but otherwise you are home free.
Your assertion that you will be prosecuted if you ever sell to a felon is simply not true. The prosecution would have to prove that you knowingly knew the buyer was a felon. The defense "he told me he wasn't" for the typical gunshow or private transfer type sales has been held up in the courts as being adequate.
Back about 20 years ago I bought a S&W from a dealer. A couple of years later I sold it to Mr. "I have no idea who" at the Tampa gunshow. About five years later I was contacted by the police because the firearm had been used in a crime. After telling the police how I sold it they were satisfied.
No one said you had to do a background check for private sales.
If a weapon you sold is found at a crime scene or in the hands of a person prohibited from owning one and it is traced back to you, you will suffer the consequence, especially if you have no bill of sale indicating when and to whom the weapon was sold. If the bill of sale shows you did in fact sell to a person that is prohibited from owning a firearm you again risk prosecution.
Yea the "I didn't know" defense works real well.
I think you're story is a fabrication.
You can think whatever you want to think.
You are confusing the the fact that most states says you can't sell to a felon to the reality that most states do not require any kind of proof on your part as a private citizen that the person you sell it to is not a felon. That is why the shithead Libtards wants universal background checks. In Florida or most other free states there is no requirement to do a background check on the person you are selling it to.
When I occasionally sell a firearm as a private sale I usually ask if they are prohibiting from own a firearm and if they are a resident of Florida. That is more than I am required to do under the law.
The "I didn't know" defense has been upheld in court for typical private transfers. If you are involved in illegal sales of firearms then that is a different ballgame.
Get caught selling to a felon and see what happens.