During the Second World War, the US military designed and manufactured a pistol called FP-45 liberator. The name FP-45 is an abbreviation for "flare projector.45 caliber", the smallest design of 23 pretends to be misleading. General Motors has produced more than one million parts in half a year. The pistol itself is not an effective gun, it is clumsy and not made cleverly.
The 1938 Federal Firearms Act ("FFA") imposed federal licensing requirements on gun manufacturers, importers, and personnel who sell firearms. The term Federal Gun Support (FFL) is used today to refer to the members of the gun industry applied to this permission request today. In addition to the licensed part of the FFA, the law also requires the license holder to maintain customer records and to assign firearms to certain categories of people, such as convicted felons. Such people are often referred to as "banned buyers". A situation that leads to a ban (such as conviction of a felony) is often referred to as "disability". The FFA was abolished by the Firearm Control Act of 1968. However, many of these provisions were redesigned as part of the additional claim.
The first Federal law on firearms was the second amendment of the US Constitution ratified in 1791. For 143 years, this is the only major federal law concerning firearms. The next Federal Firearms Act is the National Firearms Act of 1934, which stipulated the consumption tax and enacted gun selling rules requiring the registration of certain firearms like machine guns. After assassination of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., the gun control law of 1968 was enacted. This bill regulates gun trading, restricts mail order, and allows shipment only to authorized gun dealers. The law also prohibits the sale of weapons to armed men, felonies, suspects, fugitives, illegal aliens, drug addicts who were unjustly dismissed from psychiatric hospital staff.