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Old 08-31-2013, 12:23 PM
Wild&Free Wild&Free is offline
 
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Edmonton
Posts: 6,928
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Best course of action I can see is to send a Notice of Understanding to the CFO about the lack of conditions for the discharge of a restricted firearm on personal property and ask for a response within a set time frame. Send the letter out at least twice, better if you did it in triplicate, certified mail so you can be sure it was received, and await a response. If no response is forth coming follow it up with a Notice of Intent declaring you will be using your restricted on your property in a safe manner, give them a set time frame to respond and then have at it.

Responses must counter your claims on a point by point basis, so make sure you get your ducks in a row. Anything not countered in a response is accepted as truth. It may require some back and forth correspondence, but at least you'll get to the bottom of things and if LEOs come to you about it you've got documentation to back yourself up with.
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