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For general information on each policy, click the heading for that policy. Please note that many firearm-related laws have exceptions for military and law enforcement personnel.
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Connecticut prohibits any person from possessing an assault weapon unless the weapon was possessed prior to July 1, 1994, and the possessor:
Was eligible to apply for a certificate of possession for the assault weapon by July 1, 1994;
Lawfully possessed the assault weapon prior to October 1, 1993; and
Is not in violation of Connecticut General Statutes §§ 29-37j (purchase of firearm with intent to transfer to prohibited person), 53-202a to
53-202k (assault weapon regulations), and 53a-46a(h) (committing a capital offense using an assault weapon).
Section 53-202c.
Section 53-202b prohibits persons from distributing, transporting, importing into the state, selling or giving an assault weapon to any person.
Section 53-202a defines an "assault weapon" as:
-
Any selective-fire firearm capable of fully automatic, semi-automatic
or burst fire at the option of the user;
Any of a list of specified semi-automatic firearms (click here to view the list);
-
Any semi-automatic rifle that has an ability to accept a detachable
magazine and has at least two of the following:
A folding or telescoping stock;
-
A pistol grip that protrudes conspicuously beneath
the action of the weapon;
A bayonet mount;
A flash suppressor or threaded barrel designed to accommodate a flash suppressor; and
A grenade launcher;
A semi-automatic pistol that has an ability to accept a detachable magazine and has at least two of the following:
An ammunition magazine that attaches to the pistol outside of the pistol grip;
A threaded barrel capable of accepting a barrel extender, flash suppressor, forward handgrip or silencer;
A shroud that is attached to, or partially or completely encircles, the barrel and that permits the shooter to hold the firearm with the non-trigger hand without being burned;
A manufactured weight of fifty ounces or more when the pistol is unloaded; and
A semi-automatic version of an automatic firearm; or
A semi-automatic shotgun that has at least two of the following:
A folding or telescoping stock;
A pistol grip that protrudes conspicuously beneath the action of the weapon;
A fixed magazine capacity in excess of five rounds; and
An ability to accept a detachable magazine; or
A part or combination of parts designed or intended to convert a firearm into an assault weapon named specifically in the statute or described in the statute, or any combination of parts from which an assault weapon may be rapidly assembled if those parts are in the possession or under the control of the same person.
A firearm that has
been permanently rendered inoperable is not an
assault weapon. Id.
A person who lawfully possessed an assault
weapon prior to October 1, 1993 may continue to
possess the weapon if he or she registered it
in compliance with
section 53-202d and
obtained a certificate of possession.
Section 53-202d(d) provides that such a person
may possess a registered assault weapon only
at:
His or her home, property or
business;
Property owned by another with
the owner's express permission;
Certain target ranges or shooting
clubs; and
A firearms exhibition, display or
educational project.
A person may also possess a registered
assault weapon while transporting the weapon to
or from a permitted location or to a licensed
gun dealer for repair. Id. When
transported, an assault weapon must be unloaded
and, if transported in a vehicle, kept in the
trunk or in a case which is inaccessible to the
operator or passenger of the vehicle.
Section 53-202f.
When a person wishes to dispose of a registered assault weapon, he or she may transfer the weapon only to a licensed dealer, a police department or the Department of Public Safety. Sections 53-202d and 53-202e. A person who possesses a registered assault weapon must report the theft of the weapon within 72 hours of the time the person discovered or should have discovered the theft. Section 53-202g.
An assault weapon defined under section 53-202a(a)(3) or (4) is exempt from transfer restrictions and registration requirements if it was legally manufactured prior to September 13, 1994. Section 53-202m.
Pursuant to
section 53-202n, a person
may possess an
Auto-Ordnance Thompson type, Avtomat
Kalashnikov AK-47 type, MAC-10, MAC-11 or
MAC-11 Carbine type assault weapon if:
-
It was
obtained on or after October 1, 1993 and before
May 8, 2002;
-
The
possessor is not prohibited from possessing the
weapon under any other law; and
-
The
possessor has notified the Department of Public
Safety, prior to October 1, 2003, that he or
she possesses the weapon.

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Federal
law generally requires that licensed firearms dealers conduct
a background check on all prospective firearms purchasers to
ensure that such persons are not prohibited from buying or
possessing a firearm. This background check requirement and
the National Instant Criminal Background Check System (“NICS”)
were enacted through the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention
Act, pursuant to Public Law 103-159, and codified at
18 U.S.C. § 921 et seq. Federal law defines a number
of classes of prohibited purchasers (including felons,
fugitives, persons adjudicated as “mental defectives” or those
committed to mental institutions), and leaves to the states
the power to determine additional classes. (For a complete
list of federally prohibited purchasers, click
here.)
Under the
Brady Act, states have the option of serving as a “state point
of contact” and conducting their own background checks using
NICS and state informational records and databases, or having
the checks performed by the FBI using only NICS. Federal law
does not require that private sellers (persons other than
firearms dealers) conduct background checks on prospective
purchasers.
In Connecticut, all firearms transfers by licensed dealers are processed directly through the Connecticut Department of Public Safety ("CDPS"), which enforces the federal purchaser prohibitions referenced above. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 29-36l, Bureau of Justice Statistics Survey of State Procedures Related to Firearm Sales, 2005 (November 2006). In addition, Connecticut has adopted other classes of prohibited persons, and incorporated some of the federal prohibitions as state offenses. Section 53a-217 provides that, subject to certain limited exceptions, no person shall possess a firearm if he or she:
Has been convicted of a felony;
Has been convicted as delinquent for the commission of a serious juvenile offense;
Is subject to a restraining or protective order of any state court after notice and an opportunity to be heard, in a case involving use, attempted use or threatened use of physical force against another person;
Is subject to a firearms seizure order for posing risk of imminent personal injury to self or others issued after notice and an opportunity to be heard; or
Is prohibited from shipping, transporting, possessing or receiving a firearm pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(4) (persons who have been adjudicated as a mental defective or who have been committed to a mental institution).
No person, firm, or corporation, including any private (unlicensed) seller, may transfer a handgun to a person unless the person has a permit to carry a handgun, a permit to sell handguns at retail, or a handgun eligibility certificate. Section 29-33(b), (c). The certificate can only be obtained after a background check conducted by CDPS. Section 29-33(c). Pursuant to section 29-36f, a person may not obtain a handgun eligibility certificate if he or she:
Failed to successfully complete an
approved course in the safety and use of handguns;
Has been convicted of a felony (with limited
exceptions) or of certain violent or intimidating
misdemeanors;
Has been convicted as a delinquent for the commission of a serious juvenile offense;
Has been discharged from custody within the preceding twenty years after having been found not guilty of a crime due to mental disease or defect pursuant to section 53a-13;
-
Has been confined in a mental hospital
for persons with psychiatric disabilities within the
preceding year by order of a probate court;
-
Is subject to a restraining or
protective order issued by a court in a case involving the
use, attempted use or threatened use of physical force
against another person;
-
Is subject to a firearms seizure order
for posing risk of imminent personal injury to self or
others issued after notice and an opportunity to be
heard;
Is prohibited from shipping, transporting, possessing or receiving a firearm pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(4) (persons who have been adjudicated as a mental defective or who have been committed to a mental institution);
-
Is an alien illegally or unlawfully in
the United States; or
-
Is less than twenty-one years of age.
In addition, any person wishing to sell a long gun at
retail must verify through the Department of Public Safety
that the transferee is eligible to possess a firearm. Section 29-37a.
Private firearm transfers (i.e., transfers by non-firearms dealers) of rifles and shotguns that do not occur at a gun show are not subject to background checks in Connecticut, although federal and state purchaser prohibitions still apply. See the Connecticut Private/Secondary Sales section.
Under section 29-38c, a state’s attorney or two police officers may file a complaint for seizure of a firearm when there is probable cause to believe that a person who possesses a firearm poses a risk of imminent personal injury to self or others. Probable cause may be based on:
Recent threats or acts of violence directed towards self or others;
Recent acts of cruelty to animals;
Reckless use or brandishing of a firearm;
A history of use or threatened use of physical force against others;
Illegal use of controlled substances or abuse of alcohol;
Involuntary confinement to a mental hospital.

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Connecticut General Statutes § 29-7h(b)(1), adopted in 2001, requires that the Division of Scientific Services ("Division") of the Connecticut Department of Public Safety establish a firearms evidence databank. The databank is a computer-based system that scans a "test fire" (discharged ammunition consisting of a cartridge case or bullet or fragment thereof containing sufficient microscopical characteristics to compare with other discharged ammunition) from a handgun and stores an image of the test fire in a manner suitable for retrieval and comparison to other test fires and to other evidence in a criminal investigation. Section 29-7h(a)(1), (5).
The databank may be used to: 1) compare two or more cartridge cases, bullets or other projectiles submitted to the Division laboratory or produced at the laboratory from a handgun; or 2) verify by microscopic examination any resulting match, upon the request of a police department as part of a criminal case investigation. Section 29-7h(b)(2). Any image of a cartridge case, bullet or fragment thereof that is not matched by a databank search shall be stored in the databank for future searches. Section 29-7h(b)(3).
A police department shall submit to the laboratory any handgun that comes into police custody as the result of a criminal investigation, as found property, or for destruction, prior to the return or the destruction of the handgun. Section 29-7h(c)(1). The laboratory shall collect a test fire from each submitted handgun within 60 days of submission, and label the test fire with the handgun manufacturer, type of weapon, serial number, date of the test fire and name of the person collecting the test fire. Section 29-7h(c)(2). Police departments are required to collect a test fire from every handgun that is to be issued to an employee. Section 29-7h(d)(1). Police departments were required to collect a test fire from every handgun issued by the department to an employee no later than six months after October 1, 2001, and from every handgun issued to an employee since that date, prior to issuance. Id.
The Division may permit a police department that complies with all laboratory guidelines and regulations adopted by the Commissioner of Public Safety regarding the operation of the databank to: 1) collect test fires from handguns that come into the custody of the police department; 2) set up a remote terminal to enter test fire images directly into the databank; and 3) search the databank. Section 29-7h(b)(4).
The laboratory may share databank information with other law enforcement agencies, both within and outside Connecticut, and may participate in a national firearms evidence databank program. Section 29-7h(e).

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Open Carrying/Exposed Firearms
With limited exceptions, no person may carry a handgun either concealed or openly, without a permit, except in his or her home or place of business. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 29-35(a).
Transportation of Firearms
Pursuant to section 29-38, any person who knowingly has in a vehicle any weapon, including a handgun, for which a permit has not been issued may be fined up to one thousand dollars or imprisoned up to five years. Exceptions are provided for the possession of unloaded BB guns stored in the truck or a locked container other than the glove compartment, or possession of any firearm by any person who holds a valid hunting, fishing or trapping license. Id.
A person may transport a handgun in a motor vehicle without a permit if it is unloaded, not readily accessible or directly accessible from the passenger compartment of the vehicle or, in a motor vehicle that does not have a compartment separate from the passenger compartment, contained in a locked container other than the glove compartment if the person is:
Carrying the handgun in the package in which it was originally wrapped at the time of sale and transporting it from the place of sale to the purchaser's residence or place of business;
Removing his or her household goods or effects from one place to another;
Transporting the handgun from his or her place of residence or business to a place or individual where or by whom it is to be repaired or while returning to his or her place of residence or business after the handgun has been repaired;
Transporting the handgun in or through the state for the purpose of competitions, formal training, repair or any meeting or exhibition of an organized collectors' group if such person is a United States resident and is permitted to possess and carry a handgun in the state or subdivision of the United States in which such person resides;
Transporting the handgun to and from a testing range at the request of a handgun permit issuing authority; or
Transporting an antique handgun.
Section 29-35(a).
Section 53-205 prohibits any person from possessing in any vehicle or snowmobile any long gun of any gauge or caliber while the long gun contains any loaded shell or cartridge capable of being discharged in the barrel, chamber or magazine.
Concealed Weapons Licensing Requirements
Connecticut is a "may issue" state, meaning that local law enforcement has discretion in determining whether or not to issue a permit to carry a handgun. Connecticut’s permit law does not specify between carrying a handgun concealed and carrying openly. Pursuant to
Connecticut General Statutes § 29-28(b), a chief of police, warden or selectman may issue a permit to carry a handgun to a person who:
Has a bona fide residence or place of business within the jurisdiction in which he or she is applying;
Intends to make only lawful use of the handgun for which the permit will be issued;
Is a “suitable person” to receive a permit;
Has successfully completed a course approved by the Commissioner of Public Safety in the safety and use of handguns;
Has not been convicted of a felony or of a violation of:
Criminal possession of a narcotic substance;
Criminally negligent homicide;
Assault in the third degree or assault in the third degree of
an elderly, blind, pregnant, disabled or mentally retarded
person;
Threatening in the second degree;
Reckless endangerment in the first degree;
Unlawful restraint in the second degree;
Riot in the first or second degree or inciting to riot; or
Stalking in the second degree;
Has not been convicted as a delinquent for the commission of a serious juvenile offense, as defined in section 46b-120;
Has not been discharged from custody within the preceding twenty years after having been found not guilty of a crime by reason of mental disease or defect pursuant to section 53a-13;
Has not been confined in a hospital for persons with psychiatric disabilities within the preceding twelve months by order of a probate court;
Is not subject to a restraining or protective order issued by a court in a case involving the use, attempted use or threatened use of physical force against another person;
Is not subject to a firearms seizure order issued for posing risk of imminent personal injury to self or others after notice and hearing;
Is not prohibited from shipping, transporting, possessing or receiving a firearm pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(4) (persons who have been adjudicated as a mental defective or who have been committed to a mental institution);
Is not an alien illegally or unlawfully in the United States; and
Is at least twenty-one years of age.
There is a $70.00 fee to obtain a permit to carry a handgun. Additional fees are required to cover the cost of the background check. Section 29-30(a).
Additional application and background check requirements, as well as permit suspension or disqualification information, is detailed under sections 29-28a, 29-30, and 29-32.
Disclosure or Use of Information
Connecticut does not allow personal application or permit information of concealed weapons permit holders to be made public. Pursuant to section 29-28(d), the name and address of a person issued a state permit to carry a handgun or a local permit to carry a handgun issued prior to October 1, 2001 (the effective date of the law authorizing state-issue permits in place of local permits), may not be disclosed except to:
Law enforcement officials acting
in the performance of their duties;
Firearms transferors making requests pursuant to
section 29-33 for verification that such state, local, or temporary state permit is still valid and
has not been suspended or revoked; and
The Commissioner of Mental
Health and Addiction Services for persons subject to an order
of commitment.
Duration & Renewal
A permit to carry a handgun is valid for up to five years from the date the permit became effective. Section 29-30(b). Each renewal permit is valid for five years. Id. The fee for each renewal permit is $35. Section 29-30(a).
Location Limits
A permit does
not authorize a person to carry a handgun on any premises where
the possession or carrying of a handgun is prohibited by the
person who owns or controls the premises. Section 29-28(e). No person, unless specifically licensed or privileged to do so,
may carry a firearm on the property of an elementary or secondary
school or at a school-sponsored activity. Section 53a-217b.
Reciprocity
Pursuant to section 29-28(f), a bona fide resident of the United States who does not reside or work in Connecticut and holds a concealed handgun permit issued by another state may apply to the Commissioner of Public Safety for a permit to carry a handgun in
Connecticut.
Brady Exemption
Concealed weapons permit holders in Connecticut are not exempt from background checks when purchasing a firearm, according to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) chart that outlines those permits that qualify as alternatives to the federal Brady Act. Please note that ATF’s exempt status determination for a given state is subject to change without notice.
Under federal law, persons who have been issued state permits to purchase or possess firearms are exempt from background checks if those permits were issued: 1) within the previous five years in the state in which the transfer is to take place; and 2) after an authorized government official has conducted a background investigation, including a search of the NICS database, to verify that possession of a firearm would not be unlawful. 18 U.S.C. § 922(t)(3), 27 C.F.R. § 478.102(d).

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Connecticut law prohibits any person from storing loaded firearms on his or her premises if he or she knows or reasonably should know that a minor (person under age 16) is likely to gain access to the firearm without the permission of the minor’s parent or guardian. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 29-37i. A person is not criminally liable for this prohibition if the firearm is locked in a box or other container in a location which a reasonable person would believe to be secure, or the person carries the firearm on his or her person or within such close proximity that he or she can readily retrieve and use it as if it were on his or her body. Id. A person is criminally liable for "criminally negligent storage of a firearm" when he or she does not comply with these safe storage requirements and a minor obtains the firearm and causes injury or death to himself, herself, or any other person. Section 53a-217a. A person who violates section 29-37i shall be held strictly liable for damages when a minor obtains the unlawfully stored firearm and causes the injury or death of any person. Section 52-571g.
See the
Connecticut Locking Devices
section for information concerning gun lock requirements.

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Any person who sells ten or more handguns in a calendar year or is a federally licensed firearms dealer must have a handgun permit to advertise, sell, deliver, or offer for sale or delivery, or possess with intent to sell or deliver, any handgun. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 29-28(a). The chief of police, warden of a borough, or first selectman of a town may issue a permit to sell only if the applicant holds a valid state eligibility certificate for a handgun or a valid permit to carry a handgun and the applicant submits documentation sufficient to establish that local zoning requirements have been met for the location of the sale. Id.
Business organizations that sell firearms at retail must have burglar alarms installed on their premises where ten or more firearms are stored and kept for sale. Section 29-37d. The alarms must be connected directly to the local police department. Id.
Pursuant to sections 29-33 and 29-37a(a), a person, firm or corporation who wishes to sell a long gun at retail or a handgun (whether a licensed dealer or private seller) must:
Have the transferee complete a written application and retain the application for at least twenty years or until he or she goes out of business;
Make the application available for inspection during
normal business hours by law enforcement;
Transfer only to a transferee he or she knows or who
presents appropriate identification (handguns only);
Obtain an authorization number from the Department of
Public Safety;
Wait two weeks from the date of application before
transferring the firearm (long guns only).
Under
section 29-37f, any person, firm or corporation
that engages in the retail sale of goods, where the principal
part of such business is not firearms, may not employ a person
to sell firearms in a retail store unless the person:
Is at least eighteen years of age;
Has submitted to state and national criminal history records checks which indicate he or she has not been convicted of a felony or a violation that would render her or him ineligible for a handgun certificate; and
Has successfully completed a course or test, approved by
the Commissioner of Public Safety, in firearms safety and
statutory procedures relating to the sale of firearms.
A person may not sell handguns anywhere except the room,
store, or other place described in the permit for sale and the
person must display the permit for sale in the place that is
identified in the permit. Section 29-31.
Any person, firm or corporation engaging in the sale, other
than at wholesale, of any handgun, must equip such handgun with
a reusable trigger lock, gun lock or gun locking device
constructed of material sufficiently strong to prevent it from
being easily disabled. Sections 29-33(d), 29-37b. The lock must
also have a mechanism accessible by key, or electronic or
mechanical accessory specific to the device to prevent
unauthorized removal. Id. Handgun sellers must also
provide the purchaser with a written warning stating that
unlawful storage of a firearm may result in imprisonment or
fine. Id.
Any person who gives false information in connection with the sale, delivery or other transfer of any firearm commits a class D felony. Sections 29-37e (long guns), 29-34(a) (handguns).
A person who sells, delivers or otherwise transfers a
firearm knowing that the transferee is prohibited from
possessing such firearm shall be held strictly liable for
damages for the injury or death of another person resulting
from the use of such firearm by any person. Section 52-571f.
A person who sells, delivers or provides a firearm to another person to engage in an offense, when the transferor knows or should know that the transferee intends to use the firearm to commit the offense, will be held criminally liable for the conduct and punished as though he or she were the principal offender. Section 53a-8.
For state laws governing gun sales generally, see the Connecticut Private/Secondary Sales section.
Federally Licensed Firearms Dealers
There are 442 federally licensed firearms dealers and pawnbrokers in Connecticut. Federal firearms licensee totals for Connecticut as of October 19, 2006 were provided by the U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

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Connecticut General Statutes § 29-37g(a) defines a gun show as any event at which fifty or more firearms are offered or exhibited for sale, transfer or exchange to the public, or at which two or more persons are exhibiting one or more firearms for sale, transfer or exchange to the public.
At least thirty days before a gun show, the person who organizes, plans, promotes or operates the show must notify the chief of police, warden, or first selectman of the jurisdiction in which the show is to take place of the date, time, duration and location of the gun show. Section 29-37g(b).
No person, firm or corporation shall sell, deliver or otherwise transfer any firearm at a gun show until the person, firm or corporation requests a background check and receives an authorization number from the state Commissioner of Public Safety. Section 29-37g(c).
See the Connecticut Private/Secondary Sales section for state laws that apply at gun shows.

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No relevant statutes currently exist.
For detailed information about government and private party lawsuits against the gun industry, the status of litigation involving gun industry immunity statutes in various states, or pending gun industry immunity legislation, visit the Brady Center's Legal Action Project and the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence's Gun Industry Immunity page.
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No relevant statutes currently exist.
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No relevant statutes currently exist.
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A person may not purchase or receive a handgun unless he or she holds a valid permit to carry a handgun (see the Connecticut Carrying Firearms section), a valid permit to sell a handgun (see the Connecticut Dealer Regulations section), or a valid handgun eligibility certificate. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 29-33(b). Pursuant to section 29-36f, a person may obtain a handgun eligibility certificate unless he or she:
-
Failed to successfully complete an
approved course in the safety and use of handguns;
-
Was convicted of a felony (with limited
exceptions) or of certain violent or intimidating
misdemeanors;
-
Has been convicted as a delinquent for the commission of a serious juvenile offense;
-
Has been discharged from custody within the preceding twenty years after having been found not guilty of a crime due to mental disease or defect pursuant to section 53a-13;
-
Has been confined in a mental hospital
for persons with psychiatric disabilities within the preceding
year by order of a probate court;
-
Is subject to a restraining or protective
order issued by a court in a case involving the use, attempted
use or threatened use of physical force against another
person;
Is subject to a firearms seizure order
for posing risk of imminent personal injury to self or others
issued after notice and an opportunity to be heard;
Is prohibited from shipping, transporting, possessing or receiving a firearm pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(4) (persons who have been adjudicated as a mental defective or who have been committed to a mental institution);
Is an alien illegally or unlawfully in
the United States; or
Is less than twenty-one years of age.
The fee for an eligibility certificate is $35, and the certificate is valid for five years. Section 29-36h(a), (b).

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Any person, firm or corporation engaging in the sale, other than at wholesale, of any handgun, must equip such handgun with a reusable trigger lock, gun lock or gun locking device constructed of material sufficiently strong to prevent it from being easily disabled. Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 29-33(d), 29-37b. The
lock must also have a mechanism accessible by key, or electronic
or mechanical accessory specific to the device to prevent
unauthorized removal. Id. Handgun sellers must also
provide the purchaser with a written warning stating that
unlawful storage of a firearm may result in imprisonment or
fine. Section 29-37b.

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With limited exceptions, a person must be at least 21 years old to
possess a handgun. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 29-36f. There is no
minimum age to possess a long gun. A “junior firearms hunting
license” may be issued to a child between 12 and 16 years of age.
Section 26-27a.

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No relevant statutes currently exist.
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No relevant statutes currently exist.
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No person, firm, or corporation, including any private (unlicensed) seller, may transfer a handgun unless the transferee has a permit to carry a handgun, a permit to sell handguns at retail, or a handgun eligibility certificate. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 29-33(b), (c). Moreover, no sale, delivery or other transfer of a handgun will be made until the person, firm or corporation making the transfer obtains an authorization number from the Connecticut Department of Public Safety ("CDPS"). Section 29-33(c). This authorization can only be obtained after a background check is conducted by CDPS. Id. For more information on the criteria for obtaining a handgun eligibility certificate, please see the Connecticut Background Checks section.
Prior to the transfer of any firearm at a gun show, the transferee must undergo a background check. Section 29-37g(c). See the Connecticut Gun Shows section. Otherwise, private transfers (i.e., transfers by non-firearms dealers) of rifles and shotguns are not subject to a background check requirement in Connecticut, although federal and state purchaser prohibitions still apply.
All firearm sellers are required to retain records of firearm sales for a minimum of five years. Sections 29-33(e), 29-37a(b).
Connecticut prohibits any person from selling, lending, giving, delivering or otherwise transferring any handgun to a person under age 21. Section 29-34(b). A handgun may be transferred temporarily to a person under age 21 for target shooting or use on a shooting range if under the immediate supervision of a person eligible to possess a handgun. Id.

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Aside from requirements for the registration of assault weapons (see the Connecticut Assault Weapons section), there are no firearm registration requirements.

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Connecticut prohibits any person, firm or corporation from selling a long gun (rifle or shotgun) at retail until two weeks have passed after the date the purchase application is completed. This waiting period does not apply, however, to certain law enforcement officers and military personnel, holders of valid permits to carry handguns, holders of valid hunting licenses, or holders of valid eligibility certificates to possess handguns. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 29-37a.

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