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Illinois 72 hour wait time


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The most recent reference on ILGA.gov to 720 ILCS 5/24-3 is Public Act 91-0012 from 1999. The waiting period as of then was already 72 hours, as well.

 

For a more complete answer, you'd probably have to access a law library and dig through actual books and journals. Prior to 1995, electronic records (and especially Internet-searchable ones) were rare.

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This is bothering me - I feel like I should know the answer.

 

The farthest back I've been able to get is the 84th General Assembly. On 4/10/1985 Representative Braun's HB1361 was read into the record. I can't link to it, but it proposed changing the existing 72 hour waiting period to 7 days:

 

HB-1361 BRAUN.
(Ch. 38, par. 24-3)
Amends the Criminal Code. Extends the waiting period for delivery after pur-
chase of concealable firearm from 72 hours to 7 days.
Apr 10 1985 First reading Rfrd to Comm on Assignment
Apr 11 Assigned to Judiciary II
Apr 25 Recommended do pass 008-005-000
Placed Calndr,Second Readng
May 10 Second Reading
Placed Calndr,Third Reading
May 24 Interim Study Calendar JUDICIARY II

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  • 2 months later...

 

Does anyone know what year Illinois first began the 72 hour wait for private gun transfers?

While researching something else I found the answer to this question: August 20, 1968.

 

ETA for handguns only at that time, of course.

 

Of course...

 

Just like the tollways were supposed to be used to "fund schools" and were only going to be "temporary", or our "temporary" TSA checkpoints...

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Does anyone know what year Illinois first began the 72 hour wait for private gun transfers?

While researching something else I found the answer to this question: August 20, 1968.

 

 

68, what a coincidence - the Gun control act.

 

The state felt the GCA did not go far enough, so they passed their own laws. The FOID was intended to be a way to institute universal background checks and was passed around the same time (quite possibly the same bill)

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Sort of.

 

The FOID Act actually passed out of the Illinois legislature in 1967 but didn't take effect until 1968. That was before the GCA, but the GCA was being heard in committee at the Federal level at the same time. The sponsor of the bill that became the FOID Act testified before that committee, explaining that Federal regulation was necessary the achieve interstate control (read prohibition) of gun sales to people prohibited under the soon to be state law (soon to be because it hadn't been signed by the Governor yet).

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