Ok, hypothetical - what if idiot realized he forgot to sign form 4?

Ok, let’s say an idiot (we will not mention names, because this is a hypothetical) was reviewing his trust information and found a copy of the Form 4 he sent to the ATF in December and saw not signature or date on the back?

Any options other than to wait the additional four months and have them reject and/or send it back because of wrong/incomplete application?

Again, this is a hypothetical, because surely nobody here would be stupid enough to make such a mistake. :suicide2:

I would just call the 800 number and ask if you can fax your case worker the corrected forms

Greetings tnedator,

Hypothetically speaking, I have read of minor administrative errors with documentation where the examiner would send it back for completion/correction. Once completed/corrected, it would then be returned to the examiner directly, who then completes the approval process and issues the Form WITHOUT putting it back into the “bottom of the pile” (back at the beginning of the queue). This has cost maybe an additional week or so . . . but not months.

I wouldn’t even even call them, just wait, and when they get to it they will send it back for a signature. Sign it, send it back, then start getting fired up because your stamp will be in soon.

I’m not sure why the hypothetical threads are popping up, but why not just come out and say “I didn’t double check everything” and I screwed up?

Then I would probably call my examiner (they are assigned by states) and I would tell them of the oversight. Then my guess is that they provide some direction as to what they want you to do.

Concern that it would go to the bottom of pile?

When making a copy of the form, which was signed, before mailing it, I noticed the ffl had a typo in my address. When I contacted him, he corrected it, sent me new forms and I forgot to sign the second set before dropping in mail.

Sent from my Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 2

Hell call maybe you will get lucky and he will dig your forms up and it will get bumped up the line… but i would not count on it

In my experience, when an examiner processes a form and finds an error, the form is processed to completion once the error is corrected. They aren’t sent “back to the bottom,” and the application is completed pretty quickly upon you getting them the info they need.