Yes. Whether you should depends on if you plan on following all the appropriate local, state and Federal Laws.
Only 5.
A licensed FFL dealer can sell firearms to the public. But, a private party can sell guns to another private party.
If you want to sell, you need to check local and state laws, but as far as Federal law is concerned, you can sell face-to-face to a resident of your own state who is not prohibited from owning a firearm (over 18, no felony convictions, etc.). To sell to someone in another state, you will have to send it to a FFL dealer in the state of the buyer for delivery to the buyer. One way to sell without worrying about all the laws is to sell it to a licensed dealer or have a dealer sell it on commission. Another way is to list your firearms for sale at www.FirearmsLocator.com and then have national exposure for your item.
The scandal you are referring to is known as the "Georgia Land Scandal." It happened in the early 2000s when Georgia's governor, along with some legislators, were bribed to sell public land at significantly discounted prices to private developers. The scandal exposed corruption and led to criminal charges and investigations into the involved individuals.
For individual private sell there isn't a requirement but if you really want to contact your local ATF agency and report the transfer.
Kissy Sell Out, the British music re-mixer, has not stated his sexual preference in public. WikiAnswers will not speculate on what is personal and private information to any individual.
The Yazoo Land Fraud
Yes, You can have as many "middlemen" selling products as you want. Usually not as many involved as in your question because the price goes up each time.
fruits
You should be able to sell your Savage at any gun store,to another individual,on gun broker.com,or auction arms,etc.
== == Applications and general information for individual producers and agencies (resident and non-resident) can be found at the GA site: inscomm.state.ga.us
When a person that is not a dealer sells a gun to another non-dealer. Both must be residents of Texas.