1/1/2023 0 Comments Glock 22 serial numbers![]() ![]() ![]() The only thing the LEO's want to know is that you are the true owner and got the gun legally. If you send a firearm back for warranty repair and it's been messed with and the serialized parts are missing or replaced, then they know what might account for the problem. The serialized parts tell the company if the firearm has been played with more so than the police. There are hundreds of people who swap out serialized parts on their firearms. No, they can't pull a name out of a hat and find every firearm that person owns (unless there is registration in that state or you believe there is some secret registry that you don't know about (don't go there)), but if they have a serial number they can find out who bought it. People think that just because there is no registration that guns aren't traceable. call the store and ask what customer it was sold to and come up with your name anyway. call the distributor and ask for the store it was sold to. If they wanted to go even further they could ask for the serial number of the old Glock frame and match it with your barrel (which I can't imagine why they'd need to do that), or they could ask for the distributor. If they wanted to dig deeper they could ask the serial number of the defective firearm, which Glock would have a record of showing that they repossessed it, meaning you don't have two Glocks. That would pretty much automatically tell them why the serial numbers are different. Glock would then probably inform them that that serial number was assigned to a repaired firearm and was sent directly to XYZ gunstore for ExactlyMyPoint customer. They would call Glock and give them the serial number off of your frame and ask who they sold it to. If any law enforcement agency needed to "run" your firearm, this is how it would go. When you went to pick up your firearm from whatever store you sent it through for repair you would have to do another background check because you are, in a sense, picking up a new handgun. ![]() The serial numbers would, obviously, not match. If you were to send your Glock back for repair and it was determined that a new receiver was necessary they would swap out receivers and put your old barrel in that frame. The serial number that is most important is the one on the receiver/frame. ![]()
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