Massachusetts has some of the strictest gun laws in the country. A conviction for carrying a firearm in a car without proper licensing results in mandatory incarceration for a minimum of eighteen months. Illegal possession of a firearm in a residence can result in jail or probation, or both. Probation terms on firearm related charges are often strict and cumbersome, include thousands in fines, and a permanent criminal record that affects job opportunities. These cases often start with routine traffic stops, domestic calls, or police searches where officers find guns without the required permits. Foglia & Associates helps people in Framingham, Worcester, Milford, Natick, and Marlborough fight these serious charges through experienced court representation and license defense.
What Counts as Illegal Gun Possession in Massachusetts?
Massachusetts requires specific permits for different types of firearms. Handguns need a License to Carry (LTC). Rifles and shotguns require a Firearms ID (FID) card. Without these permits, possession becomes a felony with mandatory prison time.
Typical Penalties:
- First offense with a handgun: 2 to 5 years in state prison
- Rifle/shotgun without FID: Up to 2 years in jail plus $500 fine
- High-capacity weapons: 2 to 10 years state prison
Police check licensing through state databases. Certain people can never legally possess guns, including those with felony convictions, certain misdemeanors, or active restraining orders.
Simple possession without a permit creates felony charges, even at home.
How Police Find and Charge Gun Cases
Most firearms cases begin during:
- Traffic stops where inventory searches reveal weapons
- Domestic disturbance calls with protective sweeps
- Probation or parole compliance checks
- Targeted gun task force operations
Officers verify permit status immediately. Lack of proper licensing triggers arrest, firearm seizure, and bail conditions prohibiting all gun possession. Prosecutors push hard for mandatory minimum prison sentences.
Real Consequences of Firearms Convictions
Beyond prison and fines, convictions create lasting problems:
- Criminal Record: Permanent felony record visible to all employers
- Career Impact: Bars from security, law enforcement, corrections jobs
- License Loss: Lifetime ban from obtaining any firearms permit
- Federal Issues: Triggers federal gun prohibitions
- Probation Terms: Random searches, travel restrictions, substance testing
First-time offenders sometimes get probation instead of prison, but the felony conviction remains. Armed professions become impossible.
One firearms conviction can end security and law enforcement career opportunities permanently.
Effective Defense Strategies for Gun Charges
Skilled attorneys use these approaches:
Search Challenges:
- Vehicle searches without proper justification
- Home entries violating warrant requirements
- Traffic stop extensions lacking reasonable suspicion
Permit Defenses:
- Valid permit existed at time of incident
- Inherited firearms with proper notification
- Temporary transport for lawful purposes
Case Resolutions:
- Dismissal when searches ruled unconstitutional
- Pretrial probation avoiding prison time
- Reduced charges through cooperation
- License restoration after case resolution
Experienced counsel frequently gets evidence thrown out through court motions.