Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 116 Part 2.djvu/356

 116 STAT. 1138 PUBLIC LAW 107-217—AUG. 21, 2002 9, 1918, may have been purchased, acquired, or manufactured by the Government. (b) LIMITATION ON SALE OF GUNS AND AMMUNITION.— Sales of guns and ammunition authorized under any law shall be limited to— (1) other departments of the Government; (2) governments of foreign countries engaged in war agsdnst a country with which the United States is at war; and (3) members of the National Rifle Association and of other recognized associations organized in the United States for the encouragement of small-arms target practice. § 1311. Authority of President to obtain release For the use or benefit of the FedereJ Government, the President may obtain from an individual or officer to whom land has been or will be conveyed a release of the individual's or officer's interest to the Government. § 1312. Release of real estate in certain cases (a) IN GENERAL.— Real estate that has become the property of the Federal Government in pa3anent of a debt which afterward is fully paid in money and received by the Government may be conveyed by the Administrator of GenereJ Services to the debtor from whom it was taken or to the heirs or devisees of the debtor or the person that they may appoint. (b) NONAPPLICATION. —TTi is section does not apply to real estate the Government acquires in payment of any debt arising under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (26 U.S.C. 1 et seq.). § 1313. Releasing property from attachment (a) STIPULATION OF DISCHARGE.— (1) PERSON ASSERTING CLAIM ENTITLED TO BENEFITS.— In a judicial proceeding under the laws of a State, district, territory, or possession of the United States, when property owned or held by the Federal Government, or in which the Government has or claims an interest, is seized, surested, attached, or held for the security or satisfaction of a claim made against the property, the Attorney General may direct the United States Attorney for the district in which the property is located to enter a stipulation that on discharge of the property from the seizure, arrest, attachment, or proceeding, the person asserting the claim against the property becomes entitled to all the benefits of this section. (2) NONAPPLICATION.— Th is subsection does not— (A) recognize or concede any right to enforce by seizure, arrest, attachment, or any judicial process a claim against property— (i) of the Government; or (ii) held, owned, or employed by the Government, or by a department of the Government, for a public use; or (B) waive an objection to a proceeding brought to enforce the claim. (b) PAYMENT. —After a discharge, a final judgment which affirms the claim for the security or satisfaction and the right of the person asserting the claim to enforce it against the property, notwithstanding the claims of the Government, is deemed to be a

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