
The small Pennsylvania-based nonprofit Hold My Guns® describes itself as “for gun owners, by gun owners.” Its mission is to “connect responsible firearm owners with voluntary firearms storage, through our national network of partnering FFLs, during times of mental health crisis or personal need.”
The process is simple. If a gun owner wants to securely store their weapons, they go to the website, find a participating Federal Firearm Licensee in their area, bring in their guns, fill out a contract and agree to pay a small fee for firearm storage, usually $5-$20 per month. When they pick up their guns, they fill out an ATF Form 4473, which makes the process compliant with ATF’s custodial storage regulations, and then take their guns home.
Sarah Joy Albrecht, founder and executive director of Hold My Guns®, says gun owners have used their safe storage during military deployments, while on vacation, during a difficult divorce, after a watermain break, while they cared for an at-risk foster child, and if someone is struggling with mental health.
“If people have a way to store firearms with family and friends who they trust, it’s not always ideal to take their firearms to an FFL. However, not everyone is blessed with friends or family who can help. That’s how we can meet their needs as a community who cares,” Albrecht said. “And it’s not always the gun owner who is the person at risk, but it’s the gun owner being responsible for their household.”
Second Amendment attorney Joshua Prince of the Firearms Industry Consulting Group®, serves as the nonprofit’s legal counsel. Prince developed the contracts used by the FFLs, which have sections for state and local laws pertaining to firearm transfers and guided the group through ATF’s regulatory pitfalls.
Albrecht described Hold My Guns® as a “liberty-based” nonprofit. She pointed out that when she refers to gun safety, she actually means gun safety, not gun control. Throughout the process, the gun owner’s privacy is tantamount, especially given today’s “red flag climate.”
Albrecht didn’t hesitate when asked about her nonprofit’s biggest success:
“Someone went with a friend to drop off their guns at a storage partner, who could tell there was something going on. It’s hard to bring in your firearms, but they were grateful for the help. A month or two later when they picked them up, the gun owner was smiling. It was clear that whatever the situation was, it was not much of a problem anymore. There was a sense of happiness and relief. The gun owner was proud of themselves for being able to manage the situation and grateful for the service,” she said.
Secure funding needed
During 2022, the nonprofit’s FFLs stored five firearms. During 2023, 144 firearms were stored.
As of this week, Hold My Guns® had nine volunteer FFLs in its network. Albrecht is the nonprofit’s only paid employee, and she doesn’t take home much.
At a board meeting Monday night, Albrecht announced the nonprofit had only three months of funding left.
“We need a secure funding source that will allow us to continue,” she told the Second Amendment Foundation Tuesday. “We have turned down funding that had gun control attached. I have to be able to sleep at night, and I need to make sure there are no strings attached to any gun control. It’s important that those investing in our mission are staunch Second Amendment supporters.”
“We need more FFLs, and we need a funding source that doesn’t include any form of gun control,” Albrecht said. “It’s the only way we can keep going. We are doing this for our own community, to be able to equip them with this service if it’s ever needed. We want to be able to meet our community’s needs.”
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About Lee Williams
Lee Williams, who is also known as “The Gun Writer,” is the chief editor of the Second Amendment Foundation’s Investigative Journalism Project. Until recently, he was also an editor for a daily newspaper in Florida. Before becoming an editor, Lee was an investigative reporter at newspapers in three states and a U.S. Territory. Before becoming a journalist, he worked as a police officer. Before becoming a cop, Lee served in the Army. He’s earned more than a dozen national journalism awards as a reporter, and three medals of valor as a cop. Lee is an avid tactical shooter.
What I don’t like and don’t understand is “I have passed up funding because gun control was attached and we are not for any form of gun control” yet I have to fill out a 4473 form to get MY guns back? That’s not gun control? I don’t know about that, I would rather store them at a friends house if it was that much of an issue but Uncle Joe and here in the state of Oregoneistan they made sure that I have to go through an FFL to transfer them to a friend and then transfer them back.!!!!… Read more »
What a stupid idea, a stupid process, and a stupid service.
Safe firearm storage is storing them loaded, at handy locatios around the house.
I ABSOLUTELY would not pay money and submit to a 4473 to retrieve my own guns from an off-site location.
Besides, they wont all fit in the station wagon.
The way the 4473 reads is not only Adjudicated (which should be the only way) but involuntarily committed (by and into conflicted-by-dollar-signs for profit institutions that want the beds full at all times to keep the gravy train running). So if you turn your guns in to the FFL, when you go to get them back the FFL will keep them. It is no wonder why this business is failing. This building of Hold My Guns Corporation on Lenape Road in Bechtelsville PA is 2834 square feet of space with a huge extension with covered roof in solar vectors and… Read more »
Glad I wasn’t the only one who found this a bit suspect. I can understand that a person may live somewhere and have no family or friends that they would trust to leave their guns with. Some years ago, a friend who had been reduced to having to live out of his car, asked me if I would store his two AR’s for him until he got back on his feet. His family situation was bad. He had a father, mother, and siblings, but all were greedy, grabby, people who I would not have trusted with any valued property. I… Read more »
Kudos for the idea, but the numbers don’t support the need for, or value of, the service.
Either the need just isn’t really there or people figure this out on their own.
My wife is starting a new job at another non-profit this morning. I have come to hate non-profits. Bunch of worthless liberals sucking up grants snd donations and providing vague, feel-good ” services”.
If I am going to pay my cash for services, to help single moms or homeless women for example, I will visit a nice cathouse.