No. 99.9% of gun trusts are revocable. The trustee of a revocable trust can amend it at any time. The trustee can add or remove beneficiaries. The removed beneficiary has no legal recourse against the trustee. Beneficiaries are written out of trusts every day.
What you are saying would mean my...
I would get reprinted at your sheriff's office. Alternatively, you could order an ink pad to roll them yourself. Just get a few extra FBI cards in case you mess some up.
You have to engrave any build registered to that trust with that long trust name. The only option would be to cancel that Form 1, receive a refund, and reapply under the new trust.
Actually, her use of the weapon could negate the defense of self defense. She may not be eligible for self defense even if she took a shot in self defense because she was committing a crime.
:cool:
She would be committing a felony by possessing a NFA weapon that is not registered to her. It could potentially negate self defense.
Your option is to never let her possess or have access to the weapon or cancel the individual Form 1 and reapply using a trust.