This is a situation where you would go wrong if you only looked at Texas law. Texas law lets a convicted felon possess a firearm on the premises where he lives once five years have elapsed from his release from prison or from parole, whichever is later. Texas Penal Code §46.04. However, federal law is much stricter. It generally prohibits a person convicted of a crime "punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year" from possessing a firearm. The test is the length of possible punishment, not whether the crime is called a misdemeanor or a felony. No exception is made for having a firearm at the home, no matter how long ago the conviction. 18 U.S.C. § 922(g). Also, Federal law makes it unlawful for anyone under indictment for a crime punishable by imprisonment for a term exceeding one year to receive (possess) any firearm or ammunition which has been shipped or transported in interstate or foreign commerce. 18 U.S.C. § 922(n).
Yes, as long as he is not living with the wife. One person's criminal record has no legal consequences for that of another person not residing with them, regardless of their relationship to that person. Since it is illegal in Texas for a convicted felon to be in close proximity to a firearm, the husband would be in violation of the law for residing in a home that contained firearms.
Texas does not require a license to possess a firearm. A license to CARRY a concealed firearm requires that you be 21.
If it uses gunpowder to launch a projectile it is considered a firearm
No
yes
YOU SHOULD CONSULT A TEXAS ATTORNEY. This is too serious a matter to allow anyone other than a professional to advise you! Texas has a 3-strike law.Texas law allows you to posess a firearm AT YOUR PLACE OF RESIDENCE ONLY starting 5 years after your release from prison or parole (whichever is the later date).HOWEVER, FEDERAL LAW prohibits you from EVER owning a firearm again (including for protection of your residence).
No you cannot possess a firearm at all
Probably Texas
Yes.
Absoutely not.
So long as the firearm itself is legal in Illinois, yes.
You can't.