Notify the police.
Federal law states that it is illegal for a felon to posses firearms or ammunition.
No, Federal law prevents a convicted felon from possessing firearms or ammunition.
No. Federal law prohibits a convicted felon from purchasing, possessing, or having access tofirearms and ammunition.
Not certain about Texas state law, but under the Federal Criminal Code (USC Title 18) no, they cannot.
No. Not in Michigan, nor anywhere else in the US. Federal law (applicable to all states) dictates that a convicted felon may not own, possess, or be allowed access to firearms, ammunition, or ballistic armor.
In south carolina "state law " a convicted felon may own a fire arm made before 1898 it's considered an antique, but " federal law " states that a convicted felon may not possess explosives... which means you're allowed to own the antique weapon but not the powder or ammunition to go in it.
The key word here is "felon" - nothing else you stated in your question has any weight on the matter. As a felon, you may not own, possess, or be allowed access to firearms and/or ammunition. That is a matter of federal law, applicable to all states and territories of the US, and there are no exceptions to it.
No. A felon may NEVER possess, purchase, or be allowed access to firearms or ammunition, ANYWHERE in the United States (this applies to unincorporated territories, as well). This is a federal law, and it does not vary by state.
Yes. The timeframe is never. A convicted felon may not purchase, possess, or be allowed access to firearms or ammunition. That's federal law.
Under FEDERAL law, yes- if it is a caplock or flintlock (no 209 primer guns) HOWEVER- state laws vary. Some states permit, some prohibit. Georgia does not permit a felon to possess a muzzleloader (includes ball & cap) Virginia permits, but does not allow a felon to possess black powder. #209 primers (shot shell primers) are considered ammunition under Federal law, and a felon may not possess ammunition.
The antonym of felon is law-abiding citizen.
A felon anywhere in the United States is prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or being allowed access to firearms. This is a matter of federal law, applicable to all states and territories of the United States, and it does not vary between states. Possession of a firearm or ammunition by a felon is a felony under federal law and under the laws of all 50 states.