Not sure if this is what you are looking for, but the one situation I have heard of is protection from abuse orders. Was in a local gun shop and noticed several guns on the consignment rack that were silly over priced. The explanation was that the owner had been tipped off that his estranged wife had filed for a PFA so he had the FFL put them on his books.
Here is a new one:
In California a handyman performing over $500 work in a declared disaster zone (e.g. an area previously hit by a forest fire) without a contractor's license is guilty of a felony punishable by up to 16 months in prison. That $500 limit includes materials, even if provided by the homeowner, which means charging $50 to mount a homeowner's $500 flat screen TV is a felony that can make you a prohibited person.
Most are aware that a family violence plea or conviction will negate 2A rights. Most are aware that a felony plea or conviction will have the same outcome. It's the individual's responsibility to avoid having either.
Sure, but how easy is it to meet that responsibility when felonies are practically innumerable?
Do you know for sure that your year to year activities surrounding such things as taxes, vehicle use, home repair, firearms carriage, use, and modification, internet communication, computer use, etc., are not potentially felonious?
You probably don’t, and that’s a problem.