I was thinking the exact same thing. I have lived here my entire life and never experienced this hostility.Purplehood wrote:Wow, I have lived here in Houston since '99 and have yet to experience all this hostility from HPD or HCSD.
Jason
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
I was thinking the exact same thing. I have lived here my entire life and never experienced this hostility.Purplehood wrote:Wow, I have lived here in Houston since '99 and have yet to experience all this hostility from HPD or HCSD.
It does seem like most of the anti gun politicians seem to come out of Houston, and now that we have a choice, maybe we should make decisions on how we proifile the particular dept,stevie_d_64 wrote:Come on muh man...This is all old news...Chuck is gone...Not even a bad aftertaste anymore...Liberty wrote:While I believe in cooperating with the police .. showing the CHL .. I am wondering whether its a good idea to show our CHL to a Houston cop, or Harris county Deputy. They have proven they are the enemy and not to be trusted. If they are out to get us as CHLers maybe we probably shouldn't be giving them ammunition.
I'm still trying to sort this out, buy it does seem as though they are the ones that have picked this battle .. Starting with Chuck Rosenthal.
I had an accident (rearended by a drunk) that left me real woozy a few years back. My pistol flew from the console interior to who knows where. No chl but just arriving in houston from Dallas. I was sitting on the seat edge when i saw it under the mat. I had told one of the officers it was somewhere already so some wrecker driver or assistant did not "wander off" with it. When I picked it up the EMS tech got all panicky and called the officer over. All the HPD cop said was "I know, he told me." and never even looked over. They did take it since I was not in any shape to handle it and gave it back later that night. Ammo was out in a baggy. They didnt seem too anti gun then. I really think it depends on the officer involved and current push by the higher ups.I Know Jack wrote:I am not sure about the resistance of the HPD for law abiding folks to possess handguns, or the past cases....... I can say a few of my friends were disarmed during routine traffic stops in Houston, and handed their ammo back to them one round at a time!! HPD has a hard job, that I would not want, but I will not find myself in Houston without my gun when no HPD officers are not around and if they (HPD) can not respect that, they have a real problem!! Houston is rampant with crime and I will protect myself or property!!03Lightningrocks wrote:I Know Jack wrote:.
Yup. +1rm9792 wrote:I had an accident (rearended by a drunk) that left me real woozy a few years back. My pistol flew from the console interior to who knows where. No chl but just arriving in houston from Dallas. I was sitting on the seat edge when i saw it under the mat. I had told one of the officers it was somewhere already so some wrecker driver or assistant did not "wander off" with it. When I picked it up the EMS tech got all panicky and called the officer over. All the HPD cop said was "I know, he told me." and never even looked over. They did take it since I was not in any shape to handle it and gave it back later that night. Ammo was out in a baggy. They didnt seem too anti gun then. I really think it depends on the officer involved and current push by the higher ups.I Know Jack wrote:I am not sure about the resistance of the HPD for law abiding folks to possess handguns, or the past cases....... I can say a few of my friends were disarmed during routine traffic stops in Houston, and handed their ammo back to them one round at a time!! HPD has a hard job, that I would not want, but I will not find myself in Houston without my gun when no HPD officers are not around and if they (HPD) can not respect that, they have a real problem!! Houston is rampant with crime and I will protect myself or property!!03Lightningrocks wrote:I Know Jack wrote:.
Police will seldom get a ticket if the identify themselves as a "brother officer"dac1842 wrote:True Police of any type are not required to notify as we are. But the fact is, most do. I was an LEO for many years, everytime I stopped another LEO he would identify himself immediately as an LEO and let me know if he was packing. Most understand the importance of the notification and the effect that the notificaiton has on the officers state of mind. I know someone will take off on that, and that is your right. Until you have walked in those shoes, don't critisize those that have.
I've never had these problems and never had these issues.03Lightningrocks wrote:I only get to Houston maybe once a month or so but the times I am there I dread getting pulled over by that geztapo law enforcement community. The couple times I had the pleasure of meeting Houstons finest reminded me of little punk kids in high school with an axe to grind. Rude is not a strong enough word for how they acted but is all that will be allowed on this forum.Liberty wrote:While I believe in cooperating with the police .. showing the CHL .. I am wondering whether its a good idea to show our CHL to a Houston cop, or Harris county Deputy. They have proven they are the enemy and not to be trusted. If they are out to get us as CHLers maybe we probably shouldn't be giving them ammunition.
I'm still trying to sort this out, buy it does seem as though they are the ones that have picked this battle .. Starting with Chuck Rosenthal.
I am always polite to cops hoping they won't taze me. My thought when the Houston cops walked back to the car was..."please get run over".
To be more serious. The first time I was pulled over in Houston, I thought maybe the guy was just having a bad day. then the next time was just as unpleasant and I thought "no, this isn't just a coincidence, Houston cops have a major bad attitude going on".
During my time as a LEO I was out of state on a trip to visit family. I was pulled over for speeding on the Interstate in Tennessee. When I handed the trooper my license I didn't state anything about being a LEO. He looked at the license and asked 'What department do you work for?'. Puzzled by his response I asked him how he knew I was in law enforcement since I had given him no credentials or made any comment as such. He turned my license around and pointed to the photo. I then realized that a couple of months earlier I had been on duty and stopped by to get my DL renewed. Since I was in uniform, the PD collar pins showed up in the photo.dac1842 wrote:True Police of any type are not required to notify as we are. But the fact is, most do.....
That's exactly why many do just that....the free "get out of jail" card.Liberty wrote: Police will seldom get a ticket if the identify themselves as a "brother officer"
I think he is referring to that specific phrase. I too doubt that they would put it that way.jlangton wrote:That's exactly why many do just that....the free "get out of jail" card.Liberty wrote: Police will seldom get a ticket if the identify themselves as a "brother officer"
JL
Then move it somewhere away from the historic sites of my state.frazzled wrote:People that don't like Houston can leave or don't come here. Don't let the door hit your rear on the way out.