Yes, DPS shows no policy on the paperwork they were willing to provide for the FOIA query, but that does not mean there is not a policy, only that it is not written down in that section.E.Marquez wrote: . . . There in is the issue .. WHAT POLICY? What is this policy folks keep referring to.
There is no LAW, nor Code we have seen and DPS states there is NO POLICY.. So what policy are you referring to?
There is a Texas Penal Code which gives the officer authority in a very broad manner to disarm you.. I don't like it, but it is there.
There is a Criminal code which directs the officer to do a NCIC check for stolen property when a firearm is in his possession for any reason... I don't like it, but it is there.
I think our argument is in the code and law... Not a mystery policy that no one has ever seen.
And the "reasonable person" test is not at all broad, even if officers might abuse it. The problem with the reasonable person test is that you don't get to argue that on the side of the road, it is something you would have to use in a court room and how you got there is another issue. Were you arrested and then released, arrested and now at trial, arrested and then acquitted, or even arrested and convicted? Or did you sue the officer and department because you felt he was not reasonable in disarming you? If so, prove it, and where is the damage that you can justify your suit with. Reasonable person is narrow, but easily abused.
The policy folks keep referring to is the all to frequent statement by an officer that the reason they are disarming the CHL at the traffic stop, and running the serial number, is that it is their policy. Now, there is every possibility that the officer is making that up, or that the officer is misquoting the section that says that when they come into possession of a firearm they will do an NCIC check, or maybe the officer doesn't understand that section and thinks they have to do it, or the officer's superiors have told him and everyone else that for the safety of the officers they will always disarm CHLs, which still would be policy even if unwritten, and that as a result of the possession of the firearm, they now have to do an NCIC check.
There are enough YouTube videos of officers hassling open carriers where open carry is legal, and telling open carriers that they are in violation of the law when in fact they are not, or telling them that it is their policy (they never say it's department policy) to do the same with any open carry person. I don't see any reason to expect any different treatment of CHL holders.