Quick question regarding alcohol
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Quick question regarding alcohol
Let's say I go to my buddy's house and go above the "intoxicated" limit of .08 at his house. Am I allowed to carry? He knows I carry and has said It's okay to have my gun on his property. If the answer is yes, does the whole intoxicated concept just apply to public areas? Thanks. Sorry if this is a stupid question, because yes there is such thing as a stupid question.
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
It's illegal for you to carry a handgun on his property while intoxicated but you can carry a shotgun.WyattP wrote:Let's say I go to my buddy's house and go above the "intoxicated" limit of .08 at his house. Am I allowed to carry?
sent to you from my safe space in the hill country
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
Thanks for the response man.
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
How stupid a lot of laws are, I'm not just talking gun laws.tbrown wrote:It's illegal for you to carry a handgun on his property while intoxicated but you can carry a shotgun.WyattP wrote:Let's say I go to my buddy's house and go above the "intoxicated" limit of .08 at his house. Am I allowed to carry?
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
OK, I'll say it. If you are going to drink, let me rephrase that, if you are going to get drunk do not carry...
You say you are at "your buddy's house." How are you going to get home? Drive? Take a Cab so you are now "drunk" in public with a gun?
It's not worth the felony rap.
You say you are at "your buddy's house." How are you going to get home? Drive? Take a Cab so you are now "drunk" in public with a gun?
It's not worth the felony rap.
I never let schooling interfere with my education. Mark Twain
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
Okay I'll break it down more. I live in apartment complex where there have been 30+ break ins to cars since August (despite our fences/gates). Plus we live extremely close to a rather underprivileged portion of town. I'm in an off campus apartment complex to a University I attend. 99% of all my friends/teammates live in the same complex. I'm the biggest person against drinking and driving so I was just wondering. I have seen that other states have upholded the right to defend yourself despite your "intoxication".Maxwell wrote:OK, I'll say it. If you are going to drink, let me rephrase that, if you are going to get drunk do not carry...
You say you are at "your buddy's house." How are you going to get home? Drive? Take a Cab so you are now "drunk" in public with a gun?
It's not worth the felony rap.
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 5474
- Joined: Wed May 04, 2005 7:47 pm
- Location: Houston
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
Break ins are not equal to armed robbery.
Changing the situation you describe will still not sway the majority of regular posters to all of a sudden endorse being drunk and carrying.
After having done wetlabs in some advanced DWI schooling, I can tell
You that the average person at a .08 BAC is pretty messed up.
Changing the situation you describe will still not sway the majority of regular posters to all of a sudden endorse being drunk and carrying.
After having done wetlabs in some advanced DWI schooling, I can tell
You that the average person at a .08 BAC is pretty messed up.
Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
I do agree with you and everyone else who posted. Just was curious on the law aspect of it. The camps PD came out yesterday and said the armed robbery of apartments rumor was untrue, but the fact that 20+ Cars had been broken into in my gated community still remains. Thanks for the comments guysgigag04 wrote:Break ins are not equal to armed robbery.
Changing the situation you describe will still not sway the majority of regular posters to all of a sudden endorse being drunk and carrying.
After having done wetlabs in some advanced DWI schooling, I can tell
You that the average person at a .08 BAC is pretty messed up.
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
I had an occasion that I had too much to drink at crawfish boil at a friend's house. I had left the gun in the trunk of the car, and stored the magazine separately in the front. My wife drove home that evening. I put as much distance as I could between me, the gun, and the ammo until we got home. As someone mentioned , it just isn't worth the rap or the ride.
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 9
- Posts: 855
- Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2014 10:50 am
- Location: South Texas
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
.08% is not a limit, and a person need not reach that BAC to be intoxicated.WyattP wrote:Let's say I go to my buddy's house and go above the "intoxicated" limit of .08 at his house. Am I allowed to carry? He knows I carry and has said It's okay to have my gun on his property. If the answer is yes, does the whole intoxicated concept just apply to public areas? Thanks. Sorry if this is a stupid question, because yes there is such thing as a stupid question.
You need a CHL to caary a handgun on property that is not yours or that is not under your control. That means you need a CHL to carry at your buddy's house. Under penal code 46.035, it is an offense to carry while intoxicated. No restriction to public places is made in the law; therfore, it is unlawful to be intoxicated while carrying your handgun at your buddy's hoise.
Texas CHL Instructor
Texas DPS Certified Private Security Classroom and Firearms Instructor
TCLEOSE Instructor (now TCOLE)
Texas DPS Certified Private Security Classroom and Firearms Instructor
TCLEOSE Instructor (now TCOLE)
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 9
- Posts: 855
- Joined: Thu Jan 16, 2014 10:50 am
- Location: South Texas
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
The law refernced here has nothing to do with defending yourself. Those laws are in chapter 9 of the penal code, and they do not remove any self defense justification based on intoxication.WyattP wrote:Okay I'll break it down more. I live in apartment complex where there have been 30+ break ins to cars since August (despite our fences/gates). Plus we live extremely close to a rather underprivileged portion of town. I'm in an off campus apartment complex to a University I attend. 99% of all my friends/teammates live in the same complex. I'm the biggest person against drinking and driving so I was just wondering. I have seen that other states have upholded the right to defend yourself despite your "intoxication".Maxwell wrote:OK, I'll say it. If you are going to drink, let me rephrase that, if you are going to get drunk do not carry...
You say you are at "your buddy's house." How are you going to get home? Drive? Take a Cab so you are now "drunk" in public with a gun?
It's not worth the felony rap.
The carry laws prevent you from carry under a CHL while intoxicated.
Texas CHL Instructor
Texas DPS Certified Private Security Classroom and Firearms Instructor
TCLEOSE Instructor (now TCOLE)
Texas DPS Certified Private Security Classroom and Firearms Instructor
TCLEOSE Instructor (now TCOLE)
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 390
- Joined: Thu Oct 11, 2007 1:01 pm
- Location: Hewitt,texas
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
What is more important, your gun and the right to carry it or a few beers.
Skip Bishop
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 2
- Posts: 741
- Joined: Sat Jan 07, 2012 6:49 pm
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
Yes it is. Anyone "having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more" is intoxicated in Texas whether or not they show it.jbarn wrote:.08% is not a limit
I sincerely apologize to anybody I offended by suggesting the Second Amendment also applies to The People who don't work for the government.
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
jbarn wrote:WyattP wrote:Let's say I go to my buddy's house and go above the "intoxicated" limit of .08 at his house. Am I allowed to carry? He knows I carry and has said It's okay to have my gun on his property. If the answer is yes, does the whole intoxicated concept just apply to public areas? Thanks. Sorry if this is a stupid question, because yes there is such thing as a stupid question.You need a CHL to caary a handgun on property that is not yours or that is not under your control. That means you need a CHL to carry at your buddy's house. Under penal code 46.035, it is an offense to carry while intoxicated. No restriction to public places is made in the law; therfore, it is unlawful to be intoxicated while carrying your handgun at your buddy's hoise..08% is not a limit, and a person need not reach that BAC to be intoxicated.
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 4
- Posts: 17350
- Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2007 12:53 pm
- Location: Houston
Re: Quick question regarding alcohol
It is not a lower limit, but an upper limit.gringo pistolero wrote:Yes it is. Anyone "having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more" is intoxicated in Texas whether or not they show it.jbarn wrote:.08% is not a limit
NRA Endowment Member