The Texas Courts, as well as every LEO, DA, and other expert on the issue I have talked to, disagrees, but you are entitled to your opinion.Charles L. Cotton wrote: So, it is illegal for a non-CHL to carry a handgun in a gun show. People are not charged with UCW, but a lack of enforcement does not change the law.
30.06 is only enforceable if you are carrying under CHL law. When I go to a gun show, I am not carrying under CHL Law, so it is not enforceable on me.Charles L. Cotton wrote:
TPC §30.06 is enforceable at a gun show, if it's on private property as opposed to government-owned property.
Chas.
Your view creates an interesting dilemma. I myself do not subscribe to it, but those that do are admitting to committing multiple criminal acts if they possess handguns at a 30.06 gun show.
ETA:
Do not have my binder with all Texas Case Law, but here is one on-line cite from Halbrook's Baylor Law Review article:
http://www.guncite.com/journals/haltex.html#fnb220
The prohibition on carrying pistols is so draconian that judicially carved exceptions were inevitable. The constitution provides no legislative power to regulate the keeping on one's premises of commonly possessed arms such as pistols. By implication, on obtaining a pistol, one may carry it home by the nearest practicable route.[219] One may carry a pistol to and from a shop to have it repaired,[220] but the carrying must be without unreasonable delay.[221]
[219] See Kellum v. State, 66 Tex. Crim. 505, 147 S.W. 870 (1912).
[220] See Fitzgerald v. State, 52 Tex. Crim. 265, 106 S.W. 365 (1907); Magum v. State, 90 S.W. 31 (Tex. Crim. App. 1905).
[221] See Henson v. State, 158 Tex. Crim. 5,6, 252 S.W.2d 711 (1952).
The Kellum case is one of several Court Decisions which address the issue of obtaining a handgun and carrying it home and NOT being in violation.