My boss has a felony
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Re: My boss has a felony
Try an ankle rig. Solves riding your bike, concealability while working, and its not locked up where you cant get to it when you need it.
Dan
Dan
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Re: My boss has a felony
Pocket carry is also a possibility, if you have a gun that will fit in the pockets you have and a pocket holster to hold it stable.
What is Project One Million: Texas?
The "Project" is a grassroots effort to increase the number of Texans who are members of the National Rifle Association from 250.000 to 1,000,000.
http://www.projectonemilliontexas.com/
The "Project" is a grassroots effort to increase the number of Texans who are members of the National Rifle Association from 250.000 to 1,000,000.
http://www.projectonemilliontexas.com/
Re: My boss has a felony
I wonder why this hasn't been suggested, but is there a reason why you can't just OC? The owner of the property (in this case your boss) can give you permission to carry however you like even if he is prohibited himself, and you then only need a holster with a retention strap to secure the weapon from your boss' "constructive possession". Even though he knows exactly where it is he's not going to get it away from you without committing a violent crime in the process.
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Re: My boss has a felony
This has been discussed several times before. There's no "permission" to give under the law. The only way that he would be able to open carry is if he were in control of the property, which he's not if the boss is there with him.Liko81 wrote:I wonder why this hasn't been suggested, but is there a reason why you can't just OC? The owner of the property (in this case your boss) can give you permission to carry however you like even if he is prohibited himself, and you then only need a holster with a retention strap to secure the weapon from your boss' "constructive possession". Even though he knows exactly where it is he's not going to get it away from you without committing a violent crime in the process.
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Re: My boss has a felony
Then why is it that when you walk into MOST gun stores, all employees are OCing?NcongruNt wrote:This has been discussed several times before. There's no "permission" to give under the law. The only way that he would be able to open carry is if he were in control of the property, which he's not if the boss is there with him.Liko81 wrote:I wonder why this hasn't been suggested, but is there a reason why you can't just OC? The owner of the property (in this case your boss) can give you permission to carry however you like even if he is prohibited himself, and you then only need a holster with a retention strap to secure the weapon from your boss' "constructive possession". Even though he knows exactly where it is he's not going to get it away from you without committing a violent crime in the process.
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Re: My boss has a felony
Because no one has ever stopped them. That doesn't make it legal.Target1911 wrote:Then why is it that when you walk into MOST gun stores, all employees are OCing?
Remember: there's "illegal", and then there's "wrong". Sometimes they overlap; often they don't. OC on someone else's property with permission isn't legal, but it's also not wrong.
Re: My boss has a felony
KBCraig wrote:OC on someone else's property with permission isn't legal, but it's also not wrong.
Can someone point me to the applicable law for this?
Re: My boss has a felony
Start at the top of PC 46.02, where it outlaws carrying a handgun on or about your person (no matter whether loaded or not, open or concealed). Then, drop down to 46.15, "Non-applicability", to find the exceptions to that ban. There is a long list, but "with permission" isn't one of them.Photoman wrote:Can someone point me to the applicable law for this?KBCraig wrote:OC on someone else's property with permission isn't legal, but it's also not wrong.
A CHL holder can only openly carry under the same conditions that a non-licensee could, such as sporting uses, hunting, etc. (Under those circumstances, a non-licensee can legally carry concealed.) A CHL openly carrying on someone else's property, even with permission, is guilty of PC 46.035, Unlawful Carrying of Handgun by Licensee, unless they meet one of the exceptions.