It might indeed.kw5kw wrote:So, might I ask, would having such apps as mentioned here or the 30.06 app on your phone be argued that you had prior knowledge of signage before hand and could be used against you if you were carrying concealed past a 30.06 sign. If so, I would propose not having such an app on your cell phone but on, say a tablet, that you could look at before your travels. I want to know but don't want to provide LEO/Prosecutor ammo to use against me. CYA as they say!thetexan wrote:...Why do this? It also seems obvious the the point of making this endurance is to allow you to effective comply with the prohibition in 46.035. Now, if this is true...it follows that if a prosecutor can prove that you were already in a state of knowledge of the 51% status of the business then the violation of 46.035 was committed while in that state of knowledge. This might negate the defense offered in .204.
Again, the defense to prosecution in .204 is that you were not informed. But if you were in fact informed already and that can be proven then the question becomes, "did you or did you not know that you were violating 46.035 at the time. The fact that notification is required in .204 implies that failure to notify gives you a defense. The reverse implication is that if one is already informed, that the foreknowledge implied in .204 requires is essentially present and the defense offered therein is non-effectual.
In fact, this might be applicable in any situation where there is a requirement of notification such as 30.05, .06, and .07...and any other statutes where there is notification required in any code.
This would explain why a judge might not accept a defensive argument "I'm not guilty because I wasn't notified properly" even though it was PROVEN that the defendant actually knew.
This is the difference between defense to prosecution and exception to prosecution or affirmative defense to prosecution.
tex
A prosecutor will pull every trick out of his hat. He might subpoena your emails to a friend where you discuss the presence of those signs.
I have always said that one should be careful of what one lets known about what he knows.
The discretion that a trial court has in applying interpretations to statutes opens up the ambiguities that require an appellate court to untangle.
So if one intends on the strict interpretation of the rules should not give any ammunition to the prosecutor by giving evidence of your knowledge of a notification.
tex