Search found 8 matches

by Gambit
Mon Jan 09, 2012 1:22 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: CHL's and felony charges?
Replies: 61
Views: 9925

Re: CHL's and felony charges?

03Lightningrocks wrote:
jiannichan wrote:After reading some of the responses in this thread and seeing some people ineligible to get a CHL in Texas but is able to get an out of state license to carry, are the charges/convictions not serious enough to prohibit them from owning or purchasing a firearm for them to carry with said out of state licenses? Just curious...
Some states have less stringent requirements than Texas. I have wondered if a person might run into problems when they used a weapon in self defense carrying a non-resident permit, but would not be illegible to have a chl under Texas laws.
Jianichan
You can purchase a firearm if you are not a convicted felon. I believe that if you can purchase a pistol you should be able to carry it.

I wonder myself; it makes you think about the repercussions and how important that ultimate descision to draw it, if the choice was forced id give my life or jailtime for any of my loved ones. The other would be living a life knowing that a family member was in dire straights and i chose not to because of fear of the law.

The circumstance would be to risk leagal retribution or death of yourself or loved one; the choice is easy for me.
by Gambit
Sun Jan 08, 2012 10:09 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: CHL's and felony charges?
Replies: 61
Views: 9925

Re: CHL's and felony charges?

longbow wrote:
Gambit wrote:
CC Italian wrote:I think I am with gigag04 on this.
Disagree.

Burg of a hab, while not violent, definitely affects people. Youve been there when you take that report and the wife is too scared to even stay at the ransacked house.
It's defiantly not a victim-less crime in the mental sense! It's one thing if a non violent felon is allowed to own a gun in his home after a certain amount of time. All people should be able to protect themselves in their "castle" (except violent criminals, they have lost their right to own a firearm) but to allow a convicted felon to get a CHL is a little much for me reformed or not.

Carrying around a firearm on your person is a huge responsibility! Let me put it this way; I know it isn't exactly the same thing but would you want a non violent reformed felon to be allowed to become a law enforcement officer and carry a weapon? Heck, you can lose your state teaching license for getting a first offense DWI for ten years!

My point is I think a CHL should be held to the same standard as a LEO when it comes to criminal record. I might get blasted for this by others but it is my opinion but then again you know what they say about opinions. Owning a firearm in your home to me is very different then being allowed to carry a loaded weapon almost everywhere you want, you must have a good track record!
You have a right to your opinions and I respect that. Laws however are absolute and we as humans should not deal in absolutes. There exceptions to every rule and rules for every exception.

What makes you as an individual have more rights than I; to protect your family?

I made a mistake in college egged on by friends, in my youthful stupidity, I made a seriously bad judgment call. I believe the Judge saw the same and granted me deferred adjudication and saw fit to not only grant me with early dismissal from probation; but also granted me an order of nondisclosure.

I believe I have paid my debt to society. I pay more than my fair share of taxes and contribute to society in a productive way. I have not had so much as a speeding ticket since then. The friend’s father house that I broke into forgave me. But the wheels of justice were in motion.
For you to say that your spotless record entitles you to more protection from real hardend criminals than I is a hard pill to swallow. This mentality is along the lines of anti-gun/ anti-CHL congressmen that have CHL’s and carry guns.
http://www.usacarry.com/forums/politics ... ruder.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,288737,00.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

After all Laws are absolute, written by men that are felons themselves, Joe Driver (Now a FELON), in this case co-wrote the 30.02 addition I don’t have the Bill number now Irony at its finest.
What gives people like "him" more rights than you is the mere fact that having been where you were, "he" chose not to make the decisions you made. Your logic is similar to that of the 99%, why should some be rich while others are not? Because some people made better choices.

We have ALL faced pier pressure, and as wonderful as it is that you have been able to lead a fulfilling and upright life, it does not change the fact that there are consequences for succumbing to that pier pressure.

The law is absolute, it must be to protect society and deter wrong doing. From your own post, we can see that the law was very lenient and understanding with your case, it made what appears to be a sincere effort to lessen your penalty. You cannot infringe on another human beings basic rights and expect society not to punish you in the same manner.

I am writing this a person who has been a victim of both a home burglary and two vehicle thefts. No perpetrators were ever caught and none of my family's irreplaceable treasures were recovered. If I could punish the thieves I assure you they would receive far worse than a spot on their records. It is unacceptable to see your family scared to live in their own home and I hope that none of you ever have to experience that type of event.

Im sorry you and your family had to go through that, I truely am. I am not defending true crooks criminals or the like Im merely making a statement that some individuals do not deserve to reap the "absolute" hardline repercussions of law written, by ordinary people, that project a holier than thou airs sitting on thier high horse to judge others; all the while being human themselves (like politicians).

Thank you for your subjective and bias opinion. It proves my point in the post after that. You are human and that is why I carry this dead dog.

I hope you or your family never goes through what you went through again but if it does I hope you are there to protect them from it. And I hope you can see what Im trying to say.

This logic is far from the 99%. Economical "equality" Is a far cry from this. I believe that you work for what you have. Hence the stigma of a "burglury of habitation" charge weighs on me so heavily. I am not a thief.

The inalienable right to protect my loved ones should be above your views of morality. My family comes before your opinion. There is no absolute phylosophical (sp?) line in the sand that says im a bad guy and should be lumped in with the rapist, murderers and violent robbers out there nor should I not be able to defend myself or family from them. There are true animals and predators out there that you should be more afraid of trust me on that.

Some day we may meet in person and I assure you that you may even like me and would not even know about my skeleton in the closet. Someday I may be able to help protect you and your family from those true monsters; Hopefully with something more than a can of pepper spray.

ETA: What information in my posts did you gather that you would lump me in with hippie communists? :shock:
by Gambit
Thu Jan 05, 2012 11:53 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: CHL's and felony charges?
Replies: 61
Views: 9925

Re: CHL's and felony charges?

urnoodle wrote:
17 year old boy crawls in through girlfriend's bedroom window. She may have even invited him in, but did not have the authority to do so. Dad discovers boyfriend
I'm not a lawyer but I would think this type of situation would fall under Criminal Trespass which is a Class B midemeanor, or class A if the boyfriend had a deadly weapon on his person.

I have a dear friend who was convicted of a non-violent felony when he was 18 years old over 21 years ago. The consequences for which will stay with him until the day he dies. For the past 17 years, he's been a youth pastor, he speaks at schools about crime and drugs. He is the first to volunteer for any community work. He is not the same person he was 21 years ago, anyone can clearly see that. Every day he is trying to repay a self-imposed debt to society (his time served ended nearly 19 years ago). He takes full accountability for his actions. I've heard him say many times "I had a shot at doing it right but I made a conscious decision to do it wrong therefore I must live with the consequences of that decision." He's not embarassed about his conviction and neither are his friends. It made him the man he is today. I would trust him with my most prized possessions including my life and my family's lives. So I believe even a convicted felon can become a great contributor to society but his/her contributions do not erase the transgression. He'd be the first to agree with me.
You see its not what you think someone should be charged with; its what the DA/Police officer decides to charge you with while atempting to make the charges stick.

Some would do it for justice while others will do it to further thier careers. Im not making excuses but like "hoosierdaddy" posted above alot of people feel that I have my just deserts which i did. I deal with this everyday when I wake up. Its like carrying a dead rotting dog around. Im just ready to bury it.

Dont you see when someone hears "burglary of habitation" what negative connotations comes with that? How can I NOT be ashamed of that? How many here read the situation im in and raise an eybrow at me? How many here judged me just because of the negative connotation? Yet no one here KNOWS me. That is the world we live in Such as life .

I enjoy anonimity behind my keyboard but in life that skeleton is a dark place in my life. That experience was a dark chapter in my life and im still paying for it. Trust me when I say that I deal with it as a mature adult every single day. It has made me a stout non believer in humanity and my idealistic beliefs has wained, i dont trust people like i used to anymore and im not as naive.

Who I am today is a far cry from the person I was 20 something odd years ago. I still dont believe that I do not deserve the right to defend myself. Should I be thrown to the wolfs and the real hardend criminals for a prank almost 2 decades ago? Should as some of you would have me just carry pepper spray? Should I be burned at the stake in as an example for the others who may stray?

ETA : Make no mistake I know what I did was wrong; and thank you to those that believe there is some redemption in a person.
by Gambit
Thu Jan 05, 2012 6:59 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: CHL's and felony charges?
Replies: 61
Views: 9925

Re: CHL's and felony charges?

bayouhazard wrote:Actions have consequences.

Felonious actions can have some serious long term consequence.
yeah witty one liners like that makes sense when your 40 but at 19 that doesnt really sink in... It was a College prank if it had happend to afriends apartment it would have been all fun and games.

Jeez. I hope you hardliners never make mistakes. What I did was not intent to steal or burglarize it was a prank. I am very ashamed of the charges now you see; I dont drink alchohol, I dont gamble I dont Speed, i dont even curse.

Sorry OP I didnt mean to take your post off course. I will now bow out of the thread.
by Gambit
Wed Jan 04, 2012 10:51 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: CHL's and felony charges?
Replies: 61
Views: 9925

Re: CHL's and felony charges?

Ameer wrote:
Gambit wrote:After all Laws are absolute, written by men that are felons themselves, Joe Driver (Now a FELON)
If he was convicted then his CHL will be revoked too. Those are the rules.
So be it. I will carry under Floridas CHL those are also the "rules". And I hope National right to carry passes too.

Not to sound spiteful but Im not sure I trust politicians anymore. Whoever submitted the change in 2009 submitted it in a House bill HB2730 which is titled something totally benign and then buried the change in the bill on page 136 (depending on the doc format) . That is very shady in my opinion.

here is the link
http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/BillLook ... ill=HB2730

then goto the last row "ENROLLED" download the pdf file under the "bill" column, scroll down to page 136 at the top of the page is the addition, they buried it there deep.
by Gambit
Wed Jan 04, 2012 5:08 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: CHL's and felony charges?
Replies: 61
Views: 9925

Re: CHL's and felony charges?

CC Italian wrote:I think I am with gigag04 on this.
Disagree.

Burg of a hab, while not violent, definitely affects people. Youve been there when you take that report and the wife is too scared to even stay at the ransacked house.
It's defiantly not a victim-less crime in the mental sense! It's one thing if a non violent felon is allowed to own a gun in his home after a certain amount of time. All people should be able to protect themselves in their "castle" (except violent criminals, they have lost their right to own a firearm) but to allow a convicted felon to get a CHL is a little much for me reformed or not.

Carrying around a firearm on your person is a huge responsibility! Let me put it this way; I know it isn't exactly the same thing but would you want a non violent reformed felon to be allowed to become a law enforcement officer and carry a weapon? Heck, you can lose your state teaching license for getting a first offense DWI for ten years!

My point is I think a CHL should be held to the same standard as a LEO when it comes to criminal record. I might get blasted for this by others but it is my opinion but then again you know what they say about opinions. Owning a firearm in your home to me is very different then being allowed to carry a loaded weapon almost everywhere you want, you must have a good track record!
You have a right to your opinions and I respect that. Laws however are absolute and we as humans should not deal in absolutes. There exceptions to every rule and rules for every exception.

What makes you as an individual have more rights than I; to protect your family?

I made a mistake in college egged on by friends, in my youthful stupidity, I made a seriously bad judgment call. I believe the Judge saw the same and granted me deferred adjudication and saw fit to not only grant me with early dismissal from probation; but also granted me an order of nondisclosure.

I believe I have paid my debt to society. I pay more than my fair share of taxes and contribute to society in a productive way. I have not had so much as a speeding ticket since then. The friend’s father house that I broke into forgave me. But the wheels of justice were in motion.
For you to say that your spotless record entitles you to more protection from real hardend criminals than I is a hard pill to swallow. This mentality is along the lines of anti-gun/ anti-CHL congressmen that have CHL’s and carry guns.
http://www.usacarry.com/forums/politics ... ruder.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,288737,00.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

After all Laws are absolute, written by men that are felons themselves, Joe Driver (Now a FELON), in this case co-wrote the 30.02 addition I don’t have the Bill number now Irony at its finest.
by Gambit
Wed Jan 04, 2012 4:39 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: CHL's and felony charges?
Replies: 61
Views: 9925

Re: CHL's and felony charges?

dbox wrote:Gambit - I have the exact charge as you and my CHL wasn't revoked. It does expire on my birthday next year so i assume I'm screwed after that....just wondering why yours was revoked after being issued?
Dbox,

I was renewing my Lincense and it brought this added clause (changed in 2009) to thier attention. So If you have a CHL now you will be required to reapply for the license this action brings it to their attention and they will then revoke your current license and deny your renewal.
At least thats what happend in my case.


Sorry for the bad news.
by Gambit
Fri Dec 09, 2011 10:50 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: CHL's and felony charges?
Replies: 61
Views: 9925

Re: CHL's and felony charges?

Im in a similiar situation I was a really naive. In any case Im in a holding pattern right now to try and get my Texas CHL back. I am eligible for a Florida CHL and through reciprocity I am allowed to carry but I cant wait till all this gets resolved so I can reapply for my License.

Here are 2 threads I started about my ordeal.
If you read them they may help you and your father with some information.

viewtopic.php?f=7&t=36550

viewtopic.php?f=7&t=49848

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