Search found 4 matches

by Keith B
Thu Apr 23, 2009 11:10 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: Milwaukee police chief above the law
Replies: 24
Views: 3689

Re: Milwaukee police chief above the law

seamusTX wrote:How quickly y'all forget. People were arrested in Harris County, and in some cases they had to go to court to get their weapons returned. The TSRA and Texas ACLU wrote a report on it, which helped contribute to the passage of the MPA in 2007:

http://www.tsra.com/docs/AboveTheLaw.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

I will take this opportunity to once again mount my soapbox to point out that when the police want to arrest you, they will arrest you regardless of the law; and they will be backed by the full force of the police, city, and county legal systems. You will be up a creek without a paddle.

- Jim
Thanks for clearing that up Jim. My some-timers is kicking in and causing periodic loss of memory due to my advanced age of 49. LOL
by Keith B
Thu Apr 23, 2009 8:55 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: Milwaukee police chief above the law
Replies: 24
Views: 3689

Re: Milwaukee police chief above the law

Liberty wrote:
Keith B wrote: It is actually not part of the Castle Doctrine, but called the Motorist Protection Act. They used to arrest you in Houston under the previous DA, but think that has now changed I believe. However, I have not heard that Ft. Worth was ignoring the fact that it is legal since September 2007 and arresting people for it. I would be interested if he could point us to a specific case?
They did? I can't find much proof of that. I know Rosenthal encouraged folks to arrest people, but we have seen very little evidence that his was actually happening. Perhaps pre-Sept 2005 these things happened before we had the "defense to prosecution" written . It is my understanding the the LEOs in Houston understood the law and they were not going after folks who were legally carrying. The police do not work for the DA.
Most of the police and the other LEOs understood that Rosenthal was walking very thin ice and didn't wish to take the walk with him.
I do remember that the TSRA was looking for a victim in 2007 to testify before the 80th legislature and they did manage to find someone. I do not know anything about the circumstances of this individuals case, but I do remember there were not a lot of people who were victimized and it wasn't real easy to find someone arrested under the old law.
Probably a bad choice of words on my part. They used to have the THREAT of arrest if caught, but like you, I am unaware of any actual cases. However, it is like the threat from Ft. Worth that has been espoused but not founded by an actual arrest.
by Keith B
Wed Apr 22, 2009 3:55 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: Milwaukee police chief above the law
Replies: 24
Views: 3689

Re: Milwaukee police chief above the law

ninemm wrote:
mymojo wrote:Isnt the Ft Worth D.A. about the same mindset? In my CHL class I was told that while it is legal to CC in your car, Ft Worth ingores the fact and will arrest you for it.

Is that inaccurate?
Are you asking about a Castle law carry or carry by a CHL holder?
It is actually not part of the Castle Doctrine, but called the Motorist Protection Act. They used to arrest you in Houston under the previous DA, but think that has now changed I believe. However, I have not heard that Ft. Worth was ignoring the fact that it is legal since September 2007 and arresting people for it. I would be interested if he could point us to a specific case?
by Keith B
Wed Apr 22, 2009 2:00 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: Milwaukee police chief above the law
Replies: 24
Views: 3689

Re: Milwaukee police chief above the law

The AG and Governor are at odds on the issue after the AG stated he hadn't broken any laws IMO the AG just did his job. This isn't the first time he has been arrested. He was arrested in Wal-Mart and Menard's. He has already filed a federal lawsuit. It is all over Opencarry.org. Will be interesting to see how this one is ruled, especially since Wisconsin has a no preemption rule over the state law on firearms.

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