![grumble :grumble](./images/smilies/grumble.gif)
All in all it was a good stop except for an over zealous rookie. And the fact I was late for my meeting
I would have very respectfully asked for her badge number and would have contacted her supervisor and requested that she gets more training. I would also have tried to have a conversation with her and explain that LTC holders are the good guys. There was absolutely no good reason for her to act that way except for ignorance and bad training.RPBrown wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 8:02 am I had to make a pre-bid meeting at the NASJRB in Fort Worth yesterday. I got about 1/2 way there and remembered my weapon so had to go back to the office to disarm. After this, I was running a little late so my foot was a little heavy. Sure enough, just as I crossed into Fort Worth, there he & she were. I pulled over, she made the initial contact so I handed her my DL & LTC. She must have been a new officer as I could see her get kind of uncomfortable but she asked where it was. I told her I was unarmed and she asked me "you expect me to believe that you have a LTC and don't carry?" At that point the other officer stepped in and asked why I wasn't carrying. I explained to them both about going to the base and couldn't carry there. She asked him if she should search my truck and his comment was what for? He has no reason to lie and has done nothing wrong except go a little fast. He let me go with a warning but I suspect there will be (or should be) a little more training involved.
All in all it was a good stop except for an over zealous rookie. And the fact I was late for my meeting
I'd respectfully disagree & opine that RPBrown handled it as I would have. I would see it more of an "ignorance thru lack of experience" issue, and trust that the more senior partner likely provided some mentorship after the stop. The in-house coaching would likely be much more effective in shaping the new officer's future behavior in a positive way, & I generally advise students to avoid the proverbial "peeing contest" with officers roadside.Tex1961 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 8:30 amI would have very respectfully asked for her badge number and would have contacted her supervisor and requested that she gets more training. I would also have tried to have a conversation with her and explain that LTC holders are the good guys. There was absolutely no good reason for her to act that way except for ignorance and bad training.RPBrown wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 8:02 am I had to make a pre-bid meeting at the NASJRB in Fort Worth yesterday. I got about 1/2 way there and remembered my weapon so had to go back to the office to disarm. After this, I was running a little late so my foot was a little heavy. Sure enough, just as I crossed into Fort Worth, there he & she were. I pulled over, she made the initial contact so I handed her my DL & LTC. She must have been a new officer as I could see her get kind of uncomfortable but she asked where it was. I told her I was unarmed and she asked me "you expect me to believe that you have a LTC and don't carry?" At that point the other officer stepped in and asked why I wasn't carrying. I explained to them both about going to the base and couldn't carry there. She asked him if she should search my truck and his comment was what for? He has no reason to lie and has done nothing wrong except go a little fast. He let me go with a warning but I suspect there will be (or should be) a little more training involved.
All in all it was a good stop except for an over zealous rookie. And the fact I was late for my meeting
I can see your argument, and do agree that overall he did an excellent job of handling the situation. But I spend at least 2 days or more a week in the classroom either teaching LTC, Constitutional carry or just basic pistol. It would have been very difficult to have just walked away without attempting to have a conversation with the LEO. Understand, I have mad respect for all law enforcement, however I've spoken with enough to know that most / many only have an elementary knowledge of Texas law as it relates to firearms. I'm very familiar with Leo interactions and what their powers are and my duties as a citizen.. But that doesn't mean I should get harassed because of their lack of training.. Now. Had she been willing to have an adult conversation with me then no harm, no fowl.. I would have gone on my merry way. But if not and wanted to act all tough guy.. Then yes, I would have asked for her badge number and had a conversation later on with a supervisor.Mike S wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 8:49 amI'd respectfully disagree & opine that RPBrown handled it as I would have. I would see it more of an "ignorance thru lack of experience" issue, and trust that the more senior partner likely provided some mentorship after the stop. The in-house coaching would likely be much more effective in shaping the new officer's future behavior in a positive way, & I generally advise students to avoid the proverbial "peeing contest" with officers roadside.Tex1961 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 8:30 amI would have very respectfully asked for her badge number and would have contacted her supervisor and requested that she gets more training. I would also have tried to have a conversation with her and explain that LTC holders are the good guys. There was absolutely no good reason for her to act that way except for ignorance and bad training.RPBrown wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 8:02 am I had to make a pre-bid meeting at the NASJRB in Fort Worth yesterday. I got about 1/2 way there and remembered my weapon so had to go back to the office to disarm. After this, I was running a little late so my foot was a little heavy. Sure enough, just as I crossed into Fort Worth, there he & she were. I pulled over, she made the initial contact so I handed her my DL & LTC. She must have been a new officer as I could see her get kind of uncomfortable but she asked where it was. I told her I was unarmed and she asked me "you expect me to believe that you have a LTC and don't carry?" At that point the other officer stepped in and asked why I wasn't carrying. I explained to them both about going to the base and couldn't carry there. She asked him if she should search my truck and his comment was what for? He has no reason to lie and has done nothing wrong except go a little fast. He let me go with a warning but I suspect there will be (or should be) a little more training involved.
All in all it was a good stop except for an over zealous rookie. And the fact I was late for my meeting
In the end, it sounds like RPBrown received a verbal warning & was let on his way with minimal delay or hassle. If it was a bad encounter, it would still be possible to lodge a complaint with the department as every traffic stop or encounter is called in, so there would be a log reflecting which pair of officers made the stop.
Regarding training regarding how to interact with an LTC holder, or anyone else carrying under constitutional carry, as the core issue, I would agree on this point.
RIGHT..
Sadly some police aren't up to speed in training and some in common sense and some just iintelligence. I watched a video last night of a visually impaired man walking with his fold up came sticking out of his back pocket because if there's daylight he can get by without it. The female office stops him because she thinks the cane is a firearm and he's illegally he's carrying. He shows her the cane which it obviously was even while in his back pocket and then she demands his ID. Back and forth between the two because he knew his righta and quotes almost verbatim the requirements to have to ID oneself to a PO. He reiterated it several times even after another cop, a sergeant, shows up and tells him he has to ID. Sargent puts him in handcuffs and searches all his pockets and gets his wallet and effects then puts him the car. After they un-cuff him and say "see how simple that was" He wants their names and badge numbers and the sergeant tells the office to arrest him for obstruction. Charges dropped. There will be a big payoff when the guy sues. Both cops violated policy, several laws and the Constitution. I am a huge supporter of the police, belong to a support organization for our local PD and also the PD's citizen patrol group, but I know some cops need to find other work.carlson1 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 1:29 pm What would be her probable cause for a search? Because RPBrown had a LTC and was not armed does not articulate that he was committing a crime. When I went to the academy 100 years ago we had weeks of search and seizure law. Most if the TCLOSE (TCOLE Now) test covered search and seizure.
She would not need probable cause if RPBrown consented to a search. And I know a lot of rookies who ask for consent at almost every stop. I had one I was training about 20 years ago that told me he did it because he found a lot of the time there was some small amount of drugs (usually marijuana) in the car and got got an arrest. I pointed out that by waiting for real probable cause, I may only get half the arrests that he did, but they were all people who really deserved a trip to jail.carlson1 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 1:29 pm What would be her probable cause for a search? Because RPBrown had a LTC and was not armed does not articulate that he was committing a crime. When I went to the academy 100 years ago we had weeks of search and seizure law. Most if the TCLOSE (TCOLE Now) test covered search and seizure.
Lord have mercy. Be careful out there. Maybe it is just because we hear about it more but these drug smugglers seem to be very violent and some of them may be stupid enough to try and shoot their way out of a police encounter. Especially out on that stretch of Interstate Highway. I will keep you in my thoughts and prayers. One part about you doing this is that you are definitely going to have some crazy encounter stories to share with us all. We are experiencing over 300 deaths a day in this country from Fent. poisoning. My bet is, Fentanyl will be a number one seizure item. When I was a teen, the biggest concern was getting fake drugs. These kids now days are getting fent in darn near any drug they experiment with. Thank you for your service. getting even part of this stuff off the street may save the lives of somebodies misguided teen ager.srothstein wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 10:36 pmShe would not need probable cause if RPBrown consented to a search. And I know a lot of rookies who ask for consent at almost every stop. I had one I was training about 20 years ago that told me he did it because he found a lot of the time there was some small amount of drugs (usually marijuana) in the car and got got an arrest. I pointed out that by waiting for real probable cause, I may only get half the arrests that he did, but they were all people who really deserved a trip to jail.carlson1 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 1:29 pm What would be her probable cause for a search? Because RPBrown had a LTC and was not armed does not articulate that he was committing a crime. When I went to the academy 100 years ago we had weeks of search and seizure law. Most if the TCLOSE (TCOLE Now) test covered search and seizure.
Rookies seemed to prefer quantity over quality (and I am not exempting myself from when I was a rookie).
On a side note, I am coming out of retirement and going back on patrol soon. Things have changed a lot in the 15 years since I left law enforcement. The town I will be working in is a small town on IH-35 south of San Antonio and the major problem they are concentrating on now is smuggling - large drug shipments or illegal aliens. Now I have to learn a whole new set of cues for who to stop.
Devine, Pearsall, Dilley, or Cotulla...srothstein wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 10:36 pmShe would not need probable cause if RPBrown consented to a search. And I know a lot of rookies who ask for consent at almost every stop. I had one I was training about 20 years ago that told me he did it because he found a lot of the time there was some small amount of drugs (usually marijuana) in the car and got got an arrest. I pointed out that by waiting for real probable cause, I may only get half the arrests that he did, but they were all people who really deserved a trip to jail.carlson1 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 14, 2022 1:29 pm What would be her probable cause for a search? Because RPBrown had a LTC and was not armed does not articulate that he was committing a crime. When I went to the academy 100 years ago we had weeks of search and seizure law. Most if the TCLOSE (TCOLE Now) test covered search and seizure.
Rookies seemed to prefer quantity over quality (and I am not exempting myself from when I was a rookie).
On a side note, I am coming out of retirement and going back on patrol soon. Things have changed a lot in the 15 years since I left law enforcement. The town I will be working in is a small town on IH-35 south of San Antonio and the major problem they are concentrating on now is smuggling - large drug shipments or illegal aliens. Now I have to learn a whole new set of cues for who to stop.