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The Range
Law & Order
Houston Open Carry Incident With A Twist
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<blockquote data-quote="DeeJay" data-source="post: 2676573" data-attributes="member: 35125"><p>Don't get me wrong here, I am not defending the officer, he was wrong on so many levels. My point was the specific comment about taking a "sound bite" from the article and making it seem that any officer can take your firearm any time when they talk to you. Not true. The omitted portion states that can happen only with a reason such as a complaint. </p><p>Similar in ways to our cc laws. An officer cannot walk up to you for no reason and ask if you are carrying. But, if an officer stops you on the road for a traffic violation, you are required by law to inform them. I don't have a problem with that either because then all involved feel a little more comfortable.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DeeJay, post: 2676573, member: 35125"] Don't get me wrong here, I am not defending the officer, he was wrong on so many levels. My point was the specific comment about taking a "sound bite" from the article and making it seem that any officer can take your firearm any time when they talk to you. Not true. The omitted portion states that can happen only with a reason such as a complaint. Similar in ways to our cc laws. An officer cannot walk up to you for no reason and ask if you are carrying. But, if an officer stops you on the road for a traffic violation, you are required by law to inform them. I don't have a problem with that either because then all involved feel a little more comfortable. [/QUOTE]
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