flechero wrote:Another side of this I just thought of...
No one I know has been asked if he/she was carrying (under MPA) when they didn't display a chl... but in most of the cases, there is still a legal firearm in the vehicle. Is the "oversight" as simple as our reminding them with the plastic that we have a weapon? It certainly suggests that disarming chl's has nothing to do with safety. If the officer is concerned for his safety, wouldn't it seem reasonable that they ask everyone they pull over if they have a weapon?
Just as an observation, I would offer the following responses:
1. Don't confuse "failure to present CHL" with "failure to inform officer of gun in car." Presenting the CHL is a requirement under the law if you are armed at the time, even if the law no longer has a penalty appended for failure to present. Informing the officer that you're armed is not a requirement under the law. If the officer wants to know once he/she has seen your CHL, then the officer will
ask you (if they care) if you are armed and if so, where the gun is, etc., etc. In this case, if you fail to present your CHL, you're "playing the fool" because the officer is going to find out your CHL status anyway, and he/she may change their opinion of you since failure to present your CHL may be reasonably interpreted as a deliberate attempt to conceal the information, and that could make their spidey sense tingle.
2. MPA doesn't require you to inform the officer of a weapon in the car unless asked. Thus, whatever follows by way of officer response is not a legal risk to you, so long as you don't play the fool. In this case, "playing the fool" would constitute not being truthful when asked on the one hand, and screaming "I HAVE A GUN!!!!" on the other hand. Being pleasant, calm, and rational, and truthfully answering the question if the officer asks if there are any firearms in the car is the path that is going to keep you out of handcuffs and free to go when the "interview" is over.
2. Whatever the various
constitutional opinions are, the prevailing
legal opinions are that when you have a CHL and a gun in your car, your CHL "preempts" MPA, and you are subject to the laws of CHL, not MPA. In this case, "playing the fool" would constitute failure to present the CHL to the officer, and failure to truthfully answer the question of whether your are armed or not if asked.
Therefore, if your friend(s) A) had a CHL, B) were in possession of a firearm in the vehicle, C) were stopped by an LEO, and D) did NOT present their CHL when asked for ID, they
were in violation of the law. The fact that there is no longer a penalty for failure to present the CHL has not removed the
requirement to inform from the statutes. One of the things that having a CHL does—in theory—is inform the officer that you are one of the good guys. I've only ever had 3 occasions to show my CHL (only one was a traffic stop), two of the officers (Grapevine PD) didn't even ask if I was armed, and the third one (Southlake PD) asked if I was armed, where it was, and just asked me to keep my hands away from that area.....but he didn't ask to disarm me. The problem is that failure to present the CHL, which
will be discovered anyway, may very well destroy whatever good will having one in the first place had created.....setting up the type of situation which will take the contact into the area of confrontation rather than cooperation.
The trouble is, some people are their own worst enemies, and because pride goeth before the fall, they remain willfully blind to the relationship between their choices, and the consequences that develop from those choices. Those are the times that deserve one of these:
YMMV.