Search found 12 matches

by C-dub
Thu Jul 22, 2021 5:46 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

Boxerrider wrote: Thu Jul 22, 2021 3:36 pm The senate has time to address this now, correct???
They do, but I don't think they can since it wasn't one of the things specified for the Special Session.
by C-dub
Fri Sep 25, 2020 5:57 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

This is just insane. Life will not stop, but apparently justice and the law can be or at least put on hold. OMG!
by C-dub
Fri Apr 17, 2020 1:27 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

ELB wrote: Wed Mar 18, 2020 2:37 pm Ah, here we go:

Whelp, this COVID 19 business is not going to make Paxton v. City of Austin courthouse sign litigation get resolved any faster... :banghead:
Won't that only increase their fine when the City of Austin loses?
by C-dub
Fri Jan 17, 2020 7:15 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

OUCH!!!

I am a little confused by the issue surrounding the typical "no guns" sign. The silhouette inside a red circle with a slash through the gun. Are they saying it is similar to or the same as a 30.06 and 30.07 even though it doesn't have the wording to accompany it?
by C-dub
Fri Jan 18, 2019 2:24 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

Flightmare wrote: Fri Jan 18, 2019 1:25 am
RicoTX wrote: Fri Jan 18, 2019 1:09 am I think this is good news.
However, why are the fines so low?
Why threaten with huge fines if the State is not going to use them?
The judge ruled that there was only evidence of violations during 6 days.
This sounds like a weak judge to me doing everything he or she can to lessen the penalty on the city and are only ruling against them because they can’t find a way around the law. I wonder if they really expected someone to try and gain entry every day they were open and document that.
by C-dub
Mon Oct 08, 2018 12:21 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

ELB wrote: Mon Oct 08, 2018 11:34 am
C-dub wrote: Mon Oct 08, 2018 11:26 am If only the city kept accumulating a fine for each day they were in violation while this process continued. If that were the case and the fine was due when the decision made and they lost they wouldn’t want to wait so long I bet.
IIRC the fine starts accumulating 15 days after the OAG issues (or the City receives) the OAG's violation letter (and the City has not cured the issue). I believe the OAG's letter was issued in July of 2016, but I don't have access to it right now.

In this case the judge has ruled that the City is not in violation by forbidding licensed carry in the non-court part of the building when court is in session, but it can be in violation when court is NOT in session. I believe the OAG still has to show that the city was improperly preventing licensed carry when the court was not in session, and if the OAG makes that case, a fine should follow. It will be interesting to see how that is calculated.
Does that mean that there can be no decision about whether or not the judge was wrong to say that the city could ban LTC’s from carrying in the non-court areas even when the courts are in session?
by C-dub
Mon Oct 08, 2018 11:26 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

If only the city kept accumulating a fine for each day they were in violation while this process continued. If that were the case and the fine was due when the decision made and they lost they wouldn’t want to wait so long I bet.
by C-dub
Tue Sep 18, 2018 9:46 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

WildRose wrote: Tue Sep 18, 2018 9:14 pm
ELB wrote: Sat Sep 15, 2018 11:08 am As a reminder, the AG and the City of Austin meet in a hearing/trial on this coming Monday, 17 Sep, at 0900 in the 261st District Court in Travis County (Austin). I would like to go sit in on that, but really can't afford to take the time off. If there's anyone here near Austin with time to go, it would be nice to get a first hand report.

As far as I can tell from the previous ruling by the judge, the following issues will be argued:

1. Did the security guards provide an oral communication that meets the requirements of 30.06 (and did so improperly)? Or in the judge's words, "...at what point does an oral statement give rise to notice and criminal liability for the license holder." This is very interesting question, and I think is potentially much more of an impact to licensed carry than whether an entire court house can be made off limits, because the answer will likely apply to private property "oral communications" as well.


2. If & when the City of Austin improperly denied entrance to City Hall to LTC holders. She has already ruled/opined that while the City may place the entire building off limits to licensed carry, not just the court room (or school activity), the City can do so ONLY when court (or sponsored activity) is in session. Since nothing in the record indicated when court/activity was or was not in session, I assume the AG will bring evidence of this. If she finds that licensed carry was prohibited by written or oral communication when court/activity was not in session, then it appears to me fines can be assessed.
As the law is written I don't see how she can justify allowing the entire building to be posted even when court is in session.

A plain reading of the statute and the AG's guidance letters says otherwise. How can a judge make a ruling that is in direct conflict of the law as written and expect it to stand?
I think that's where the rub is. The AG opinion/guidance is not law and they disagree with his opinion/guidance and seem willing to go to court to settle the law.
by C-dub
Wed Jul 06, 2016 10:19 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

ScottDLS wrote:
Scott in Houston wrote:
ELB wrote:
Scott in Houston wrote:Very disappointed in the Elgin ISD ruling.
That could create the slippery slope for others wanting to claim exclusion based on being an educational institution or school district.
I find your comment a bit baffling, since I see little doubt that forbidding concealed (and now, open) carry on elementary, junior, and high school districts (without permission of the district) was exactly what the legislature intended. I don't like it, but an independent school district is precisely what the law meant. There is no slope at this point, for the AG to say otherwise would have been in direct contravention of the law. I'm even puzzled that someone went to the trouble to even make a complaint about a ISD administration building.
Read his letter. These comments, "(opining that FERPA applies to student records at both the state and local level because "educational agency or institution" includes any public or private agency or institution that receives federal funding under an applicable education program, without regard to whether it enrolls students") "

So any agency that gets federal funding from an education program can now be considered a school? So what if a zoo gets money? Or libraries, or … ? See the slope I'm talking about?

I believe the intent of the was SCHOOLS… not all buildings supporting them like bus barns or administrative offices completely separate from a school.
I don't think the opinion goes that far. When the letter refers to "applicable education program" that could mean "applicable to SCHOOLS". Like Head Start for Pre-K SCHOOLS, not daycares (which wouldn't qualify).

What I read from the opinion is that the ISD administration buildings are part of the SCHOOL system and supporting it, therefore covered. I don't agree with it, but I can see the reasoning. The Fort Worth Zoo might be off limits if it was OWNED by FWISD AND used as part of the curriculum, but just because they "educate" people there and sometimes have school activities, doesn't make them a SCHOOL. I predict they lose.
I'm going to go along with Scott in Houston on this one, but not because of the money thing. In the AG opinion it is stated that school or educational institution is not defined in 46.03, but is in other contexts. I guess that they are correct in their interpretation, but think that it needs to be better defined. An administration office for an ISD is not a school or an educational institution IMHO and might not be what the legislature had in mind when drafting and approving that part.
by C-dub
Wed Apr 06, 2016 9:35 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

casp625 wrote:
C-dub wrote:
casp625 wrote:
C-dub wrote:
casp625 wrote: Yes but the term amusement park does not apply to any sidewalk or walkways, per statute :tiphat:
True, but those sidewalks or walkways must be public. All the sidewalks and walkways "inside" the amusement zoo are not public.
You sure about that?
(1) "Amusement park" means a permanent indoor or outdoor facility or park where amusement rides are available for use by the public that is located in a county with a population of more than one million, encompasses at least 75 acres in surface area, is enclosed with access only through controlled entries, is open for operation more than 120 days in each calendar year, and has security guards on the premises at all times. The term does not include any public or private driveway, street, sidewalk or walkway, parking lot, parking garage, or other parking area.
It's not spelled out, but I'm pretty sure that the intent of that is directed to public or private areas that are accessible to the public even when closed. The areas we are debating about here are inside the park and accessible only when the park is open.
Intent vs plain meaning is how the zoo got itself the amusement park designation. And thus, plain meaning states amusement park does not apply to any public or private sidewalk or walkway. So even if 30.0X posted, 46.035 only applies to the buildings in the amusement park.

Simple solution: stay on the walkways and sidewalks and 46.035 doesn't apply in the zoo, erm, amusement park. Unless you can point out in the statute that states otherwise.
That would be great if that were the case, but somehow I don't think it is.
by C-dub
Wed Apr 06, 2016 9:59 am
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

casp625 wrote:
C-dub wrote:
casp625 wrote: Yes but the term amusement park does not apply to any sidewalk or walkways, per statute :tiphat:
True, but those sidewalks or walkways must be public. All the sidewalks and walkways "inside" the amusement zoo are not public.
You sure about that?
(1) "Amusement park" means a permanent indoor or outdoor facility or park where amusement rides are available for use by the public that is located in a county with a population of more than one million, encompasses at least 75 acres in surface area, is enclosed with access only through controlled entries, is open for operation more than 120 days in each calendar year, and has security guards on the premises at all times. The term does not include any public or private driveway, street, sidewalk or walkway, parking lot, parking garage, or other parking area.
It's not spelled out, but I'm pretty sure that the intent of that is directed to public or private areas that are accessible to the public even when closed. The areas we are debating about here are inside the park and accessible only when the park is open.
by C-dub
Tue Apr 05, 2016 9:45 pm
Forum: General Texas CHL Discussion
Topic: 30.06 Ruling Letters
Replies: 229
Views: 80208

Re: 30.06 Ruling Letters

casp625 wrote: Yes but the term amusement park does not apply to any sidewalk or walkways, per statute :tiphat:
True, but those sidewalks or walkways must be public. All the sidewalks and walkways "inside" the amusement zoo are not public.

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