Scared sheople
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Scared sheople
The guy didn't even have a gun, but the thought that he might while taking care of some personal banking business apparently was enough to detain his family waiting in the parking lot as well as hold him on the ground at gunpoint for 30 minutes.
WFAA NEWS story here
(edited by moderator to reduce url)
WFAA NEWS story here
(edited by moderator to reduce url)
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 917
- Joined: Tue May 09, 2006 9:12 am
- Location: The part of Texas that isn't like Texas
Thats what is scary to me. Who's to say this couldn't have have happened to any of us? What if we had been properly concealing and yet someone claims to have seen our gun even if they really had not?
I don't know but to me this is part of the reason I wish open carry was legal here. Perhaps if people were exposed to law abiding citizens carrying in public places doing no wrong on a regular basis it would start to lift some of the fear people have when they simply think that someone "might" be carrying a gun.
I don't know but to me this is part of the reason I wish open carry was legal here. Perhaps if people were exposed to law abiding citizens carrying in public places doing no wrong on a regular basis it would start to lift some of the fear people have when they simply think that someone "might" be carrying a gun.
Last edited by RCP on Mon Sep 10, 2007 11:56 am, edited 1 time in total.
If someone calls the police and say they see "a man with a gun," and the police show up before you leave, the police aren't going to see anything illegal.RCP wrote:Who's to say this couldn't have have happened to any of us? What if we had been properly concealing and yet someone claims to have seen our gun even if they really had not?
If the person who called has hysterics and says you were waving it around, he or she had better be able to describe it.
This is where the people who have unusual revolvers, rosewood grips, etc., have an advantage. The idiot would be very unlikely to guess right.
In any case, arrest requires probable cause that you committed a crime, and it would be up to the responding police officer whether the word of one other person constituted probable cause.
- Jim
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 917
- Joined: Tue May 09, 2006 9:12 am
- Location: The part of Texas that isn't like Texas
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 208
- Joined: Sun May 27, 2007 11:34 pm
- Location: DFW Texas
After yesterdays deal in Odessa I am sure the LEO are on high alert to any perceived danger.
2be1-ask1
-----------------
DougMyers
NRA Endowed Life Member
CHL Issued June 2007
Member # 1567
http://www.texasopencarry.com/
-----------------
DougMyers
NRA Endowed Life Member
CHL Issued June 2007
Member # 1567
http://www.texasopencarry.com/
Well, there's no bottom limit on stupidity. But there would be no legal basis for charging someone with robbery when he was having a conversation with people who knew him, and had not made a threat or displayed a weapon.propellerhead wrote:But considering how the incident folded out, I'm thinking they might go as far as booking him for attempted robbery or whatever they seemed to come up with.
- Jim
Don't go In
I have a bank but I have not seen it in over a year.
Online banking rules!!!
Seriously are people that nieve that a person acting suspiciously is automatically a bank rober? there was no demand or action tward the bank in the article.
Contrary to sheeples opnions not all people look alike.
Online banking rules!!!
Seriously are people that nieve that a person acting suspiciously is automatically a bank rober? there was no demand or action tward the bank in the article.
Contrary to sheeples opnions not all people look alike.
Big round, Little round, Having one is what counts!!!