Ohio.
A Deer Park man with a concealed carry permit was arrested early today after brandishing his gun in a bar during an argument.
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
A Deer Park man with a concealed carry permit was arrested early today after brandishing his gun in a bar during an argument.
TDDude wrote: I'm pretty sure there are a whole lotta things left out it being a newspaper and all.
I agree that retreat is one option, but it's not always possible to retreat safely.steveincowtown wrote:I believe Ohio is a "Duty to Retreat" state. He should have left the bar before the situation escalated, not only because it is the law, but it is good common sense.
I would rather be the wise man then the proud man any day of the week...
boba wrote:I agree that retreat is one option, but it's not always possible to retreat safely.steveincowtown wrote:I believe Ohio is a "Duty to Retreat" state. He should have left the bar before the situation escalated, not only because it is the law, but it is good common sense.
I would rather be the wise man then the proud man any day of the week...
For sure...again the article may or may not be correct but if:boba wrote:I agree that retreat is one option, but it's not always possible to retreat safely.steveincowtown wrote:I believe Ohio is a "Duty to Retreat" state. He should have left the bar before the situation escalated, not only because it is the law, but it is good common sense.
I would rather be the wise man then the proud man any day of the week...
TDDude wrote:Story says O'Reilly had been drinking. Is the Ohio law zero tolerance on this issue or do they have similar intoxication laws to Texas? Story doesn't say how much he had been drinking. Since the story doesn't specifically say O'Reilly was drunk then my guess is it wasn't much.
No alcohol at all as any consumption would be classified as under the influence. Unlike the Texas law that states intoxicated, the argument is made that with any consumption you are under the influence. It is a VERY grey area.Ohio Statute 2923.15 Using weapons while intoxicated.
(A) No person, while under the influence of alcohol or any drug of abuse, shall carry or use any firearm or dangerous ordnance.
(B) Whoever violates this section is guilty of using weapons while intoxicated, a misdemeanor of the first degree.
No alcohol at all as any consumption would be classified as under the influence. Unlike the Texas law that states intoxicated, the argument is made that with any consumption you are under the influence. It is a VERY grey area.[/quote]Ohio Statute 2923.15 Using weapons while intoxicated.
(A) No person, while under the influence of alcohol or any drug of abuse, shall carry or use any firearm or dangerous ordnance.
(B) Whoever violates this section is guilty of using weapons while intoxicated, a misdemeanor of the first degree.
So confused. Are you saying you rather have a law that saw you can't have a single drink rather than have a gray area? Why not just not drink, then the gray area becomes pretty black and white.KingofChaos wrote:
I'd honestly rather it be that way in Texas as well. I'd much rather have the situation under my control and be determined on whether I chose to drink or not. The way we have it, determining "intoxication" is left to the subjective judgment of other men after the fact, or by an officer who presumable encounters you after drinking and makes you. But that's just me...
I agree.steveincowtown wrote:So confused. Are you saying you rather have a law that saw you can't have a single drink rather than have a gray area? Why not just not drink, then the gray area becomes pretty black and white.KingofChaos wrote:
I'd honestly rather it be that way in Texas as well. I'd much rather have the situation under my control and be determined on whether I chose to drink or not. The way we have it, determining "intoxication" is left to the subjective judgment of other men after the fact, or by an officer who presumable encounters you after drinking and makes you. But that's just me...
As long as you can produce a prescription for that controlled substance, and you are not carrying while impaired by that controlled substance...you should be fine.VoiceofReason wrote:
I notice he was charged with “possession of a controlled substance”. I carry a small pill box of prescription pain meds in my pocket. I wonder if I could be hauled off to jail because they are a “controlled substance”?
My advice is that you better have your script handy in case something does happen. Perhaps your pharmacist can put it on a card or tape a label to your pill holder.VoiceofReason wrote: I notice he was charged with “possession of a controlled substance”. I carry a small pill box of prescription pain meds in my pocket. I wonder if I could be hauled off to jail because they are a “controlled substance”?