I do appreciate everyone’s time weighing in on this topic. Don't misunderstand, this is not a flippant decision I'm about to make. This child is mature and responsible well beyond her years or I would have never even considered it. The initiation of this thread was to determine if the MPA extends to individuals in their teens. That's the first step in the data gathering exercise that I’m currently engaged in. The next step is to gauge the maturity and responsibility of the individual, then assesses the risk vs. the reward. I’m not taking this lightly.SlowDave wrote:
That's the law, then there's the smart thing to do. These are not always the same thing. Use good judgement on allowing your kids to carry in the car, with the knowledge that you are putting them in a spot for a potential huge problem as well as the fact that you will surely go down with them if anything happens. And "anything" includes them not securing the vehicle/weapon and some other kid getting possession of the weapon. My $.02. IMHO, YMMV, IANAL, etc.
Do I want her driving home by herself at 1:00am from some burger flippin’ job without some sort of protection? No I don’t. Am I concerned that something stupid will happen with some knucklehead kid flashing it or having an accidental discharge? Yes. But honestly at this point, since there seems to be some ambiguity in the interpretation, I’m more concerned that a LEO’s interpretation may cause her more pain than it would cause me, then it might sour her on firearms.
As I’ve said previously, I’ll probably be contacting the DA of my county of residence. If you care to read further I’ll convey a short but humorous story about the county that I live in.
During the course of building a new home a few years ago, we were having some vandalism problems. Just kid’s breaking a few windows. It happened two nights in a row, so I decided to stay at the site the next night and catch the little rascals. I had the County Sheriff come out, fill out a report and notify him of my intentions for that evening. I didn’t want him shooting me because he thought I was a BG. The sheriff asked me if I had a weapon, my response was no. He was clearly disappointed and said and I quote, “You know you can shoot them don’t you.” Enough said. Also, during my CHL class the instructor believed that my county has the most CHL’s per capita in the state. Not sure how he could get that data, because I’ve tried to nail that down and I can’t. Anyway, it’s a bit of the old west where I am.