Car Carry Law and School Campuses
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Car Carry Law and School Campuses
I teach part-time at a private school that I have not yet talked into letting me carry while at work. When I drive there to teach one class, I am carrying, so I secure in my truck or car in the parking lot before going inside. However, on occasion, my wife needs to drop me off (she does not have a CHL). If, when she drops me off, I disarm and lock my weapon in the glovebox, am I causing her to break the law by possessing a weapon on school campus? Or is she covered by the car carry law?
If you put a keyed trigger lock on the pistol, and kept all the keys to that trigger lock with you, I think you wife would be okay in regards to the Federal laws, as the gun would be inaccessible to her in that condition.
I am not a lawyer.
I am not a lawyer.
Remember, in a life-or-death situation, when seconds count, the police are only minutes away.
Barre
Barre
The federal law requires the firearm to be unloaded and in a locked container or rack.barres wrote:If you put a keyed trigger lock on the pistol, and kept all the keys to that trigger lock with you, I think you wife would be okay in regards to the Federal laws, as the gun would be inaccessible to her in that condition.
- Jim
You all beat me to my next question . . .
What if I unload? It's a Taurus, so it has the integrated security system where I can lock it. Locking the glovebox doesn't do any good because her car key opens that, but the pistol would be unloaded and locked and unable to be unsecured by anyone but me.
The federal law says unloaded and in a locked case or rack. The driver of the car can legally have the key to the case.
It is completely legal under state law for the driver of a car to have a concealed handgun, loaded or not.
I have said already, this law is never used to prosecute people who are simply driving near a school. The NRA would love to have a test case to take to the Supreme Court.
I would never advise someone to break the law, but IMHO this is an unconstitutional law with no moral authority. It was already overturned by the Supreme Court once.
- Jim
It is completely legal under state law for the driver of a car to have a concealed handgun, loaded or not.
I have said already, this law is never used to prosecute people who are simply driving near a school. The NRA would love to have a test case to take to the Supreme Court.
I would never advise someone to break the law, but IMHO this is an unconstitutional law with no moral authority. It was already overturned by the Supreme Court once.
- Jim