Question for LEO and/or military on the board

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I'll admit that running a CCW holder's gun makes more sense as, like a car, you have to have a license. But in an open carry state it seems a but odd to run it because it is my legal right to posses it in most places provided I'm sober.

And if I'm on the street, not driving, and get cuffed without acting stupid (in VA I'm allowed to refuse to show ID to LEO provided I'm not carrying concealed and while it is kind of a jerk thing to do, it is my right and I may excercise it when desired) I will be filing lots of complaints.

And reasonable belief wont fly for anything of mine being confiscated and not returned in a timely fashion. It is prevlant attitudes like that that essentially just say "sorry, we're the police and we do what we want but if you did the same thing it would be illegal and we'd arrest you" that create so much distrust between LEO and general public.

I personally enjoy areas where the police become active in the community. Bike and beat officers are great. I like stopping to talk to them or a bit of conversation at 7-11 where a lot of the local cops gather around shift change (free donuts and coffee) or late at night when they're bored and the town is quiet.

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I wouldn't sweat it, you seem like a level headed, amiable guy, I'd say the odds of you're having a bad experience are very, very low. Most cops attitudes are you get back what you give, you'll be fine.

Now if you go to Chitown, NYC etc....hey, I can't speak for that.
 
I wouldn't sweat it, you seem like a level headed, amiable guy, I'd say the odds of you're having a bad experience are very, very low. Most cops attitudes are you get back what you give, you'll be fine.

Now if you go to Chitown, NYC etc....hey, I can't speak for that.

Good Lord, man. Do you think I've not got any sanity? Going to NYC is just bad mojo. Maybe once Bloomberg gets his grubby mits off of things I'll make it there. :p

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My experience with LEO have been mostly good. I've found that most know the concealed carry laws of the state they reside. Some don't know and don't care.

I got pulled over once for a burned out brake light. When the officer approached my car I handed him what he asked for and my concealed pistol license. He came back and asked me what I was carrying. When I answered he said "you can't carry a 44 magnum!":rolleyes: I politely informed him that nowhere in the state laws does it say I can't. All I got was a hurumph!

Then I got pulled over for speeding by a trooper. ( I got a lead foot):rolleyes:

Gave him the paperwork and pistol license. He looked at it and said thanks for being up front and honest and he let me go with a warning.:eek::D;)
 
That's not even a logical statement. The police risk their lives to maintain a stable and safe society, which you and your loved ones directly benefit from.

That's one of the things that they say. However, the Supreme Court has stated that the police have no obligation to protect you. Add in that a frequent statement made by police is "the important thing is that you go home at the end of shift" and you have a very disturbing picture.

About fifteen years ago or so, there a police officer shot a motorist in the Maryland county where I lived. Supposedly, the officer was "helping" the motorist out of his car when he "accidentally" shot the motorist in the back and killed him. I was involved in a sports league at the time with quite a few county police officers. The universal sentiment was, "It is really screwed up that Officer Schmoe got fired over this." When queried about the poor dead motorist and that tragedy, the response was "Meh, ca-ca happens."

. . . I don't think you are in the majority.

Depends on the internet forum.
 
LEO meets CCW holder

There was an earlier post asking for LEO input on demeanor during a confrontation between CCW holders and LE. My intent here is to expand on some of the questions and concerns.

In 1970, in a police academy class, it was pointed out that 8% of the population created 90% of the work for police, and after working for three to five years and only seeing the dregs of society, it was not uncommon for a police officer to lose sight of the fact that 98% of the population was just as straight as the officer. It is also not uncommon for officers to form close friendships with fellow officers, largely because they are well known, work the same job and often work the same unusual hours. During this three to five year period of seeing good police officers and bad citizens it is not uncommon to fall into what was described as the, “Them VS us” syndrome.

This, “Them VS us” syndrome was described as, a police officer sees a young man walking along a sidewalk and the officer thinks to himself, “I wonder what no good he is up to?” Now, a priest happens by, sees the same young man and thinks to himself, “What a beautiful soul, he could do no wrong.” What the police officer and the priest, both fail to recognize is that the great majority of young men fall somewhere between those two exaggerated opinions. Both the officer and the priest have surrounded them selves with like minded people for so long that they have lost sight of reality. Being aware of this syndrome is necessary to prevent falling for it and acting irresponsibility when caught up in it.

Ideally all police officers would treat everyone they come in contact with respect, be familiar with all of the laws and be properly trained in dealing with the entire range of possible situations. Unfortunately, law is extremely complicated requiring attorneys, judges and juries to make final judgment. Training is very expensive and many departments are not afforded the money to properly train their officers. Some departments are not even afforded the money to hire quality officers. Lastly, we must recruit our officers from the human race and the human animal is fallible. I am not trying to excuse intentionally bad or unlawful conduct but to point out that we live in an imperfect world and both sides need to think outside their box during a confrontation.

One question was the legality of taking the gun from a CCW holder and checking it for possibly being stolen. There is no simple answer to this due to the unlimited scenarios under which the gun and CCW permit can come to light.

For instance, during a traffic stop, as the officer approaches you, you declare your permit and gun. The officer has not seen either yet but he must assume there is a gun. He need not assume that there is a permit as it would be folly to assume that every person who speaks to him is telling the truth. Not that he believes you are lying but for his own safety he must assume that it is a possibility, until your truthfulness can be verified by seeing and verifying the permit. The possibility may exist that the officer has prior knowledge of a gun related crime by a person resembling you, or a car used in that crime resembling your car. This scenario would prompt the officer to take control of the gun immediately and then verify the permit.

Under the preceding scenario, once it is determined that you are in lawful possession of the gun, and no circumstance suggests that your gun could be stolen, under California law when I retired, it would be improper to run your gun for a stolen. Due to a lack of knowledge, training or discipline, the officer may run your gun anyway. Should that happen, the place to protest is at the police station or at city hall.

I hope that this helps and does not stir up animosity. Both sides need all of the understanding and cooperation that we can muster.
 
Part of my reason for purchasing S&W was their partnership with the LE community so want to tap into that today. Am I mis-reading things or do you experience the distrust? What is driving the divide? Should I be more careful/cautious? Is the LE community supportive of law-abiding people arming themselves?

In my experience, non-police gun carriers often expect law enforcement to assume they're "the good guys" because they look a certain way, act respectful and complied with the law's very low standards to obtain a CPL. From the law enforcement officer's perspective, or from THIS law enforcement officer's perspective, the way you look means nothing, the way you initially act means nothing and the fact that you have a CPL means nothing at the side of the road at 3:00am. Some people seem to expect a friendly conversation about guns and a break on a speeding ticket when they inform the officer they have a custom Kimber and a CPL. Some of the most polite people I ever dealt with were penitentiary veterans of violent crimes. They learn to act this way and they cultivate this persona as a way to manipulate the unwary.

In my line of work, guns are tools, not a conversation starter on a traffic stop. I make no assumptions about the people I deal with at work based on how they look, what they're wearing or the fact that they have a CPL. It has nothing to do with "trust". Trust is something you "develop". Any officer who "trusts" someone they just met while taking care of business on the job is a fool. While I don't assume someone is a criminal because they're armed, I certainly don't assume they're a good guy either. In fact, the only assumption I make is that they have a gun and it's up to them whether they shoot me or not. It's up to me to figure out what their intentions are before they do.

There's no big deal with a "lack of trust" when there's no basis for trust to begin with. Too many gun carriers mistake impersonal but professional interaction with some sort of disdain or rudeness.

While there are plenty of cop haters on gun board and plenty of arrogant cops who seem to think only they should be allowed to carry guns, I think there are more cop haters, per capita, than I think there are cops who hold legal gun carriers in contempt.

I don't care one way or the other if people choose to carry guns. It's their right and I support that right, but the fact that someone is legally armed never influenced my decision to arrest or ticket or to not arrest or ticket anymore than the color of their eyes.

Another thing....Imagine this: You're an appliance repair man who is dispatched by radio. You get 30 minutes for lunch. You can count on getting another call as soon as you say "clear from lunch" on your radio. Try to imagine how annoying it would be to have someone expect you to carry on a 20 minute conversation about the multi tool you have in a holster strapped to your belt. Do you have any idea how hard it is to "be nice" to someone like that for 20 minutes, and not appear to be rude in getting the message across that you don't want to be their friend and talk about multi tools and hang out with them? Some people think that 30 minutes of companionship at lunch time comes with the taxes they pay for police service. Others seem to think that they're part of the police fraternity because they have a CPL. They're not. In general, being the police is about .2% gun-related. In the ghetto, it might be about 1 or 2% gun-related.


Most LEO do not like the CCW Laws. The reason is there are too many legal guns on the street, in the hands of the drunk or enraged people.

I disagree (27 years on). Most cops I know have no problem with Michigan's "shall issue" law or the CPL law in general. In fact, I'd rather have someone carry concealed than open, and open carry has always been legal in MI. My position has nothing to do with the fact that they may prevent crimes in progress or be a deterrent, but simply is based on the fact that I believe it's their right to carry. Over the years, I've probably had as many problems, per capita, with armed off-duty cops doing stupid things with guns than legally-armed non-cops. The young guys don't seem to hang out like the guys did in the "old days". I guess they're at home playing video games or something....Or maybe at the gym working out......But over the years I learned it would be best to avoid the cop bars on paynights. Not that I avoided them much, I just learned it would be best.....

Playing Devil's advocate, the argument would be LEO's run your tag, run your DL, your vin# sometimes, so what's the difference? Guns are a very common stolen item, sometimes simple stop and talks yield big arrests.

Legally, LEO's can stop you, pat you down, look in your car for plain view items and even cuff you for officer safety. That being the case SCOTUS certainly would allow running your gun.

Actually, I think that's sort of a gray area. You can run a car's plate because it's open to public view. In order to run a number on a handgun, you have to seize something that wasn't initially in plain sight. I don't know that there has been much case law that says you can seize someone's gun just because they're armed. The standard for patting someone down for weapons is a reasonable belief that they're armed AND potentially dangerous, not just "armed". There is no "officer safety" exception to the search warrant rule. Just because someone is armed, doesn't NECESSARILY mean it's reasonable to believe they're dangerous. (Would you run up and pat down every plain clothes Secret Service guy you see when the president's in town? He's armed but do you have a reasonable belief that he's dangerous?). Any cop worth his salt could probably articulate reasonable suspicion for a pat-down of an armed guy at the side of the road at 3:00am, but there is no law that says you get a free pass for "officer safety". There has to be a reasonable belief that the person is armed and potentially dangerous for a Terry search.
 
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Police around here seem to handle things pretty well. Lot's of friends who carry and no one ever mentions being hassled. I've only been pulled over once. Handed the officer my carry permit and DL at the same time. I didn't mention anything about having a gun and he never said a word about a gun. End of story.

That said, if he asked if I had a gun then disarmed and detained me while he ran a check... the moment the officer was gone my cheerful smile, obliging and cooperative attitude would flip 180 degrees as I called the mayor's office...
 
I work with some officers that see everyone as a perp. I tend to reserve judgement until you give me a reason to turn it up a notch or two. You set the tone within the first five seconds of my contact with you.

There it is.

I often wonder how many bad encounters start with a surly attitude from the "good citizen who knows he is beyond reproach".
I've encountered one truly bad cop in my life.
I beat it in court and had the pleasure of making him look like the jerk he was, and only lost a speeding fine. From the demeanor of the other cops in the courthouse that day, I believe THEY thought he was jerk also.
Quite a few times, I've been stopped, and knew I was wrong. I treated the officer with normal courtesy, and even though he had me cold, I've been issued a warning, or simply told "How 'bout slowin' it down?"




That's not even a logical statement. The police risk their lives to maintain a stable and safe society, which you and your loved ones directly benefit from.

That's one of the things that they say. However, the Supreme Court has stated that the police have no obligation to protect you. Add in that a frequent statement made by police is "the important thing is that you go home at the end of shift" and you have a very disturbing picture.

About fifteen years ago or so, there a police officer shot a motorist in the Maryland county where I lived. Supposedly, the officer was "helping" the motorist out of his car when he "accidentally" shot the motorist in the back and killed him. I was involved in a sports league at the time with quite a few county police officers. The universal sentiment was, "It is really screwed up that Officer Schmoe got fired over this." When queried about the poor dead motorist and that tragedy, the response was "Meh, ca-ca happens."
Give us a break.
We got it.
In your mind, cops are evil.
Most of us don't agree, but we got it.
I think you may be correct in your fear that you are going to have problems if stopped. One of those "self-fulfilling prophecy" things we've heard about. Read the first part again. Most cops will start out simply civil in a straightforward, professional way. After that, they'll probably feed you the same that you give them.





. . . I don't think you are in the majority.

Depends on the internet forum.
Just to be sure you know-
This AIN'T that forum...... ;)
 
In explaining the, "Them VS us" syndrome, I failed to mention that this applies to any person or group of people who obsess over an issue and develop a prejudice against another person or group, be it Blacks, Hispanics or police. If one develops distrust of any group they very likely form an opinion that this group is inherently evil, and that assumption would be wrong about 92% of the time.

We occasionally fail to realize that we live in an imperfect world and occasionally, and sometimes frequently, are forced to face adversity that does not play out as we would like. Life is not always fair but it always beats the alternative.
 
I'll jump in with my experience and opinion...

I was pulled over for excessive speed on a freeway in Phoenix a couple years ago. I kept my hands on the wheel as the DPS officer approached the car. My wallet was in my right hip pocket and my handgun was concealed under my shirt on my right hip. While keeping my hands on the wheel, I informed the officer that I was carrying and that the location of the gun was near my wallet. He politely had me step out of the car and place my hands on the car while he removed the handgun from my holster. I then gave him my DL and CCW permit from my wallet, he had me get back in my car, while he took the gun, and my DL and CCW back to his car. A few minutes later he got out, went to the passenger side of his car (away from traffic), removed the mag and safely cleared my gun. He then brought all my property back to me along with a polite warning to slow down (no ticket).

Did I feel violated?? Not at all. It was a bit unnerving to have my hands on the car as he removed my weapon, but I understand the reasoning for it. I did not WANT to reach for my wallet until he felt comfortable that I wasn't reaching for anything else! Yes he held on to my gun and cleared it before returning it to me, but again...I didn't blame him. Officers do get ambushed and shot during routine traffic stops.

And by the way, I had previously been stopped for speeding probably 4-5 times during my time in Arizona (previously I wasn't carrying), and this was the ONLY time I was ever left off without a warning...so I think the officer appreciated my courtesy and appreciated being informed.

I have no doubt that the experiences could differ significantly in other states.
 
Question: in NH, if you have a CCW you are law abiding or you wouldn't get your CCW. Also you can't buy a firearm unless you have no felony arrests. I don't know the policy in all states but how could a officer encounter a CCW holder who is not law abiding? Yiogo
 
Question: in NH, if you have a CCW you are law abiding or you wouldn't get your CCW. Also you can't buy a firearm unless you have no felony arrests. I don't know the policy in all states but how could a officer encounter a CCW holder who is not law abiding? Yiogo

Al Capone had a gun permit.
Bob
 
I'll take your word for that but these days felons don't get CCP's, at least not in the Granite State, nor can they buy a firearm. Sorry. I meant to say CCP and not CCW . Not saying the officer should not check and disarm. Just saying having the CCP means law abiding. Of course, one could go on a crime spree after being law abiding his whole life after getting his permit. Not likely but reason enough to disarm. Yiogo
 
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Question: in NH, if you have a CCW you are law abiding or you wouldn't get your CCW. Also you can't buy a firearm unless you have no felony arrests. I don't know the policy in all states but how could a officer encounter a CCW holder who is not law abiding? Yiogo

I was looking for an outlaw biker at a 1%er clubhouse once. I ran the plates on several bikes out front hoping to find my guy. Two of them came back to cpl holders. Just because you don't have a felony record doesn't mean you're "law abiding".
 
I'll take your word for that but these days felons don't get CCP's, at least not in the Granite State, nor can they buy a firearm. Sorry. I meant to say CCP and not CCW . Not saying the officer should not check and disarm. Just saying having the CCP means law abiding. Of course, one could go on a crime spree after being law abiding his whole life after getting his permit. Not likely but reason enough to disarm. Yiogo

Sorry, just having some fun; couldn't resist. Too many good comments on CCW permits so I won't add mine. Just remember to keep the moral outrage to a minimum when you're stopped and questioned; the cop stopping you doesn't know you're a "good guy". I arrested a famous actor in Los Angeles one evening; he was acting like an idiot and tried to take my partner's gun. He was restrained, arrested, booked and released. The DA dropped the charges in return for an apology and some community service time. He had a concealed carry permit from Culver City (the place to go for a CCW permit because LA doesn't give them out). A CCW permit is just a piece of paper stating the holder has no criminal record, has usually passed some form of rudimentary training and is allowed to carry a deadly weapon. If you (as a cop) play the odds, the chances are excellent that the CCW citizen is very law-abiding and won't cause any problems. But I've seen off-duty cops do stupid things when stopped; I arrested several from other agencies for hanging with prostitutes and smoking rock (cocaine) in my area. I arrested another for murder. You really can't trust anyone until you go through the safety routine, based on training and experience. Street cops can pay a harsh price for being careless.
Bob
 
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A couple more thoughts here. If I tell the cop that I have a gun, it doesn't seem likely that I'm going to yank it out of my belt and shoot him. If I wanted to shoot him, I wouldn't have warned him and plugged him when he came up to the car.

Cops tend to be gun morons. Most police officers that I know are not shooting enthusiasts. They know how to operate their duty pistol and shotgun and that's about it. This being the case, I don't want some fumble fingers trying to yank my pistol out of my holster which creates an unsafe situation and then trying to figure out how to take the safety off and then manipulate the slide to clear it.

It is most likely that the cops on this forum are enthusiast and are familiar with most types of guns but they are in the minority.

A few years ago there was a discussion on another forum which stated when the OP stated that he had been in a police station when a lady had brought in a pistol for disposal. No one on duty could figure out how to drop the magzine. During the discussion someone suggested that police officers should receive rudimentary training in how to clear and make safe most common types of firearms. Then the attacks started from the police officers on the forum: who would pay for this because budgets are too tight, the idea that they do it on their own was met with derision, just asking one of their own who is a gun enthusiast to do it wouldn't work either. The issue of pay kept coming up.

So the result is when Officer Friendly is trying to disarm me for "his safety" he is actually creating a very, very unsafe situation.
 
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