Inform the officer or not when concealed carry?

I think you need to inform the police officer if you have cwp at front than hide it from him just in case he search your car then you don't get in trouble . As long as you don't violet the law you're okey .:pleasantry:


Officer I do not consent to any searches
 
When you quoted me, you highlighted some of the phrases (statements) I had made, that showed you agreed with what I was saying. But, what I really do not understand is your question, or its meaning.

The bolded were not that i was agreeing...


because dispatch will notify them instantly if you do

Why do they do this? Having a permit is not equal to having felony convictions...this seems to be the same treatment.

It is common respect AND courtesy to let the LEO that has pulled you over know that you have a firearm and a permit.

Why is it common respect and courtesy? If the firearm has no bearing on why one is stopped why should the subject be brought up?
 
The bolded were not that i was agreeing...

Why do they do this? Having a permit is not equal to having felony convictions...this seems to be the same treatment.

Why is it common respect and courtesy? If the firearm has no bearing on why one is stopped why should the subject be brought up?

Why does/should dispatch inform the LEO that the individual they are now walking up to has a Firearms permit (or CCP)? Any added information about the individual who was pulled over (who is at least 90% hidden from the LEO’s view) will help the LEO, especially the fact that there is a very good chance the individual has on his/her person, a firearm. I am not an LEO, nor have I ever been one, but I do have a great amount of respect for LEO’s. I served 3 years in the US Army, and it seems common sense to me that if I were an LEO, regardless of whether I was stopping someone for speeding, drunk driving, or even just not using their signal lights, I would want to know “in advance” before facing them, if there was a good possibility of them carrying/holding/hiding a firearm. That is “common sense”. Remember, you have, “whether it was intentional or not”, done something that an LEO has reason to believe, is illegal; to put it bluntly, the LEO believes you have broken the law, and the knowledge that you may or may not have a firearm in your possession is information that most all LEO’s would probably want.
Why is it common respect and courtesy? It does not matter whether or not the firearm has bearing on the reason one is being stopped. It becomes a knowledge and safety issue to the LEO (even before they speak to you). As far as the LEO knows, you could be “Aunt Bee” from the Andy Griffith show, or you could be one of the top ten most wanted (LEO killing) fugitives in America. But he/she has to treat the Fugitive and Aunt Bee exactly the same until circumstances make the LEO alter his/her routine. The knowledge given to them by dispatch that you have a license/permit to carry, is information they should have/receive before the face to face encounter. On the same note (as MS law requires), informing the LEO that you have a license/permit, and also do have a firearm in the vehicle (and give/show) its location, is giving them the common respect and courtesy they not only deserve “as humans”, but as LEO’s.
 
Why does/should dispatch inform the LEO that the individual they are now walking up to has a Firearms permit (or CCP)? Any added information about the individual who was pulled over (who is at least 90% hidden from the LEO’s view) will help the LEO, especially the fact that there is a very good chance the individual has on his/her person, a firearm.

I find it interesting that you immediately equate having the permit to possessing the firearm and then center the issue around that firearm. How about, instead equating the permit to: being informed of the permit provides the officer with information that likely the subject that is stopped has passed a background check and is many, many more times likely to be a "safe" person who desires to do the officer no harm than the person without a permit? How about instead equating the permit to: IF a firearm becomes a issue, which it should not become any issue at all since there is no need for it to, but IF it should become an issue, it is that much more likely to be a firearm that is legally possessed and carried.
 
Why does/should dispatch ... but as LEO’s.


First let me say Paragraphs are your friend.

I’m not sure how to approach this w/ out going right back into the tell/ don’t tell dead horse beating contest but I’m going to try.

The first thing I would bring to your attention is that statistically, permit holders are one of the most law abiding demographics a cop is likely to encounter in his career including other cops. I would also point out that many states allow for the carrying of a weapon in a private vehicle w/ out a permit so dispatch certainly won’t be telling the officer about them. Also in some states (Colorado among them) your permit isn’t in some master data base so here they won’t have that information either.

Finally you may want to check your facts before posting because Mississippi doesn’t require you to notify on a traffic stop http://www.handgunlaw.us/states/mississippi.pdf
 
In Georgia where I live it is not required to notify. I have never and will never notify a LEO I am carrying. If they ask if I have a gun in the vehicle I will state that I have no illegal weapons in the vehicle.

If I am visiting a state like Mississippi that requires notification by law then I will notify the LEO. In a non notify state you are just asking for trouble if you notify IMHO.
 
i dont think anyone needs to inform a schmofficer of consitutional granted rights...keeping and bearing shall not be infringed.

if you stcik a gun in an officers face one can likely expect to be be shot at. that should be the end of it. no imforming necessary.
 
I was stopped and didn't tell the officer I had a CC permit because I didn't have my weapon with me.
I just handed him my drivers licence and when he came back to the vehicle he asked why I didn't tell him I had a CC permit.
I told him under the Ohio law I only needed to inform him if I was carring.
After reading BigSlicks post I will from now on hand them my CC and drivers licence no matter if I am carring or not, nomally I am.
Debray

Debray, I am a Instructor for Ohio, Florida and Virginia CCW here in Ohio. Everyone I have Ever trained for Ohio CCW / CHL was Instructed to Inform the Officer Regardless if they are Carrying or Not and Provide them your D.L & CHL regardless if your Carrying Concealed or not. In Ohio the Law says you do not have to Inform the Officer if you do not have a Concealed Handgun with you HOWEVER, If you think about the Officers side of it,,, He just ran your Information D.R. and License Check and it told him you had a CCW/CHL If the Vehicle is registered to you, Then when he is at your Window you do not Inform him or her of the CCW/CHL Permit... He may think you have forgotten to follow the Law, You have a Gun and you dident want to tell him, OR you really have something to hide. I think at that time the Officer will go over you and your Vehicle with a fine tooth Comb. Why put yourself in that situation ? I carry 24/7 unless in a forbidden zone but if I am ever stopped and not carrying, I will always Inform to save myself and the Officer the Hassle. I have had MANY Encounters with Law Enforcment in Ohio while Carrying and they all ask where it is, and then say DONT TOUCH IT and thats that, why not tell them your not Carrying and relieve the Tension ? Thank you. ohioccw4u.com
 
Debray, I am a Instructor for Ohio, Florida and Virginia CCW here in Ohio. Everyone I have Ever trained for Ohio CCW / CHL was Instructed to Inform the Officer Regardless if they are Carrying or Not and Provide them your D.L & CHL regardless if your Carrying Concealed or not. In Ohio the Law says you do not have to Inform the Officer if you do not have a Concealed Handgun with you

Your opinion really doesn't matter in comparison w/ the law.

The law says they need PC or a warrant to search your car HOWEVER, think about it from the cop's standpoint. If you refuse a search he may really think you have something to hide.

The law says you don't have to answer any questions w/out a lawyer present and you can't be forced to incriminate yourself HOWEVER, think about it from the cop's standpoint. If you refuse to speak he may really think you have something to hide.
 
Debray, I am a Instructor for Ohio, Florida and Virginia CCW here in Ohio. Everyone I have Ever trained for Ohio CCW / CHL was Instructed to Inform the Officer Regardless if they are Carrying or Not and Provide them your D.L & CHL regardless if your Carrying Concealed or not. In Ohio the Law says you do not have to Inform the Officer if you do not have a Concealed Handgun with you HOWEVER, If you think about the Officers side of it,,, He just ran your Information D.R. and License Check and it told him you had a CCW/CHL If the Vehicle is registered to you, Then when he is at your Window you do not Inform him or her of the CCW/CHL Permit... He may think you have forgotten to follow the Law, You have a Gun and you dident want to tell him, OR you really have something to hide. I think at that time the Officer will go over you and your Vehicle with a fine tooth Comb. Why put yourself in that situation ? I carry 24/7 unless in a forbidden zone but if I am ever stopped and not carrying, I will always Inform to save myself and the Officer the Hassle. I have had MANY Encounters with Law Enforcment in Ohio while Carrying and they all ask where it is, and then say DONT TOUCH IT and thats that, why not tell them your not Carrying and relieve the Tension ? Thank you. ohioccw4u.com

then he already knows you are a law-abiding person and doesn't have to worry about you.
 
then he already knows you are a law-abiding person and doesn't have to worry about you.

AND, on top of that, SINCE the officer has just received more indication that he does have a person stopped who is LEAST likely to do him harm, it seems to me like a simple question by the officer of, "Do you have any weapons?" would be in order.

www.ohioccw4u.com said:
I think at that time the Officer will go over you and your Vehicle with a fine tooth Comb.

Really? I don't think he will. Why? Because he would be committing a complete and total violation of the 4th amendment which has already been established in Supreme Court Cases and will likely find his a$$ in a lawsuit along with that of the city/county. A person goes out and LEGALLY obtains CCW/CHL. And, by your statement above, you are justifying a search for weapons, when NO reasonable suspicion of weapons is present, simply because the subject LEGALLY obtained a CCW/CHL! An officer cannot legally conduct a search based upon a legal and lawful activity! Get real!

That would be the exact same situation if an officer stopped you on a bicycle and finds out you have a driver's license so he starts asking about registration and insurance on any vehicles you may own. Upon failure to produce a vehicle registration and insurance, while riding a bicycle in possession of a driver's license, do you think that gives the officer reason to search you and cite you for not having vehicle registration or insurance?

It's just as ridiculous to think an officer will search your vehicle because you have gone to the trouble of getting a background check done and obtain a CCW/CHL. A CCW/CHL is NO indication of the presence of a weapon just as a driver's license is NO indication of the presence of a vehicle if the holder is riding a bicycle.
 
I live in Oregon where it's not required to notify an LEO. That being said I think it's a good idea. When I hand the officer my drivers license they get all my CCW licenses and my instructors license at the same time. I feel it's gotten me out of a ticket.
 
Here in SC it is required to notify the LEO if you have a permit and if you are armed. Plus it's a good Idea to cooperate anyway.
 
the stories are probably fake ..and thats sad.

legally to me seems carrying in a way that isnt infringed upon by a govt goon.

if a person in a car intends to shoot a cop the entire ccw permit asking crap to me seems pointless and a waste of time on traffic stops.

is somoene took the unneeded amount of time to get the unconstitutional cc permit they are probably the least likely to shoot an officer, and on traffic stops at that. hell..if you have a cc permit and want to murder, take the bus or a cab and go kill someone.
 
I know I am going to get accused of cop bashing for posting this but the type of mindset that is willing to submit to this type of authoritarianism concerns me.

Statistically, it is far more likely that I will have a crime committed against me by a cop than cop will have a crime committed against him by a permit holder. You may not like it but that is a statistical fact. Yet when I interact w/ a cop he gets to stack the deck in his favor.

Recently a Wyoming state trooper was arrested for trying to steal a Wal-Mart truck which he intended to use to stage an accident

Wyoming pays $110,000 to trucker kidnapped by state trooper.

In other news a Colorado trooper was recently arrested for DUI in his patrol car
Link Removed

So how does that work when I get pulled over and the cop uses his authority to disarm me and then shoots me?

I interact w/ armed people all the time I’ve had arguments w/ armed people and it’s never once occurred to me to tell them to keep their hands away from their weapon. Yet if the police find out I’m armed they either disarm me or feel the need to tell me to keep my hands away from it.

Since I can’t legally refuse these orders the only option I have to maintain a modicum of my rights (and be able to defend myself if I win the lottery and meet the next cop who wants to stage an accident) is to keep my mouth shut unless I am specifically asked if I have a weapon. That’s why I tend to advocate so strongly in favor of not informing
 
In Colorado, if carrying concealed you must notify. If not, you do not have to. When stopped (three times in the past several years for minor infractions) I always hand the officer my driver's license, retired military ID, and carry permit. One officer asked me why all three, and my response was "driver's license because you will ask me for it, retired military ID to prove that I am a citizen, and carry permit to prove that state has investigated me and I am a certified good guy - even though I may have been speeding or broken a traffic law. By the way, I *am* carrying and the piece is locted yada-yada-yada."

Each time I got my cards handed back to me with the admonition to "slow down, Captain" or "your left brake light is out" and no citation. Twice, the cop told me of his military service.

Each time was a positive experience for both me and for the cop (I think).
 
I'm an ex LEO, I haven"t been stopped in recent years, but keep my DL and CCW in a double pass case in my shirt pocket. In Colorado the officer may asked for your weapon; but must return it upon your release from the stop.I have never heard of it happening, and if he does it had better come back to me fully loaded (with one in the chamber) or his commander will get a formal complaint.
 

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