Addressing the part highlighted in red: Apples to oranges. You're taking my point out of context. I speak only in relation to CHL. It IS illegal to carry a concealed handgun without a CHL. There IS specific law forbidding you to do so. Your CHL doesn't void the law. It is a defense to prosecution. If your CHL gets confiscated for some reason, you will no longer have a defense to prosecution for carrying a concealed handgun, and if you are caught carrying one concealed, outside of your vehicle (MPA applies), you will likely be prosecuted for it.thetexan wrote:I preface this with this...if there is another section of code either in the CHL law or otherwise that disputes what Im about to say then notwithstanding.....
Using the logic given, then any law or statement of affirmative code can be assumed to be a 'defense to prosecution'. ie If I go the speed limit then it is a defense against prosecution that I was going too fast.
Or...anyone under the age of 21 cannot drink. It is a defense to prosecution if the actor is 21 or over.
Any codified law implies that there is a defense to prosecution to an allegation of breaking the law by simply having obeyed the law, or code.
Here we have a assertion of legal fact stating that Subsections (b)(4), (b)(5), (b)(6), and (c) do not apply if the actor was not given effective notice under Section 30.06. In other words, the prohibition stated in (b)(4), (b)(5), (b)(6), and (c) does not exist for any actor not given effective notice under Section 30.06. Stated another way, the prohibition does and only exist for an actor given notice as per 30.06.
This is considerably different language from those paragraphs such as in paragraph (h)
(h) It is a defense to prosecution under Subsection (a) that the actor, at the time of the commission of the offense, displayed the handgun under circumstances in which the actor would have been justified in the use of deadly force under Chapter 9. Here, there is a conspicuous inclusion of 'defense to prosecution' language giving a mitigating exception to an otherwise prosecutable violation of the code.
I guess. That is the question isnt it.
And.....if the correct application of 30.06 is required to create the prohibition in the first place then the paragraphs (b)(4), (b)(5), (b)(6), and (c) dont even need to be listed in the first place as they fall into the 'everywhere else' catagory already austensibly covered by 30.06.
So. This is the reason I concluded that it seems to be that there is no more prohibition to entering a nursing home (as it relates to 30.06) as there is to entering a gas station or Walmart. The test for these 'everywhere else' locations seems to be this...
1. Have I had verbal notification that I cannot carry
2. Have I received written notification of the prohibition with 30.06 specifications, or
3. Is there signage that meets 30.06 specifications.
That is my thought process. Does anyone disagree with that?
tex
With alcohol, there is no law forbidding anyone over 21 from drinking. You don't need a license to drink if you're over 21, and you can't get a license to drink if you're under 21. With alcohol, there is no law saying you CAN drink if you're over 21. The law doesn't establish whether it is legal or illegal for anyone over 21 to drink. It leaves it alone. If there is no law saying you can't do it, a thing is automatically legal, unlike with carrying a gun. There IS however a law saying you can't drink under 21 years of age.....that law is an exception. I don't know about Texas, but in California there are some defenses to prosecution for underage drinking......like in your own home, under your parents' supervision, having a glass of wine with dinner or a toast of champaign at a wedding under parental supervision.....stuff like that.
With driving, you can't legally drive under OR over the speed limit without a driver's license. That license means that you agree to be bound by the laws. There are no public highways in Texas (or almost anywhere else in the U.S. either) without a speed limit. You agree with the acceptance of your license to be bound by those limits. (In fact, you agree to not drive with too much alcohol in your system.) Furthermore, you can get a ticket for going too slow. Try driving 25 mph in the left lane of 1-35 between Waco and Austin some time.
I agree that the law is not as clear to the layperson as it should be. I'm just talking about what is.
As far as 30.06 goes, you have to look at timeline:
- CHL law passes. Certain places listed as off limits to CHL.
- 30.06 passes. Certain places still off limits to CHL.
- Language for 46.035 (i) added, stating that "Subsections (b)(4), (b)(5), (b)(6), and (c) do not apply if the actor was not given effective notice under Section 30.06"........meaning that hospitals/nursing homes, amusement parks, houses of worship, and meetins of government entitiels now require 30.06 to keep you out.
- Today, it appears that (b)(4), (b)(5), (b)(6) and (i) may be struck from the language of 46.035. IF THAT HAPPENS, here is the net effect as you will experience the law: next to nothing. That's why I wrote previously "It's not so much a change in how you experience CHL as a license holder as a practical matter, as much as it is a change in how the law views CHL."