Don't even get me started on when they wanted me to start asking some kids if thier parents had guns at home. :x
I was a full-time school resource officer at the HS and you knew which kids hunted and which kids were thugs. (Never hurts to know who has a hunting lease :) )
And good point about the DA's, if there is already a law and they don't enforce it, what good is another one going to be?
The school was only able to check the cars in the parking lot, but there were quite a few parked on the public roadway that they could not do anyting with.
Glenn
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- Sat Jan 22, 2005 5:57 am
- Forum: 2005 Texas Legislative Session
- Topic: School parking lots
- Replies: 25
- Views: 26395
- Fri Jan 21, 2005 2:04 am
- Forum: 2005 Texas Legislative Session
- Topic: School parking lots
- Replies: 25
- Views: 26395
fitftycal, I am a cop, and I work in Harris County. As any police officer in Harris County will tell you, there is TX law and then there is Harris County law.
The DA would not even take the 46.02 much less the felony stick. The ADA explained that she was not actually in the care, custody, or control of it at the time in which the handgun was found. (It was in her car)
She said her step-dad and she shared the car and he worked graveyards. She said he would come home and she would get in it and come to school and he must have forgotten to take the Helweg (is that the right spelling, it's the Egyptian knock off of a Berreta?) out of the car. I wrote him the ticket for making a firearm admissable to a child, but if I remember right he was a convicted felon or on probation or something. Her mom stated under oath as a witness in court it was not his, it was hers, so she got a ticket issued to her after court on her way to her car.
At the same time I would hate to have to jack-up a kid who has a hunting gun, even if it was a handgun in his or her truck or car, that forgot it was there. The schools like to talk about open mindedness and etc, but they sure seem to be closed minded when it comes to guns.
Glenn
The DA would not even take the 46.02 much less the felony stick. The ADA explained that she was not actually in the care, custody, or control of it at the time in which the handgun was found. (It was in her car)
She said her step-dad and she shared the car and he worked graveyards. She said he would come home and she would get in it and come to school and he must have forgotten to take the Helweg (is that the right spelling, it's the Egyptian knock off of a Berreta?) out of the car. I wrote him the ticket for making a firearm admissable to a child, but if I remember right he was a convicted felon or on probation or something. Her mom stated under oath as a witness in court it was not his, it was hers, so she got a ticket issued to her after court on her way to her car.
At the same time I would hate to have to jack-up a kid who has a hunting gun, even if it was a handgun in his or her truck or car, that forgot it was there. The schools like to talk about open mindedness and etc, but they sure seem to be closed minded when it comes to guns.
Glenn
- Thu Jan 20, 2005 2:02 pm
- Forum: 2005 Texas Legislative Session
- Topic: School parking lots
- Replies: 25
- Views: 26395
There should be some action to take against those who have handguns(not long guns) in school parking lots that do not hold a permit. I once caught a student in the parking lot of the school I was assigned to and there were no charges that I could file. But it is such a risky thing, because you never know what amendments will be added or what type of interpretation will be made of it.
I wrote her mother a ticket for allowing a minor access to a firearm. (I did not ever see myself writing such a left-wing ticket, but in this case I made an exception.)
Glenn
I wrote her mother a ticket for allowing a minor access to a firearm. (I did not ever see myself writing such a left-wing ticket, but in this case I made an exception.)
Glenn