You are ignoring the plain and clear language of HB823. You are also ignoring the context in which the statements you have quoted were given.
He absolutely did not! The only way to rebut the presumption is by giving information or evidence that disproves one of the five required elements of the presumption. Mr. Ross was advising people to keep their mouths shut to avoid being arrested by LEO's operating in counties where the DA's are telling them to make the arrests in spite of the new law - counties such as Harris County.JohnKSa wrote: Mr. Ross (TSRA General Counsel) clearly indicates that the citizen may inadvertently provide the officer with evidence (specifically in response to the "Where are you going today?" question) contradicting the presumption of traveling and resulting in arrest and prosecution.
Again, Albert's goal was avoiding the arrest. He did not say you would be convicted.JohnKSa wrote: Therefore he advises that one not answer such questions and that one not consent to a search without a warrant. His final comment is:
"You may receive some kind of traffic citation, but that is better than being placed under arrest, having your handgun confiscated, your car towed and having to make bond and court appearances after being charged under P.C. 46.02 for being in possession of an unlawful concealed weapon."
I sit on two NRA committees with the NRA General Counsel and I talk to him several times a year. I've also read and discussed with him his evaluation of HB823 written during the 2005 Texas Legislative Session. He does not believe HB823 allows the judge to consider evidence on anything other than the 5 elements of the traveling presumption. Your quote of the NRA position leaves out one very critical part NRA's position on the bill - i.e. the express language in the statute which includes this operative phrase the facts giving rise to the presumption. Adding this phrase gives an entirely new meaning to the portion you quoted. Here is the full subsection of TPC 2.05(b)(2)(A):JohnKSa wrote:The earlier analysis from NRA -ILA was in an article in the issue that came out immediately after the law passed, IIRC.
A) the presumption applies unless the state proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the facts giving rise to the presumption , do not exist; [these are the 5 elements of the traveling presumption]
I respectfully disagree. The clear and unequivocal language proves you are incorrect. I recognize there are many people who believe this, but to do so, one must ignore the fact that a judge cannot consider evidence the jury will be unable to hear. I admit that this is a rule of law that non-attorneys cannot be expected to know, any more than I know how to do open heart surgery. But why ignore this critical element in the analysis once it is explained?JohnKSa wrote:In plain terms, their final one sentence summary indicates no particular benefit over the situation extant before the law was passed.

I spoke with Chairman Keel at the TSRA Annual Meeting and the Awards Banquet and this is not his opinion!JohnKSa wrote:Mr. Keel's comments make it clear that this law changes nothing in terms of what is legal or illegal.
Again, my frustration on this issue is not directed at you John. I have discussed, debated, and written on HB823 over a hundred times since the bill was first given to me to review prior to filing. Honest DA’s and ADA’s readily admit that HB823 can only be rebutted by disproving one of the five elements of the traveling presumption. Unfortunately, the Harris County DA’s position carries great prestige and Mr. Rosenthal’s blatant disregard of the clear language of the bill (now statute) has had a chilling effect on DA’s in smaller counties. He will be proven wrong, but some innocent person is going to have to run the gauntlet for that to happen. If any good will come from this, it is that the Legislature is likely to take a very dim view of Rosenthal and his ilk ignoring Legislative intent and will take corrective action in 2007. (Guess who has already written a bill to do just that.

Regards,
Chas.