srothstein wrote:Sorry for the confusion and making it worse. I did use the 46.03(e) improperly to show the defense for showing the gun as an example.
But you are wrong about 46.03 applying only to carrying. Obviously, if it is in your bags you are not carrying it, but when you read 46.03 carefully, it says "possessing or goes with". even when you check you luggage, it is still yours and you still possess it.
This is either a really bad case to use for the example, or the really perfect one. No one (well, in Texas) would ever think of arresting you for still possessing the gun after you have checked the luggage with it inside. But it is still a technical violation of the law. This is why I was saying that the technical reading of the law is so different from what happens in real life, 99.99% of the time. We all need to know the law well for the .01%, but the odds of it happening to us are just so small as to not be a cause of concern to most.
There's no doubt that you know a heck of a lot more than I do, and I thank your input and for bearing with me. But, knowing the legal definition that I still "possess" the gun, even after I have legally checked my bags, and then proceed without the gun into the secure area, is a technical violation of the law, is disturbing. That would mean I was technically breaking the law for ALL the off limits areas of 46.03.
1. If I leave my gun in the car in a school parking lot, and then go inside a building, as I still (legal definition) "possess" the gun, I have technically broken the law.
2.Same for the premises of a polling place if I leave it in the car.
3. Same for the court House parking lot
4. Same for the racetrack, etc., etc.
At least 46.03(e) gives me a defense to prosecution for entering the secured area of the airport. But using the legal definition, I have no defense to prosecution for all the other off limits areas of 46.03. That's even scarier to me. That tells me that all or most CHL holders are constantly technically breaking the law, and the only thing we have on our side is the "hope" that the "odds" are in our favor. I found this online:
"The U.S. Supreme Court has said that "there is no word more ambiguous in its meaning than possession" (National Safe Deposit Co. v. Stead, 232 U.S. 58, 34 S. Ct. 209, 58 L. Ed. 504 [1914]). Depending on how and when it is used, the term possession has a variety of possible meanings. As a result, possession, or lack of possession, is often the subject of controversy in civil cases involving real and personal property and criminal cases involving drugs and weapons—for example, whether a renter is entitled to possession of an apartment or whether a criminal suspect is in possession of stolen property."
Based on that, I think 46.03 should be changed to read, "...actually possesses...." which is described as, ""Actual possession is what most of us think of as possession—that is, having physical custody or control of an object" (United States v. Nenadich, 689 F.Supp. 285 [S.D. I'd feel better about that.
Thanks again for putting up with me