MoJo wrote:Courts are off limits. The way I understand it if the court room is separate from the rest of the building (no adjoining entrances) it's considered a separate building if there is a common entrance then the whole building is off limits. If your PD has a jail in the building that also makes the building off limits.
This has been hammered out here
ad nauseum. No one wants to be the test case, but the law as written is pretty clear that it's only the offices used by a court, not the entire building just because it happens to have a court inside.
PC 46.03, "PLACES WEAPONS PROHIBITED":
Sec. 46.03. PLACES WEAPONS PROHIBITED.
(a) A person commits an offense if the person intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly possesses or goes with a firearm, illegal knife, club, or prohibited weapon listed in Section 46.05(a):
( . . . )
(3) on the premises of any government court or offices utilized by the court, unless pursuant to written regulations or written authorization of the court;
( . . . )
(c) In this section:
(1) "Premises" has the meaning assigned by Section 46.035.
PC 46.035, "UNLAWFUL CARRYING OF HANDGUN BY LICENSE HOLDER":
(f) In this section:
( . . . )
(3) "Premises" means a building or a portion of a building. The term does not include any public or private driveway, street, sidewalk or walkway, parking lot, parking garage, or other parking area.
As for the police station and any jail they might have, that's covered by Government Code 411.207, "AUTHORITY OF PEACE OFFICER TO DISARM":
GC411.207(b) A peace officer who is acting in the lawful discharge of the officer's official duties may temporarily disarm a license holder when a license holder enters a nonpublic, secure portion of a law enforcement facility, if the law enforcement agency provides a gun locker where the peace officer can secure the license holder's handgun. The peace officer shall secure the handgun in the locker and shall return the handgun to the license holder immediately after the license holder leaves the nonpublic, secure portion of the law enforcement facility.
(c) A law enforcement facility shall prominently display at each entrance to a nonpublic, secure portion of the facility a sign that gives notice in both English and Spanish that, under this section, a peace officer may temporarily disarm a license holder when the license holder enters the nonpublic, secure portion of the facility. The sign must appear in contrasting colors with block letters at least one inch in height. The sign shall be displayed in a clearly visible and conspicuous manner.
(d) In this section:
(1) "Law enforcement facility" means a building or a portion of a building used exclusively by a law enforcement agency that employs peace officers as described by Articles 2.12(1) and (3), Code of Criminal Procedure, and support personnel to conduct the official business of the agency. The term does not include:
(A) any portion of a building not actively used exclusively to conduct the official business of the agency; or
(B) any public or private driveway, street, sidewalk, walkway, parking lot, parking garage, or other parking area.
(2) "Nonpublic, secure portion of a law enforcement facility" means that portion of a law enforcement facility to which the general public is denied access without express permission and to which access is granted solely to conduct the official business of the law enforcement agency.