Three points from firing
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Three points from firing
Hey guys, I have a buddy that insists that in order to open carry that the gun had to be "3 points from firing". Has anybody here ever heard of this? Maybe it was an old law or something but he's convinced. He recently told me that "I get my info from professionals and police officers not from forums. And an officer can and will f*!k you over hard if he wants to, the lack of actual laws associated doesn't work out in your favor."
I'm not sure if I'll ever convince him otherwise but input would be appreciated.
I'm not sure if I'll ever convince him otherwise but input would be appreciated.
- Sevens
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Re: Three points from firing
Your friend will have to better explain exactly what he means. California once (perhaps still does...?) had an odd occurrence of laws that many dubbed "six seconds to safety" where the law allowed open carry of an unloaded handgun... so the mantra was to carry that unloaded handgun, a loaded magazine in a pocket and practice that speedy jockey under stress for personal defense. As far as I recall here in Ohio, we've never had any such thing.
I'd have little sympathy for him when that happens because as I hinted... your buddy sounds like a jackass. But then again, maybe you'd have to be there. Either way.
I would suggest that roughly half of this makes him sound like a jackass and I certainly hope he learns from the select sample of police officers who learn and follow the minute details of the law that we do here as a hobby. Those officers absolutely exist (a handful of great ones active here on these pages) but the morass of those that don't may put a bit of a speed-bump in his routine.JohnZ wrote:"I get my info from professionals and police officers not from forums. And an officer can and will f*!k you over hard if he wants to, the lack of actual laws associated doesn't work out in your favor."
I'd have little sympathy for him when that happens because as I hinted... your buddy sounds like a jackass. But then again, maybe you'd have to be there. Either way.
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Re: Three points from firing
The best I can figure is it's one of those old wives tales that gets mindlessly parroted. I've challenged him a twelve pack and an apology if he can provide proof that this is really a thing lol, I'm interested to see what he says next.
- JustaShooter
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Re: Three points from firing
As you already appear to know, your friend is mistaken. Ohio law does not make openly carrying a firearm a crime, therefore it is legal. Ohio law also does not specify how one must carry openly, therefore any method of open carry is legal. The problem in proving that to him is, of course, the law doesn't speak to it so you don't have anything to show him...
However, consider the following from the Ohio Attorney General's Concealed Carry Laws pamphlet located at http://www.ohioattorneygeneral.gov/Law- ... -%28PDF%29" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Consider further, this Law Enforcement Bulletin from the AG website at http://www.ohioattorneygeneral.gov/Medi ... -v-City-of" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;:
And I would be remiss if I didn't include a link to our own OFCC Wiki on the topic: http://www.ohioccw.org/wiki/Ohio_Open_Carry" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
However, consider the following from the Ohio Attorney General's Concealed Carry Laws pamphlet located at http://www.ohioattorneygeneral.gov/Law- ... -%28PDF%29" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
It also does not discuss any limits on open carry, and you would certainly expect it to if there were any.Open Carry
Ohio’s concealed carry laws do not regulate “open” carry of firearms. If you openly carry, use caution. The open carry of firearms is a legal activity in Ohio.
Consider further, this Law Enforcement Bulletin from the AG website at http://www.ohioattorneygeneral.gov/Medi ... -v-City-of" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;:
There is more on that page worth reading, but perhaps the biggest takeaway is that if there were statutory restrictions on open carry, they would be mentioned and would likely provide justification for a stop.Search and Seizure (Open Carry): Northrup v. City of Toledo Police Department
6/19/2015
Question: If someone is openly carrying a firearm, can an officer conduct a Terry stop and frisk and disarm the person?
Quick Answer: No, open carry is legal in Ohio and simply carrying a weapon openly is not sufficient reasonable suspicion to justify a Terry stop and frisk.
And I would be remiss if I didn't include a link to our own OFCC Wiki on the topic: http://www.ohioccw.org/wiki/Ohio_Open_Carry" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
How is it legal to Open Carry in Ohio?
Ohio has no state statute or law prohibiting the open carry of any firearm, loaded or unloaded.
Prior to the enactment of R.C. 9.68 in 2007, municipalities within the state could each have their own firearms laws that may have criminalized open carry within their jurisdiction. This created the hazard of violating laws by simply traveling from city to city. R.C. 9.68 invalidates all local laws regarding ownership, possession, carrying and transport of firearms. This creates consistent laws throughout the state.
The reason Open Carry is lawful in Ohio is:
There is no statewide statute (law) that specifically prohibits the mere possession of a loaded firearm that is not concealed.
Since the adoption of "Statewide Preemption" (R.C. 9.68) local governments have been prohibited from enacting or enforcing almost all local gun laws or rules.
R.C. 9.68 includes in it's definition of carrying a firearm, the words "openly or concealed".
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- DontTreadOnMe
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Re: Three points from firing
I pretty much agree with Sevens but I'll try to give your buddy a little benefit of the doubt.
There are no laws in Ohio regulating Open Carry, aside from laws regulating guns in general. There is no statewide law specifying that a gun carried in public (whether openly or concealed) has to be carried any particular way. If there were a local law about this it would be invalid under state general law 9.68.JohnZ wrote:Hey guys, I have a buddy that insists that in order to open carry that the gun had to be "3 points from firing". Has anybody here ever heard of this?
I kind of sympathize with him here, as there's a lot of bad info on the internet. Unfortunately there's a lot of bad info among police officers and other professionals too, and as I recently said in another thread, following bad info from a supposedly official source will NOT protect you from a felony charge. It's your responsibility to know the law. Police and other professionals can help with that, so can the internet. Thing is, you can't blindly rely on any of that because ultimately you following the law is on you, not someone else.JohnZ wrote:He recently told me that "I get my info from professionals and police officers not from forums. And an officer can and will f*!k you over hard if he wants to, the lack of actual laws associated doesn't work out in your favor."
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Re: Three points from firing
Thanks a bunch guys. I know it's been a while since I've been active here but you guys haven't lost it a bit
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Re: Three points from firing
I think maybe Utah had something along those lines on their books until fairly recently. It's gone now. Nothing like that ever existed statewide in Ohio, not in my lifetime of 53+ years anyhow. Wouldn't venture a guess as to whether some city/village had some such silly ordinance.
Maybe your friend is confusing the above two states because they both have four letters each, comprised of 2 vowels and 2 consonants? Buckeye state, Beehive state..hmm.
Maybe your friend is confusing the above two states because they both have four letters each, comprised of 2 vowels and 2 consonants? Buckeye state, Beehive state..hmm.
Quit worrying, hide your gun well, shut up, and CARRY that handgun!
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Re: Three points from firing
^ AwesomeBrian D. wrote:Maybe your friend is confusing the above two states because they both have four letters each, comprised of 2 vowels and 2 consonants? Buckeye state, Beehive state..hmm.
Now he's arguing what the definition of a loaded firearm is
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Re: Three points from firing
Legislature clarified that a few years ago, it's no longer weird or vague. In other words, they guy can have his own opinion, not his own facts.
Quit worrying, hide your gun well, shut up, and CARRY that handgun!
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Re: Three points from firing
A loaded magazine inside the car apart from the gun is still considered a loaded gun, right? And I assume it's the same thing if you have a holstered gun that's unloaded and a full mag in your pocket.
- pirateguy191
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Re: Three points from firing
A loaded magazine is no longer a loaded gun. With your CHL, carry any way you please. Without a CHL, the magazine may be loaded but the empty gun and mag have to be in two separate closed containers.JohnZ wrote:A loaded magazine inside the car apart from the gun is still considered a loaded gun, right? And I assume it's the same thing if you have a holstered gun that's unloaded and a full mag in your pocket.
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Re: Three points from firing
If someone makes a pronouncement about what the law says, ask him for a citation. If he cannot provide it, move on. He is mindlessly parroting what he has heard from another improperly informed source.
Police officers are a remarkably lousy source of information about the law. Some are ignorant. Some just lie.
One of the guys selling firearms for me was a retired cop. He constantly told customers that firearms in a vehicle had to be x steps from firing when the driver/carrier was not licensed. x seemed to vary day-by-day. I would just hand the customer a sheet with ORC code sections listed, telling them to read the law for themselves and not to take anyone else's word for what it says.
I know of no section of Ohio law that speaks to some number of steps from firing, and I made it a point to read every word of firearms law in Ohio upon moving here.
The cop who worked for me clearly had not read the law and was probably repeating some cop-myth he was taught early on in his career.
Hey cops! Read the law. I did. It ain't that hard!
Police officers are a remarkably lousy source of information about the law. Some are ignorant. Some just lie.
One of the guys selling firearms for me was a retired cop. He constantly told customers that firearms in a vehicle had to be x steps from firing when the driver/carrier was not licensed. x seemed to vary day-by-day. I would just hand the customer a sheet with ORC code sections listed, telling them to read the law for themselves and not to take anyone else's word for what it says.
I know of no section of Ohio law that speaks to some number of steps from firing, and I made it a point to read every word of firearms law in Ohio upon moving here.
The cop who worked for me clearly had not read the law and was probably repeating some cop-myth he was taught early on in his career.
Hey cops! Read the law. I did. It ain't that hard!
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It finally happened. I have now been accused on OFCC of both being a cop-hater and then a cop-lover! Therefore, anyone making either accusation must not be paying attention.
It finally happened. I have now been accused on OFCC of both being a cop-hater and then a cop-lover! Therefore, anyone making either accusation must not be paying attention.
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Re: Three points from firing
pirateguy191 wrote:A loaded magazine is no longer a loaded gun. With your CHL, carry any way you please. Without a CHL, the magazine may be loaded but the empty gun and mag have to be in two separate closed containers.JohnZ wrote:A loaded magazine inside the car apart from the gun is still considered a loaded gun, right? And I assume it's the same thing if you have a holstered gun that's unloaded and a full mag in your pocket.
When did that change?
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Re: Three points from firing
IIRC, about two years ago.
Be a Madisonian.
It finally happened. I have now been accused on OFCC of both being a cop-hater and then a cop-lover! Therefore, anyone making either accusation must not be paying attention.
It finally happened. I have now been accused on OFCC of both being a cop-hater and then a cop-lover! Therefore, anyone making either accusation must not be paying attention.
- JustaShooter
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Re: Three points from firing
March 2013JohnZ wrote:pirateguy191 wrote:A loaded magazine is no longer a loaded gun. With your CHL, carry any way you please. Without a CHL, the magazine may be loaded but the empty gun and mag have to be in two separate closed containers.JohnZ wrote:A loaded magazine inside the car apart from the gun is still considered a loaded gun, right? And I assume it's the same thing if you have a holstered gun that's unloaded and a full mag in your pocket.
When did that change?
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