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Yessir, north of the city and close to the countryside.Have a friend near Mobile Alabama. I think it’s called Semmes
Yessir, north of the city and close to the countryside.Have a friend near Mobile Alabama. I think it’s called Semmes
I’ve been to Larry’s a time or two.Yes sir! Larry's has a taken a lot of my moneyActually, I've given it to them willingly. Although, I purchased our Echelon 4.0c Comp at Last Resort - they had the best price I found - even better than online. Sadly, it was not the Gear Up pack, but that's okay.
Not sure I've been through Leeds; we generally stick to I-65 when we head down to NW FL (which is really home, but I like getting a paycheck, so Huntsville it is for now lol).
Leeds also has a Bass Pro and a Buc-ee's. That place near the airport is still there (had a name change) and it's still a mess. They have a 4-lane range with stupid rules (no shots quicker than 2-seconds and the list goes on). Marks has taken some of my $$ and so has Hoover Tactical (12-lane pistol, 6-lane rifle and a 3D archery range) near the Galeria.I’ve been to Larry’s a time or two.
If you’re in Leeds, you’re not too far from Birmingham. There is Marks Outdoors in Hoover, and used to be a place called Birmingham Pistol Parlor (I think that was it)out by the airport. (This was back in the 90s). That guy was a Class III dealer, but his shop was in the hood with bars on the windows. He had all manner of cool full-auto stuff you could touch. His shop was always a mess, but he’d let you step out back and use his small alley if you wanted /needed to function check as he called it, your handgun.
I bought my 6906 there in the early 90s.
I do the same. Alabama doesn't require it but it usually greased the squeaky wheel to let them know. Never had one ask me to step out of the vehicle and never got a written warning or ticket.First I want to say that Colorado (at present). does not require me to inform a police officer that I'm armed in an official contact
The second thing I want to say is that I have not been pulled over by the police since (I think) 2013.
So in 2008 I had a job working in a group home in Green Mountain Falls Colorado. It was about 30 miles west of Colorado Springs on Highway 24.
There was one ******* State Trooper who worked Highway 24 in Ute Pass.
He pulled me over once for failure to yield the Right lane while he had somebody pulled over on the right shoulder of the road. It wasn't a law at the time he just thought I should do it so he pulled me over ran my license registration proof of insurance and then told me why he thought I should do that then let me go.
The second time he pulled me over he pulled me over for "Going too fast for conditions."
He walked up to the car introduced himself and told me why he pulled me over. then asked for my License Registration and Proof of Insurance.
I handed them the documentation and he asked me if there were any weapons in the vehicle.
I already had my wallet in my hands. I didn't say anything I took the concealed handgun permit out of my wallet and handed it to him.
He went absolutely ballistic. He stepped away from the car and put his hand on the gun he started screaming at me. He told me that I was required to a notify him immediately upon contact if I had any weapons in the vehicle. No such law exists in Colorado. Then he told me he could take me to jail. I kind of wish you would have tried it because I would have been able to retire a lot sooner.
About six months later I read that his wife had asked for a divorce and he killed her then got in a standoff with the cops before killing himself.
Remember that's the guy with the gun and and all the power in the interaction standing outside your car window by the side of the dark, deserted road in the middle of the night.
I've never had the following happen to me and that's the only cop who asked me if there were guns in the car.
But I've read stories on the internet of cops disarming posters and returning their guns to them in pieces in a paper bag.
Roll TideI do the same. Alabama doesn't require it but it usually greased the squeaky wheel to let them know. Never had one ask me to step out of the vehicle and never got a written warning or ticket.
Good advice for going anywhere you're unfamiliar with. 'Not knowing' is more often than not, not a valid defense.If on vacation and decide to visit a reservation make sure you find out what the laws are on the one you will visit as they are all different. Some will allow firearms secured in a lock box and some will say NO and others may say you have to leave them at the office. Th may change from year to year as some states like to do like the West coast.
State Laws vary so much , there really isn't a unified conversation there .
The Other Question around Voluntary Best Practices ? There actually is no Best Answer . Each approach has it's own ups & downs , not predictable in advance .
The OP isn't making it up , it's a real thing with greater than zero frequency .
Our membership is probably skewed to living in the sticks , where the actual Sheriff , both deputies , and the one prosecutor covering 4 adjancent counties are all NRA Life Members .
But there are places where some combination of Individual Ofc , local area supervisor ,or entire agencies are default Anti Gun , and as policy persue maxium harassment , and esculated procedures .
I can say this was being taught in Academies in 1988. Always believe the occupants are armed but you also don't make every stop a felony stop.Interesting topic.
I wonder if in todays world, all law enforcement training programs and academy’s train their graduates to expect and therefore treat every traffic stop as if the driver and occupants are armed.
Anyone know or venture to guess if this is the (training) case today?