ijusam
Regular Member
imported post
It seems that when a encounter with a leo results in a disarmament, it is often "given back" unloaded and perhaps disassembled, with orders to "wait until I’m out of sight before you reload" Of course, this statement is asinine. But is it a order you have to follow? If you’re given your gun back, I’m thinking the encounter is over. Particularly if you ask "Am I free to go?" And get an affirmative answer. Can your loading the gun in a public place be any more dangerous then the leo unloading it in the same place? For that matter; with my 1911 in a Blackhawk CQC, I can drop the gun in (click), insert the magazine, rack the slide, engage the safety, and be ready to continue on my way. Or did I just justify being proned again? I know it’s not legal advice, but what do you all think?
It seems that when a encounter with a leo results in a disarmament, it is often "given back" unloaded and perhaps disassembled, with orders to "wait until I’m out of sight before you reload" Of course, this statement is asinine. But is it a order you have to follow? If you’re given your gun back, I’m thinking the encounter is over. Particularly if you ask "Am I free to go?" And get an affirmative answer. Can your loading the gun in a public place be any more dangerous then the leo unloading it in the same place? For that matter; with my 1911 in a Blackhawk CQC, I can drop the gun in (click), insert the magazine, rack the slide, engage the safety, and be ready to continue on my way. Or did I just justify being proned again? I know it’s not legal advice, but what do you all think?