On Wednesday, September 26, 2001, at 04:18 PM, Sandy Sandfort wrote:
Nice try. The law actually refers to temporary housing or some such. Thus, when you drive down the road in your RV, it's a motor vehicle. When you park for the night, it's your home.
S a n d y
-----Original Message----- From: owner-cypherpunks@lne.com [mailto:owner-cypherpunks@lne.com]On Behalf Of keyser-soze@hushmail.com Sent: 26 September, 2001 16:13 To: cypherpunks@lne.com Subject: Re: When the FBI Guys Come Knocking...
At 03:21 PM 9/26/2001 -0700, David Honig wrote: At 09:51 AM 9/26/01 -0700, Tim May wrote:
On Wednesday, September 26, 2001, at 08:03 AM, David Honig wrote: (For the curious, it is not a violation of the carry laws to have a handgun on one's person in one's own property, even, interestingly, a tent. Unless barred by other laws (National Parks, etc.).
So, if I wear an assembled tent and walk down main street
Sandy is of course right. I almost added a parenthetical remark to my "tent" point about how RVs, for example, are only "homes" for the purposes of this law when _parked_ (and maybe when parked for the purposes of sleeping, blah blah). So, no guns not locked up while rolling down the road, or parked at McDonald's for a burger. (Obviously, there is vanishingly small chance of being "caught" if the gun is not brandished. Applies to cars as well.) In this case, the common sense interpretation is what the law actually supports, strangely enough. --Tim May