Centennial.
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Centennial.
Can't carry at work (gov't building - gun-free zone and all), but always keep my CCW in the holster, in the passenger seat driving to and from work. Got pulled over for speeding last week in Aurora; cop saw my pistol in the seat and asked if I was an officer or have a CCW permit. Decided not to argue that I don't need a permit to carry in my car, and he didn't mess with me about it beyond that.
Back on topic, why is it not considered open carry if your CCW is exposed?
What the hell is wrong with the edit feature that it doesn't recognize apostrophes?
Just the grip was out because it was not a purposeful open carry for me. He was just letting me know nicely.
In the several years that I've a CCW I have been pulled over for this or that a bunch of times. Every time I gave the officer my DL and CCW at the same time and I never had a problem. I figure they'd rather know before it pops up on their computer - it'll just make them nervous I imagine. Never once did the officer ask to see my weapon or anything.
The best reasoning I've heard for giving them your CCW with your DL is that it lets them know right away that you're not a felon and allows them to slide you more towards the "citizen" category and away from the "customer" category during their initial contact. That's been my SOP for the last eight years. Since I started doing that I haven't had any issues stemming from my pistol when I've gotten pulled over.
Sounds like the cop was just doing you a favor. I mention it to guys when I see their pistol exposed too. Seems like common courtesy to me.
I think giving them your CCW and saying whether you are carrying or not carrying shows respect to them and puts them at a little more ease. I've gotten out of a few tickets because of it b
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