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Good encounter with LEO

gunslinger493

Regular Member
Joined
Dec 25, 2011
Messages
58
Location
Globe, AZ
I was at Starbucks on Chandler Blvd. today OC'ing my Sig P-220 when one of the employees approached me and said that someone had called the police. Ten minutes later the same employee came back and said they were trying to cancel the call. About 10 minutes later a police officer came by and asked me to step outside. there he checked my SC DL and CWP. He had no problem with me carrying but he could understand since the shouting in Seattle that it was prudent to check one someone open carrying. He was really cool and we talked mostly about my job as chemist and that he had also lived through a hurricane. As were talking, he got the call to cancel the visit.

All in all a good experience the LEO, just surprised that some called police on an OC in Arizona.
 
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F350

Regular Member
Joined
Mar 22, 2012
Messages
941
Location
The High Plains of Wyoming
Isn't AZ "constitutional carry"? And what is a "SC".

I don't really view that as a good encounter, he had no RAS you had, were or were going to commit a crime, hence no authority to "ID" you. Sorry but I will not play the "PAPERS!!! You vill show your identity papers" game with anyone!
 

sawah

Regular Member
Joined
Jan 22, 2011
Messages
436
Location
Virginia
Sorry that happened to you but it was a bit of a fail and not a 'good encounter'.

1. You consented to stepping outside absent reasonable and articulable cause that you had committed a crime.
2. You produced a DL when on foot in a state with no 'stop and ID, papers please' law. This trains the officer that he can ignore the 2nd and 4th Amendment.
3. You produced your permit when OC-ing, also not required.
4. You were (presumably) not running a recorder so there is no proof of what happened.

Yes, it ended peacefully, but you also gave up the rights that many OC-er are trying to uphold.

Always run an audio and/or video recorder, never show DL if on foot, ask the officer why you are being detained and if he says you're not, tell him you do not consent to an interview absent RAS
Always know the laws about 1-2 party recording
Always know the necessity in your state for producing your permit (if you have a concealed firearm with you).

Good luck.
 

F350

Regular Member
Joined
Mar 22, 2012
Messages
941
Location
The High Plains of Wyoming
I guess I am still new at this. SC = South Carolina. What is RAS?

In your original post you said "he checked my SC DL and CWP" So you have a South Carolina DL?

RAS=Reasonable Articulable Suspicion

Reasonable suspicion is a legal standard of proof in United States law that is less than probable cause, the legal standard for arrests and warrants, but more than an "inchoate and unparticularized suspicion or 'hunch' ";[1] it must be based on "specific and articulable facts", "taken together with rational inferences from those facts".[2] Police may briefly detain a person if they have reasonable suspicion that the person has been, is, or is about to be engaged in criminal activity; such a detention is known as a Terry stop. If police additionally have reasonable suspicion that a person so detained may be armed, they may "frisk" the person for weapons, but not for contraband like drugs. Reasonable suspicion is evaluated using the "reasonable person" or "reasonable officer" standard,[3] in which said person in the same circumstances could reasonably believe a person has been, is, or is about to be engaged in criminal activity; it depends upon the totality of circumstances, and can result from a combination of particular facts, even if each is individually innocuous.

LEO can not just walk up to someone and demand "PAPERS!!! You vill show your identity papers". (sorry old WWII movie gestapo reference) they have to be able to state specifically what you were doing to cause them to suspect you were involved illegality before they can demand ID.

The LEO in your original post may have been friendly, which makes him a friendly gestapo agent.
 
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JoeSparky

Centurion
Joined
Jun 20, 2008
Messages
3,621
Location
Pleasant Grove, Utah, USA
In your original post you said "he checked my SC DL and CWP" So you have a South Carolina DL?

RAS=Reasonable Articulable Suspicion



LEO can not just walk up to someone and demand "PAPERS!!! You vill show your identity papers". (sorry old WWII movie gestapo reference) they have to be able to state specifically what you were doing to cause them to suspect you were involved illegality before they can demand ID.

The LEO in your original post may have been friendly, which makes him a friendly gestapo agent.

I would add just one word to your statement. It would be "legally" and insert it just after "can not". Nothing in the world prevents the LEO from ASKING for anything. He cannot LEGALLY demand without RAS at a minimum.
 

MKEgal

Regular Member
Joined
Jan 8, 2010
Messages
4,383
Location
in front of my computer, WI
Others have already pointed out that while he was a polite officer, he was still infringing your rights (which you appear to have given up gladly; your choice, but it makes things harder on the next person who won't).
gunslinger493 said:
I was at Starbucks on Chandler Blvd. ... one of the employees approached me and said that someone had called the police.
If it was an employee who called, that person will be out of a job.
Starbuck's is a welcoming company.
Once you have the audio of the call (& maybe the paperwork), if it was an employee contact the manager. Maybe corporate.

since the shooting in Seattle that it was prudent to check on someone open carrying.
If he's going to waste time on that in AZ, he's not going to get anything else done the whole shift, & neither will anyone else in law enforcement.
How many criminals have you ever heard of who carry openly into a "job"? :banghead:
In fact, the FBI says that criminals don't carry openly & practically never use holsters.
This from interviews with felons in federal prisons.
The study [AUG06] is titled "Violent Encounters: A Study of Felonious Assaults on Our Nation's Law Enforcement Officers". Here's a page with links to PDFs of the study (in chapters). IIRC, it's chapter 4 where they conclude that criminals don't OC.

surprised that some called police on an OC in Arizona.
Surprised they responded. Hope you got the guy's name & agency, to do a FOIA/ORR, then write a politely-worded letter of complaint to the head of the agency.
 

gunslinger493

Regular Member
Joined
Dec 25, 2011
Messages
58
Location
Globe, AZ
It was not a Starbucks employee that called , it was a customer. One of the employees came up to me informed that a customer had called the police. After about ten minutes after the same employee had came and said that they had called the police to try to cancel the original call, but by then it was too late and ten minutes later the cop showed up.
 

carsontech

Activist Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2011
Messages
529
Location
Anderson, SC
Just like the others have pointed out, you did not need to show your papers, or even identify yourself, if the officer did not have RAS to detain you. Unless he had RAS, he had no reason to demand you to identify yourself.

Even if the officer had RAS, your SC DL and CWP have nothing to do with any activity that you were doing, therefore they were not relevant. I take it you were not driving and doing anything that requires a permit to carry a firearm (since no permit is generally required to carry a firearm in AZ).

AZ has a "stop and ID" statute. If an officer has RAS to detain you, you only need to identify yourself by stating your full name, you are not required to supply physical ID.
http://www.azleg.gov/FormatDocument.asp?inDoc=/ars/13/02412.htm&Title=13&DocType=ARS

It sounds like the officer took advantage of your ignorance of the law, as he had no RAS. It seems like you voluntarily gave up your identification and other information to the government when it wasn't required.

Good phrases to research:
"Am I being detained? Am I free to go."
"Why am I being detained?"
"What is your reasonable articulable suspicion that I have committed, am committing or about to commit a crime?"

Also, this is a good video that is somewhat relevant:

[video=youtube;6wXkI4t7nuc]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wXkI4t7nuc[/video]
 
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sawah

Regular Member
Joined
Jan 22, 2011
Messages
436
Location
Virginia
Thanks for the information everyone. I am new to open carry and will know what to do next time.

Before you go off 'half-cocked' all set to follow the advice on OCDO, here's a thought.

1. Next time you OC in an unfamiliar location, try to go with an experienced OC-er. Going in pairs, going with someone who has knowledge of 2A rights and encounters with LEOs is a good idea.
2. Get a recorder (Olympia with a USB port) and run it the entire time you are OC-ing outside the home but be sure you know the laws involving 1&2 party recording
3. Get a copy of the applicable laws, learn them, carry them with you.

If a LEO asks you to do something 'Can you come outside and discuss this'. Say in a respectful tone 'Officer, am I required by law to do this? I'd like to decline consensual contact as I am busy'. Follow with 'Why am I being detained'. If the LEO says you are not, say 'May I leave'. Running your recorder (either in the open or not obviously) provides proof if you should have to follow up with a lawsuit

Have legal retainer on speed dial if you are in a non OC-ing friendly location/city (iow, it's legal but not frequently seen), and do not try to try the case on the street. Do not resist, but clearly state you do not give permission, but will not resist.

Finally, play it by ear. For example, if you are OC-ing and you spy someone mean-mugging you and getting out their cell-phone, it's better to leave calmly than to wait for cops to show up, or to argue with someone and have them call the cops. Go eat/play/buy somewhere else where OC-ing is accepted. Did I mention going out with an OC-ing partner?

Most of the time, depending on state you're in, nothing happens.
 
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Super Saiyan

Regular Member
Joined
Mar 31, 2011
Messages
155
Location
Phoenix
This happened in Arizona? That's...strange... Few here hardly ever even bat an eye, let alone call the police. Must've been someone from out-of-town who was completely ignorant of Arizona's gun laws, or lack thereof.
 
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sharkey

Regular Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2010
Messages
1,064
Location
Arizona
If the starbucks employee advised you of the call and attempted to cancel it I assume you did nothing to draw extra attention to your self. But I still have to ask, was there something other than your gun that made you stand out?

I mean, I've open carried in a buffet (several plates of food so the gun was visible on multiple occasions) full of snowbirds with a scraggly beard and not gotten a second glance. This is AZ!

Like said above, don't talk to the police.
 

skidmark

Campaign Veteran
Joined
Jan 15, 2007
Messages
10,444
Location
Valhalla
Has anyone else noticed that it took about 20 minutes for the cops to respond to a MWAG call, and when they did they 1) did not arrive lights & sirens blaring, 2) did not show up in force, and 3) did not shoot anybody's pet dog?

OK, that last one was a cheap shot. Even I know the difference between Arizona and Maryland.

stay safe.
 

Sonora Rebel

Regular Member
Joined
Aug 6, 2008
Messages
3,956
Location
Gone
RAS isn't a consideration in this encounter.

The officer responded to a specific MWAG 911 call for service dispatch. Odd for AZ, but some of these city cops come from elsewhere. There's no telling what info was relayed to the officer by the dispatcher or the actual veracity of the original complainant's call to 911. The call was obviously from an anti... and they lie like thieves. No cop knows what the real situation is 'til they get there.

I suspect the police dispatcher relayed something unusual. The 'step outside' part was for your privacy and his safety. The document check was unneccessary. Was it volunteered or did the cop ask for it?

"He had no problem with me carrying but he could understand since the shooting in Seattle http://www.kirotv.com/news/news/crime-law/shooting-reported-near-decatur-high-school-federal/nGMY9/ that it was prudent to check one someone open carrying". No... I have to disagree with that entirely. Entirely different dynamic.

Excused the paranoia of some others posting here... they don't live in AZ and have no experience with the actual dynamic of the state regarding firearms compared to their own 'fairly recent and still culturally unaccepted' experiences.
 
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OC for ME

Regular Member
Joined
Jan 6, 2010
Messages
12,452
Location
White Oak Plantation
OCer in a Starbucks.....nothing new there. Especially in AZ. Or, is Phoenix somewhat different than the rest of the state where LE is concerned.
 

sharkey

Regular Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2010
Messages
1,064
Location
Arizona
OCer in a Starbucks.....nothing new there. Especially in AZ. Or, is Phoenix somewhat different than the rest of the state where LE is concerned.

No, OC'ing outside the courthouse downtown (waiting for it to open) has garnerned me a passing glance from police and other's waiting to enter but that's it. No, "Oh my God, he's got a gun!" or "Sir, can we talk to you for a second".

I hate to admit it but I was probably more nervous than anyone else when it came time to surrender my weapon (lock box at the courthouse) because I don't like to handle it unnecessarily.
 

ccwinstructor

Centurion
Joined
Jul 11, 2008
Messages
919
Location
Yuma, Arizona, USA
Thanks for your post and efforts

Thanks for the information everyone. I am new to open carry and will know what to do next time.

You do not have to be perfect. You did far more good than harm. Cooperating with the police is not detestable, as long as they know that you do not have to do so.

I think a good policy is to educate the police about your rights. Once they acknowlege your rights, you can work with them if you like. We need to bring the police to us. They are our natural ally once they are educated. I have seen it happen numerous times.
 

TOF

Regular Member
Joined
Nov 2, 2008
Messages
443
Location
Happy Jack, Arizona, USA
I have OC'd off and on for 50+ years in Arizona and never been hassled in any way. This incident may have occurred in Arizona but it is an extremely rare occurrence here. I really don't think we all need to rush out and purchase audio/video recorders quite yet.
 

Sonora Rebel

Regular Member
Joined
Aug 6, 2008
Messages
3,956
Location
Gone
I have OC'd off and on for 50+ years in Arizona and never been hassled in any way. This incident may have occurred in Arizona but it is an extremely rare occurrence here. I really don't think we all need to rush out and purchase audio/video recorders quite yet.

"Same here... since '66. I've never even been asked about any of my pistols by any LEO... other than type and bore size. AZ LEO's like .45's I've found...
 
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