Your choice...concealed or open carry.So Indiana recently passed and (now) enacted a law stating an Indiana resident can carry w/o a "pink card".
Can the piece be concealed? Must it be "open carried" Rifle? Pistol? Shotgun? Thanks in advance.
Indiana State Police will continue to issue the LTCH to facilitate carrying in reciprocating carry states.So Indiana recently passed and (now) enacted a law stating an Indiana resident can carry w/o a "pink card".
Can the piece be concealed? Must it be "open carried" Rifle? Pistol? Shotgun? Thanks in advance.
And I recommend getting one for this reason.Indiana State Police will continue to issue the LTCH to facilitate carrying in reciprocating carry states.
John
Is there a defined list of items that make you prohibited? Or is this up to the whim of somebody?IC 35-47-2-3
Sec. 3. (a) and is not otherwise prohibited from carrying or possessing a handgun under state or federal law
As long as you are a “proper person” you are G2G. Same rules that apply to whether you are allowed a LTCH.Is there a defined list of items that make you prohibited? Or is this up to the whim of somebody?
Interesting statement. Has it been confirmed that Dicken did not have a LTCH and was, in fact, taking advantage of the new CC law?I definitely agree with the above mentioned answers. Thanks to constitutional carry...so many lives were saved at Greenwood mall this past Sunday
It depends on who you ask. LEO said no, Relford said yes. We will see in time.Interesting statement. Has it been confirmed that Dicken did not have a LTCH and was, in fact, taking advantage of the new CC law?
The good guy had a permit at GPM…I definitely agree with the above mentioned answers. Thanks to constitutional carry...so many lives were saved at Greenwood mall this past Sunday
It is confirmed he did and a copy posted in the GPM thread.Interesting statement. Has it been confirmed that Dicken did not have a LTCH and was, in fact, taking advantage of the new CC law?
There is a "lack of distinction" on the permit, because there is no distinction in THE LAW.Can definitely be concealed! Indiana has always had a weird open/concealed lack of distinction on the verbiage of the old permits.
Yep and that's why our permitting was better than most. We weren't permitted to carry a CONCEALED handgun. We we simply permitted to carry a handgun. Many other states had and have concealed handgun permits with restrictions on open carry. Of course constitutional carry trumps allThere is a "lack of distinction" on the permit, because there is no distinction in THE LAW.
The law that's been that way since Indiana was Indiana.
Weird?Can definitely be concealed! Indiana has always had a weird open/concealed lack of distinction on the verbiage of the old permits.
Hey I think it's great. But it was certainly atypical and unusual when you looked at what other states were doing. Like I mentioned above, we had a better permit system in that regardWeird?
It's weird to let the choice be up to the person?