This entire thread is nothing more than an argument for national constitutional carry.
QFT!
This entire thread is nothing more than an argument for national constitutional carry.
As long as you notified ISP of your address change as required, your Indiana license was never invalid.Your State of permanent residence is the one from which you file your taxes. I have property in another state, but I currently reside in Indiana and pay my State taxes here as well as declare Indiana on my federal tax forms. If a person would buy a gun here and falsely misrepresent their residence, it would be pretty hard to defend yourself once you have filed taxes. If you are filing taxes in MI, IN licenses become invalid. I have lived in 4 states in the last 12 years. When I moved back to Indiana my LTCH became valid again. Even though I have property in Texas, my Texas CHL became invalid when I moved here.
This entire thread is nothing more than an argument for national constitutional carry.
Prove it.
The Indiana license to carry is rendered inactive (invalid) upon declaration of residency in a different state.
It is no longer valid.
No, I don't believe Indiana will issue a license to a non-resident.
I hope this isn't hijacking the thread but MI has a gun registry? You have to register all your guns with the government?
So my father in law has changed his residency to the state of Michigan since that is where they are planning on retiring and are spending more and more time there(they still own a house here in Indiana). He still holds a lifetime Indiana LTCH. The question he asked me( and which i could not answer with 100% confidence) is if he is now a Michigan resident and has an Indiana LTCH, any guns he wants to buy here in Indiana must go through an FFL? Right? He seems to be under the impression that since he has a LTCH that he can buy from non FFL sellers even though I implore him that this is not the case.
IC 9-13-2-78
"Indiana resident"
Sec. 78. "Indiana resident" refers to a person who is one (1) of the following:
(1) A person who lives in Indiana for at least one hundred eighty-three (183) days during a calendar year and who has a legal residence in another state. However, the term does not include a person who lives in Indiana for any of the following purposes:
(A) Attending a postsecondary educational institution.
(B) Serving on active duty in the armed forces of the United States.
(C) Temporary employment.
(D) Other purposes, without the intent of making Indiana a permanent home.(2) A person who is living in Indiana if the person has no other legal residence.
(3) A person who is registered to vote in Indiana or who satisfies the standards for determining residency in Indiana under IC 3-5-5.
(4) A person who has a child enrolled in an elementary or a secondary school located in Indiana.
(5) A person who has more than one-half (1/2) of the person's gross income (as defined in Section 61 of the Internal Revenue Code) derived from sources in Indiana using the provisions applicable to determining the source of adjusted gross income that are set forth in IC 6-3-2-2. However, a person who is considered a resident under this subdivision is not a resident if the person proves by a preponderance of the evidence that the person is not a resident under subdivisions (1) through (4).
As added by P.L.2-1991, SEC.1. Amended by P.L.188-2006, SEC.2; P.L.2-2007, SEC.139; P.L.85-2013, SEC.12; P.L.149-2015, SEC.24.
.... Even though I have property in Texas, my Texas CHL became invalid when I moved here.