farmerj wrote:jgalt wrote:2. If you're worried about it, get a conforming case - they're cheap.
Define a conforming case....
There isn't one per se that a manufacturing company is going to be able to label as "meets or exceeds MN Law".
What RobD said above... The 'sock' shown is advertised by a national retailer as being a "Knit Gun Sock", which clearly does meet the specific definition given of "expressly made to contain a firearm". Definition met, problem solved - at least as far as any case brought in court is concerned.
farmerj wrote:It needs to totally cover the weapon making it not readily accessible. It needs to be secured in a fashion that it's not simply a folded over blanket. Wrap said blanket with a piece of string and tie it, meets the requirement so long as you cannot see the firearm.
For that matter, a plastic container with a snap tight cover would function as an appropriate container. Not sure a cop would see it that way, but it meets the definition of the law.
That would certainly meet what I understand the legislative intent of the law to be, but it would not meet the letter of the law - hence the need for the "Knit Gun Sock", or some similarly cheap 'case' which is publicly advertised as being "expressly made to contain a firearm".
farmerj wrote:There are some that would even contend a zipped guncase with the zipper slipped open an inch back from the stop is "not fully enclosed". Again, that's one of those funky web stories that Georges uncles cousins friends brother sister nephew sons girlfriend dad said.
And I'd be one of them. The definition clearly states "fully enclosed", and if the zipper is open at all, then it is not "fully enclosed". Were I an officer, DA, or judge, I wouldn't consider that a problem, and would not press the issue - but any of them
could if they wanted to, as the law is quite clear.
farmerj wrote:In short....
Apply a little common sense
We agree completely, I think. And the issue brought up in
our posts is exactly why the OP is asking the question. Unfortunately, the OP has a history of 'stirring up the natives', and the question cannot be answered in such a manner so as to satisfy him (apparently). Common sense is the only way to govern one's decisions regarding how to case & transport your firearms. If the OP - or anyone else - wants to ensure that they won't run afoul of the law, the way to do so is to get the wording of the law changed to remove the "expressly made to contain a firearm" portion of the statute. Of course, legislators aren't likely to do so, as ambiguity in the law - any / all law - is what allows politicians to exert control over our lives - though that is an entirely different discussion that I'll leave for another time & place...
farmerj wrote:and stop trolling.
I'm still unwilling to get on the "troll" bandwagon, but can certainly see why some have jumped on it and are riding it hard. The OP needs to accept the answer I gave above, or risk pushing more folks onto the bandwagon... Common sense must rule the day - and then he must hope that he never pisses a LEO off enough for him / her to get out the statutes to begin to look for ways to see how he has violated the letter of some law or another. A friend of mine (who is coincidentally is a LEO now) used to work at a drag strip inspecting cars before they were allowed on the track. He was told explicitly by his boss during his training, that there were enough rules that he could
always find some way to keep a car off the track if he really wanted to - the same goes for the law. Don't give the LEO you are dealing with a reason to search the "rule book" for any 'technical' violations. Really pretty simple... (and I'm sure you (farmerj) get that - I'm hoping the OP will too at some point soon.)