texasprowler wrote:And the court rulings on police conduct with regard to stops and possession of a legal weapon are well established. Constitutional rights don't end on private property.
texasprowler wrote:They explained politely that it is the policy of the mall to report a mwag and said I was not in any way suspicious. OK. Unlawful stop.
They then colluded with security to obtain my private information because security wanted to know if I had a permit, information they are not entitled to. So, the police demanded my ID, unlawful stop, unlawful detainment, therefore unlawful demand for ID.
I tried to go through security at the airport with my firearm concealed on my hip. Security tried to detain me, but I explained that air marshals are allowed to carry on flights, and they had no proof that I wasn't an air marshal, so they should just leave me alone. They attempted to argue that an armed air marshal was an exception to the general rule of "no firearms on planes", and tried to make me show my ID & badge, but I wasn't having any of that nonsense. Once the swelling goes down, I get the casts off, and the catheter can be removed, I'll tell you the rest of the story.
I don't think you understand what the court has actually said in Minnesota. The police get to assume that you're violating the law if you're carrying in public. It doesn't matter if you're acting suspiciously or not. This decision is a good place to start your research on this issue (see pages 10-11). It summarizes the relevant cases:
http://statecasefiles.justia.com/documents/minnesota/court-of-appeals/a11-1008.pdf...the supreme court’s reasoning that lacking a handgun permit is not an element of the crime of
carrying a gun in a public place; rather, having a permit is a mere exception to the crime.
Id. at 396. So police developed reasonable suspicion that Timberlake’s conduct met all
the elements of the crime because he was reportedly carrying his handgun in a public
place.
I don't like that logic, but it is what the courts have determined.