Seems like a situation where you'd want a well built and very subtle safe (maybe back wall of a closet?).
I haven't been in too many RV's that'd take much doing to un-do to gain some nice guns were I the type to abscond with them.
ttousi wrote:LarryFlew wrote:ttousi wrote:in no particular order
* an RV unhitched is not a motor vehicle by MN definition (no motor). therefore a structure
* wife alone in RV with no permit firearm needs to be unloaded and cased
* .04 BAC while carrying ...conviction means loss of permit for 6 months.....2nd offense or greater than .1 conviction is loss of permit for year
Keeping in mind that as your "home" number 2 still requires either permission or reason to enter by police etc. Covers most state laws BTW.
true......depends on usage at the time
ttousi wrote:in no particular order
* an RV unhitched is not a motor vehicle by MN definition (no motor). therefore a structure
* wife alone in RV with no permit firearm needs to be unloaded and cased
* .04 BAC while carrying ...conviction means loss of permit for 6 months.....2nd offense or greater than .1 conviction is loss of permit for year
LarryFlew wrote:ttousi wrote:in no particular order
* an RV unhitched is not a motor vehicle by MN definition (no motor). therefore a structure
* wife alone in RV with no permit firearm needs to be unloaded and cased
* .04 BAC while carrying ...conviction means loss of permit for 6 months.....2nd offense or greater than .1 conviction is loss of permit for year
Would she need a permit inside your "home" or would she be allowed to defend without a permit as in your actual home?
LarryFlew wrote:That's what I was thinking also. Obviously there are different state laws etc that may make a difference but guessing in most cases disconnected trailer or 5th wheel and totally hooked up motor home would be considered a home.
I agree with concealed is concealed, but my next question would be, do campground owners even have the legal right to ban firearms that are kept inside the RV? Are the campers considered tenants?LarryFlew wrote:Not so much a real legal issue but we have stayed at MANY parks and have yet to see one that does not have some kind of firearms statement. Most say no firearms allowed and a few say firearms must be cased etc. Note the size of a "few" as that means 2 so far.
falls under the same stuff as concealed is concealed as far as I am concerned. Yes the extras in my RV are cased etc but the carry is available no matter what the park rules are. If needed for defense I can deal with the park rules after the problem is taken care of.
sprigfan wrote:I agree with concealed is concealed, but my next question would be, do campground owners even have the legal right to ban firearms that are kept inside the RV? Are the campers considered tenants?LarryFlew wrote:Not so much a real legal issue but we have stayed at MANY parks and have yet to see one that does not have some kind of firearms statement. Most say no firearms allowed and a few say firearms must be cased etc. Note the size of a "few" as that means 2 so far.
falls under the same stuff as concealed is concealed as far as I am concerned. Yes the extras in my RV are cased etc but the carry is available no matter what the park rules are. If needed for defense I can deal with the park rules after the problem is taken care of.
I agree with concealed is concealed, but my next question would be, do campground owners even have the legal right to ban firearms that are kept inside the RV? Are the campers considered tenants?[/quote]wasfuzz wrote:
PhilaBOR wrote:As posted above, laws will vary by state. My fiancée and I both have permits and carry wherever we can. We have MN and FL permits. We mostly visit states between Minnesota and Arizona which except Colorado have reciprocity. A person has to decide if protecting yourself and your loved ones is worth stretching the law a bit.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 20 guests