ovrszd
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- May 27, 2006
- Messages
- 32,246
- Location
- Missouri
- Tractor
- Kubota M9540, Ford 3910FWD, Ford 555A, JD2210
My 2 cents:
I never tell the officer I have a permit or I am armed.(not that I get stopped much) I retired from the job and am able to have a RPO permit. I show them my retired badge. The RPO is good nationwide and in states without carry permits I don't trust that the officer would know what to do properly. Some states require that you inform the officer in which case you should definitely should as a failure to advise might be a charge in of itself.
If an officer is aware from his computer that your grandson has a CCW permit it would inform him that he has been investigated and found to be crime-free. That's always a good thing.
The most important aspect of any traffic stop or police interaction is attitude and behavior. Pull as far off the road as possible so he doesn't have to hang out in traffic. Stay in the car, roll down the window, turn off the music, hang up the cell phone. Turn on the inside light at night. If you have tinted windows roll them all down. Keep your hands in sight and advise your passengers to do the same and have your passengers shut up unless addressed. Listen and obey their instructions. And be polite. Ask if you are unsure. Advise the officer before ANY action. And if it's possible, ask for consideration, maybe a warning. But NEVER say "What did I do wrong?".
I could write a book on it but it's already been done.
Sorry Buggs, you were typing as I was, didn't intend to exclude you. Thank you for your Service!!!