![]() |
|
|
#266 (permalink) |
|
Afro Shoulder
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: In a whales vagina
Posts: 6,375
Member ID: 13
![]() |
So after a full day of carrying in my new holster @ work and around town I must say this thing lives up to its reputation and description. I barely noticed it after about the first 30 mins. With my Uncle Mikes holster I was previously using I would constantly have to readjust it and sometimes even make sure the gun was seated properly. With this holster I found myself checking occasionally but never once did it move from where I placed it originally. The only thing I need to do is adjust the brackets on it so that it has a little more cant to it and also so that it sits a tad lower so that its concealed by my jeans more and doesn't stick out from the top of my pants as much. I would definitely recommend this holster for anyone looking to conceal carry. The other nice feature is that you can buy additional kydex pieces to swap on for your different pistols.
__________________
|
|
|
|
|
|
#271 (permalink) |
|
HB 615 will make the following changes:
make the Georgia Firearms License (GFL) useful for carrying other weapons besides just guns. Removes the holster requirement for concealed carry. Allows people who don’t have GFLs and who are not even GFL-eligible to transport an unloaded and encased gun in their motor vehicles, so long as they are not a “prohibited person” under federal law (felons, dishonorably discharged vets, fugitives from justice, people who have renounced US citizenship, etc.) Repeals the public gathering law and replaces it with a very short list of only two kinds of places where guns are banned –“that part of a building that houses a courtroom” and jails/prisons. Affirmatively announces that with a GFL, you can carry anywhere in the state without criminal penalty except those places above (courthouses, jails / prisons). Even in courtrooms, weapons can be brought in for use as evidence with the permission of the Court and the courtroom security officers. At courthouses and jails/ prisons, you can bring a weapon and tell security officers there about it and follow their instructions about how to store it or secure it. If they don’t provide gun storage lockers, they cannot keep you out, but they could hold your weapon for you or they could unload it, disable it, and let you keep it in your possession. Repeals the law that made it a crime to openly carry a gun without a GFL. Now open carry will be legal without a permit, and a GFL will allow you to conceal if you wish. GFLs will be issued through the Georgia Secretary of State’s office, not each of the 159 county Probate Courts. As previously stated, GFLs will now apply to knives and other weapons besides handguns. You can get a “lifetime” GFL for $40, or keep getting the 5-year version that is intended to allow you to buy new guns without having to do the federal background check. Misdemeanor drug offenders are no longer barred from getting a GFL, which they currently are, even if they plead under the “first offender” law which is not supposed to be a conviction and is not supposed to impact any of their rights. GFLs are OK to issue to people who have voluntarily entered an inpatient treatment facility for a drug or alcohol problem. GFLs may be issued to drug offenders if they are otherwise qualified. Drug offenses will no longer be treated differently than other past crimes when determining GFL eligibility. The fee for the GBI’s background check is fixed at $20. The State has only 10 days to issue your permit after the criminal history records are obtained. GFLs don’t have to be any particular size or made of a certain material. GFLs will no longer have your fingerprint on it. The “Hurricane Katrina” law-- cops and other government agents CANNOT seize your guns, register your guns, or ban guns from places where guns had previously been legal, just because of a declared emergency. This includes the Governor, too. ALL CONFLICTING LAWS, OR CONFLICTING PARTS OF OTHER LAWS, ARE REPEALED. My note: This broad language may impact several existing gun control laws that are spread out over many different chapters of the Official Code of Georgia, including: 15-16-10, regarding the Sheriff’s power to make and enforce courthouse security plans. 16-11-127.1, regarding weapons at educational institutions and school zones. 16-11-127.2, regarding weapons on the grounds of a nuclear power facility. 16-12-123, regarding boarding a bus, aircraft (including private small planes?) or train with a firearm or knife. 16-12-127, regarding possession of a firearm with the intention of bringing it into a bus, rail, or freight shipping terminal. 21-2-413 (i), regarding the crime of possessing a firearm within 150 feet of a polling place. 27-3-1.1, regarding possessing loading guns in a Wildlife Management Area. 27-3-6, regarding possession of firearms while archery hunting. 27-4-11, regarding possession of firearms in public fishing areas. 42-4-13, regarding possession of weapons at jails (the new law gives jail visitors more options, although you can still be disarmed at jails.) 42-5-15, regarding possession of weapons at "correctional institutions". |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#274 (permalink) | |
|
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 15
Member ID: 112
![]() |
Quote:
![]() WTF.... talking about me.... I love my witness but yeah your right holsters are impossible to find... My negotiation tools !!! ![]() Kimber Custom and Witness P ![]() SIG SP2009
__________________
|
|
|
|
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|