Ahem just a portion of where CCW is forbidden....... as published on:
http://www.nraila.org/GunLaws/StateLaws.aspx?ST=OH
Please note highlights added by me.
So if I choose to have no carry on my property I am discriminating as if I were not serving other races or ethnicities etc????? State of Ohio says differently......
Like I said, I don't give a damn about guns..... BUT PEOPLE TELLING ME THEIR RIGHT TO CARRY ON MY PROPERTY SUPERCEDES MY RIGHTS, PISSES ME OFF TO WHERE I'LL BACK GUN CONTROL LAWS.
RESPECT MY RIGHTS.... I'LL RESPECT YOURS.... SHIT ON MINE I'LL SHIT ON YOURS.
Someone else and I had an argument in another thread where I said it was illegal in Ohio to carry a gun in a bar.... he also chose to not believe me.
Quote:
Concealed carry of a handgun by a licensee is prohibited in certain areas. Under state law, all persons or governing bodies who direct the activities of each entity listed below, must post at each entrance, a sign which reads, "Unless otherwise authorized by law, pursuant to the Ohio Revised Code, no person shall knowingly possess, have under the person`s control, convey, or attempt to convey a deadly weapon or dangerous ordinance onto these premises."
Court house or court rooms.
Inside a public school.
Police, sheriff or state highway patrol station.
Correctional facility, jail or any premises controlled by Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation.
Airport passenger terminal or any airplane.
Any room or open-air arena licensed to serve alcohol for on premises consumption. (in other words a bar......)
Premises owned or leased by a public or private college, university or other institution of higher learning.
Any place of worship.
A child day-care center.
A family day-care home.
Any building owned or leased by a state government entity or a political subdivision of the state.
Any location prohibited by federal law.
The owner or person in control of private land or premises, and a private person or entity leasing land or premises owned by a public entity, may post a sign in a conspicuous location on that land or premises prohibiting persons from carrying firearms or concealed firearms on that property.
A person who violates this prohibition is guilty of criminal trespass.
It is unlawful to have a loaded firearm in a motor vehicle in such a manner that it is accessible without leaving the vehicle. It is unlawful to have a firearm in a motor vehicle unless it is unloaded and carried in one of the following ways:
In a closed case, box, or package.
Secured in a rack in plain sight.
In plain sight, with the action open or the weapon stripped, or if the firearm`s action will not stay open or it cannot be easily stripped, in plain sight.
In a compartment that can be reached only by leaving the vehicle.
There are exceptions for law enforcement authorities and very limited specific exceptions for landowners engaged in pest control under the exact circumstances described in the statute.
A person who has been issued a license or a temporary emergency license to carry a concealed handgun may transport a loaded handgun in a motor vehicle if either it is in a holster and in plain sight on the person`s person, or it is securely encased in closed, locked glove compartment or in a case that is in plain sight and that is locked.
A firearm in the passenger compartment of a motor vehicle is considered loaded if its magazine is loaded or a loaded magazine is ready at hand. Muzzleloading weapons are considered unloaded if the percussion cap or priming powder in the pan is removed.
It is unlawful to possess a firearm in any room in which liquor is being dispensed pursuant to a liquor license. This prohibition does not apply to a police officer, or to any room used for the accommodation of guests of a hotel, or the possession of an unloaded rifle by a veterans` organization, or possessing or displaying unloaded firearms in a soldiers` memorial or in a convention center or other public meeting place by an exhibitor, trader, purchaser, or seller.
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