A lock blade style knife?!?//Did you call Homeland Security?//Terror Code: Hot Red?//Did he detonate the device?
probably not,but I am guessing the knife was taken away from the intoxicated individual so it wouldn't be pulled on the EMT if the pt decided to get combative.
Seriously guy, you need to chill the hell out.
what are you basing this on?
If I'm not at work, I'm carrying a weapon.
which is your right, should you do that.
If you disarm me against my will, you've committed theft. Theft of a firearm is a first degree felony in this state and I'd go to every length to prosecute you.
and you will be laughed out of the court room. not only that, but if i sustain any injuries while you are resisting my attempting to keep myself safe, I will make sure you are charged with assault & battery of a public safety professional, interference with a public safety professional in the course of his duties, reckless endangerment of my crew and the public in general, and hopefully after LEOs arrival, and I tell them what happen, you will continue to resist and they will subdue you appropriately and take away your weapon. not only that, but you will probably lose you CCW permit, and spend some time in jail for all the crimes you commit.
or, I will let you keep the weapon, call LEOs leave the scene, where your condition will deteriorate, and if you pass out, you will again be stripped of every weapon you have on you, and if need be, be transported to the hospital in hand cuffs (protective custody, for your safety because you are now altered as a result of your illness or injury). Feel free to tell you they are violating your rights, I'm sure they will love to hear that.
Just because you managed to grind through the 110 hour class doesn't mean that you're Jack Bauer?
and just because you are always armed, doesn't mean you are going to be transported to the hospital with your weapons still on you
Not quite. It's legal because you have the unalienable right to carry said device. Our rights are natural and exist regardless of the current "law".
I see we have another guy who just doesn't get it. You absolutely have the right to carry. Fine. I have the right to not treat or transport you anywhere as long as you have that weapon on you. My safety trumps your rights. Feel free to try to sue me, I'm pretty sure a reasonable judge and jury will laugh you out of court, and that's assuming you can find a lawyer to even consider the case.
It's prohibited, by law, to carry specific items onto commercial airlines. Could you cite the law that prohibits the carrying of specific items on an ambulance? The only one I'm aware of makes it a felony for a loaded firearm to be carried on an ambulance unless carried by an officer. So, if you disarm me and bring the gun, you're a felon.
oh hell no. If I am disarming you, then you are not getting the gun back. absolutely not. it's being turned over to law enforcement. you are more than welcome to get it back from them.
I've been there, but usually at the request of law enforcement in function of an EMT. never as an inmate, and I assure you, I have no plans to change that.
The Dumbification of America, redux.
I know, anything you can't understand, you call dumbification. It's called using your faulty logic to prove how incorrect your point is. nice try though.
If they want to grab a weapon to take to the hospital, the answer is no.
why not? it's the inalienable right do do it. why the backstepping?
If I find something on my trauma scan, I'll make it as safe as I can. sometimes the safest place for a pocketknife is in the owners pocket.
a pocket knife? are we talking about a 2 inch swiss army knife? of a 6 inch hunting knife? I might let a patient keep a small pocket knife. key word is might, it would depend on the call.
but the safest place for the knife, in regards to the EMT who is treating the injured, which is me, is in the hands of law enforcement, or in a worst case, MY POCKET. not with the patient. I am not stealing it, I am making sure said weapon does not get used against me. and it gets turned over to hospital security when we arrive at the hospital, where it gets returned to the patient when he and the hospital part ways.