LTCH limits you to only one gun?

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  • HoughMade

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    Oct 24, 2012
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    Hey all, attorney here (don't throw rocks). The ltch does not limit the number of guns you can carry.

    IC 1-1-4-1
    (3) Words importing the singular number only may be also applied to the plural of persons and things.

    This is part of the rules of general statutory construction and apply to all provisions of the Indiana Code

    Yep....Kirk got it....which I either did not know or had forgotten, either way I missed it....don't tell my clients.
     

    Jack Burton

    Shooter
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    I've heard this thought from more than one LEO. I don't know how deep it is set into the overall LEO community but it appears common, at least.
     

    Kirk Freeman

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    The book I cited earlier is Indiana Place Names, Indiana University Press, 1975, by Ronald Baker and Marvin Carmony.

    Bellmore: originially named Northhampton (Massachusetts) but changed in 1852 in honor of a daughter of Thomas Moore by a suggestion of Gen. George K. Steele.
     

    bingley

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    Bellmore: originially named Northhampton (Massachusetts) but changed in 1852 in honor of a daughter of Thomas Moore by a suggestion of Gen. George K. Steele.

    But since the name "Bellmore" existed before 1852, I'm guessing Gen. Steele was giving it a felicitous interpretation: "a beautiful daughter of the Moore family" = "Belle Moore" = "Bellmore." That doesn't explain where the name Bellmore *originally* came from. Is it a combination of a French word (beau/belle = beautiful) and an Anglo word (moor = upland)?
     

    cobber

    Parrot Daddy
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    Sep 14, 2011
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    PR-WLAF
    Hey all, attorney here (don't throw rocks). The ltch does not limit the number of guns you can carry.

    IC 1-1-4-1
    (3) Words importing the singular number only may be also applied to the plural of persons and things.

    This is part of the rules of general statutory construction and apply to all provisions of the Indiana Code

    Does that pertain to wives? :woot:



    :spend:


    :(
     

    HoughMade

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    Oct 24, 2012
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    Valparaiso
    Does that pertain to wives? :woot:

    Two (2) individuals may not marry each other if either individual has a husband or wife who is alive-
    Burns Ind. Code Ann. § 31-11-1-3

    A marriage is void if either party to the marriage had a wife or husband who was living when the marriage was solemnized-
    Burns Ind. Code Ann.
    § 31-11-8-2

    You just have to decide if you want to keep the state happy, or Joseph Smith.
     
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