Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Concealed Carry – 10 suggestions and insights from an experienced lawyer

  

 1. A concealed carry permit is not a license to kill. You have no more right to use a weapon than a person without a CCP. 

 2. Better to be tried by 12 than carried by 6. True, but the criminal and civil legal consequences following a shooting will test that. Once the trigger is pulled, your life will change. 

 3. If you must use your weapon, do so. If not, don’t. Most people carry mobile phones; use that if you can. Otherwise, once you shoot, holster/secure your gun and call 911. You will be recorded (so will your phone calls at jail). Stick to the few basic facts – “I’m calling to report a shooting. The address is ___. Send an ambulance.” Then hang up and wait. 

 4. For your concealed carry gun especially use factory ammunition of the same kind. Don’t mix. Some think mixing ammo makes you look untrained, sloppy, haphazard or even gangster. 

 5. Use the minimal powered round you’re comfortable with, preferably something with “defense” in the description on the box. Of course hollow points are good but know the jury will be told by the prosecution (and/or the plaintiff’s personal injury lawyer) – and the judge will allow – that hollow points are designed to maximize damage. Your jury won’t appreciate that hollow points are sensible self-defense rounds; they will believe that hollow points – or any other ammo designed for greater damage (stopping power) – are evidence that you are a bad person. 

 6. Carry whatever gun you want, but again understand that the jury – likely grossly ignorant of guns and how they work (and brainwashed by the media) - will get to see it and touch it. They will not appreciate its aesthetics or functionality as you do. They will fear it. The judge and court personnel – and the prosecutor - will treat it like its highly radioactive. 

 7. Shoot only as many times as you must, aiming for center of mass. Any shot other than to the front body of the person increases the chance of criminal charges and a civil lawsuit. Definitely no shots to the back or back side of the person. 

 8. Your concealed weapon presumably is not intended to be a battle weapon. Its for an emergency. The less offensive looking the better for you in the event of prosecution or lawsuit. 

 9. If you shoot, you probably will be arrested (at least one of the many law enforcement types responding to the scene will want to arrest you, and that’s all it takes), handcuffed, jailed, stripped, searched, fingerprinted, swabbed, held alone, watched, listened to, and interrogated. Your vehicles and home probably will be searched, as will your phones and computers (they’re looking for evidence the shooting was pre-meditated, i.e. not self-defense). A warrant will issue and all your guns and ammo will be confiscated (why? Because they can). Your spouse, girlfriend, roommates etc. will be questioned (and should politely decline to answer any questions about you). If there’s not enough evidence to charge (in the eyes of law enforcement and/or the prosecutor’s office) you should be released eventually. If charged you may be held without bail, or bail so high you can’t afford it. You then will remain in jail through trial 6 or 8 or 12 months later, the odds of which generally speaking are 70% for conviction. The sentence will carry a mandatory minimum of at least 10 years, give or take, somewhere in a more remote part of Colorado (hopefully). Know that from the moment you are taken into custody, you may not get out for a very long time. An appeal takes years and has about a 25% success rate. You will also be sued. You may win the criminal case and still lose the civil case (the burden of proof is lower). The person you shot – or his family – will try to take every penny you have left (after lawyers of course). Insurance will not cover alleged criminal conduct. 

 10. Beyond contact and identification by law enforcement, politely decline to answer questions. You will be in no condition to think clearly enough to understand and answer questions. Plus, assume they are looking for evidence of a crime – that’s what police do. Tell them you’d like to answer questions but have been told by your lawyer not to. Stick to that and stay silent (other than name, address etc.) “Lawyer” is a magic word to police – they’re taught to leave you alone once they hear it. 

     As a criminal defense lawyer practicing nearly 40 years, I can’t recall a time a client ever talked himself out of criminal charges. Usually its just the opposite. If law enforcement is asking you questions – interrogating you or “just trying to learn what happened” – its because they don’t have enough information to charge you! Don’t do their job for them. They probably don’t care that much about you, your family, your career, your reputation etc. They’re looking to make an arrest. Get an experienced lawyer on board ASAP.

Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Some musings on the changing Practice of Law

 I started in law school 40 years ago.  Here are some of the changes I've seen.

- Technology changed the economics.  Mobile phones, laptop computers, scanners, cloud storage, virtual meetings - these are way cheaper than buildings in downtown offices close to costly over secure courthouses in congested cities or towns.  Nor do lawyers anymore need such office space for secretaries to type and maintain paper files, or to house law libraries.  Good lawyers can be anywhere, and the smart ones already are.

- A diluting talent pool.  Just like in professional sports, there are only so many really good players.  The more teams, the fewer really good players on each.  Law schools are paid to pump out little lawyers.  Little lawyers become judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, politicians (!) etc.  Add in the idiocy of DEI, and the "best and brightest" are becoming fewer and farther.  One fact that hasn't changed is clients want results.  When things get rough they don't care about claimed race, or sexual preferences/perversions, or pronouns, or any other virtue signaling madness.  Even the wokest of the woke will rather have a winning lawyer than one that checks all the boxes but loses.

- The system is overwhelmed.  Too many laws (many of them really dumb or partisan), too many people (so many of them non-English speakers), and trying to do too much to solve the world's problems via courtrooms (like addiction, domestic strife, neighborly disputes, incivility) clog, slow, choke and greatly cost increase what historically has been a system to resolve recognized substantial legal issues among citizens.  Courtrooms now too often sound like lame therapy sessions.  Whole industries leach off the system, from the prison/jail industry to probation departments to community service agencies to sobriety monitors to treatment providers etc. etc.

- Politics trumps justice.  Especially at higher levels - where one might expect better - judges/justices decide a result based on their politics and then work backwards to justify it (usually with hypocritical, tortured and shallow legal "reasoning").  They follow their feelings, not the law.  This sad development is getting worse, undercutting faith in and hope for what should be a strictly impartial system for Justice.

- Judges won't enforce rules.  Civil and criminal matters have longstanding, tried and true rules governing their process, evidence, pre-trial matters, and trial.  Partly because of their inadequacies, more and more judges (see talent pool dilution above) let slide rule violations.  This makes predicting what will happen in a case (something clients understandably want) much more difficult/impossible.  It increases the time and expense of cases for the same reason.  Judges are quick to complain that lawyers don't follow the rules.  In my experience, it's judges not enforcing the rules (or applying established law) that hurts the system.


Monday, August 25, 2025

"As is" clauses in contracts

The form contracts associated with selling or buying a home (or a vehicle for that matter) usually contain a clause that the sale is "as is."  Generally this means defects not otherwise hidden or disclosed may not give rise to redress after the deal closes.

However, language in the same contracts may undercut the as is clause.  Especially more specific language elsewhere may give rise to a cause of action for failing to tell the other side about known "adverse material facts" - in addition to misrepresentation, nondisclosure, concealment of defects or of course downright fraud.  

The bottom line is that "as is" will not protect in all circumstances and does not immunize from potential costly liability.