You can find information about Michigan's current knife laws on the Michigan Legislative website. The state's compiled laws can be searched by section or keyword, such as "knife".
You can also sign up to be notified by email when items of interest change or are added to this website. The email will contain a link to the items of interest located on the Michigan Legislature website.
In addition to state law, some cities and counties may have additional or more
restrictive local laws.
I can't find any laws that pertain solely to Porter County in terms of knife laws, that means there are no additional knife laws for the county beyond state laws. Indiana is one of the most lenient states in terms of knife laws. There are viturally no laws regarding knives except to forbid knives on school grounds. Ballistic knives are still illegal, of course. But ballistic knives are considered illegally manufactured firearms rather than knives. Throwing stars are illegal as well.
Rolison Pro hardware
Michigan is the only state that participates in Michigan driver laws. The other states have their own laws.
They are banned in the United States and any country which has any laws against knives.
Monkey laws in Michigan are null. http://petmonkeyinfo.com/laws.html
Yes, as long as they don't carry it to school or on the bus. Indiana is one of the most lenient states in terms of knife laws. There are viturally no laws regarding knives except to forbid knives on school grounds. Ballistic knives are still illegal, of course. But ballistic knives are considered illegally manufactured firearms rather than knives. Throwing stars are illegal as well.
No. Indiana is one of the most lenient states in terms of knife laws. There are viturally no laws regarding knives except to forbid knives on school grounds. Ballistic knives are still illegal, of course. But ballistic knives are considered illegally manufactured firearms rather than knives. Throwing stars are illegal as well.
There is no length limit in Indiana. There are no laws regarding swords either, except for the obvious don't hurt someone with them. Indiana is one of the most lenient states in terms of knife laws. There are viturally no laws regarding knives except to forbid knives on school grounds. Ballistic knives are still illegal, of course. But ballistic knives are considered illegally manufactured firearms rather than knives. Throwing stars are illegal as well.
the laws are : you may not use knives or guns . you may not take captives
No one here is going to research the laws of all 50 states to satisfy your curiosity. Incidentally, most state laws do not describe them as "butterfly" knives. They are usually covered under the classification of "gravity knives" and occasionally referred to as Balisongs.
Indiana is one of the most lenient states in terms of knife laws. There are viturally no laws regarding knives except to forbid knives on school grounds. Ballistic knives are still illegal, of course. But ballistic knives are considered illegally manufactured firearms rather than knives. Throwing stars are illegal as well. Other than that, there are no restrictions.
No, because Michigan was not a slave state