depends if you have any priors. if this is your first offense then your looking at probation ( a couple of months in lock up at worse ). If this is not your first offense, maybe a year or two in jail but i doubt anything more then a year. If your priors are bad you may be doing a two or three year streach
Yes
You can carry a concealed weapon in most every state. Wisconsin and Illinois (and D.C.) don't issue permits, but you can carry a handgun in any other state if you have a handgun permit valid in that state. For more information, see the related link.
It's not unlawful to carry a padlock, HOWEVER - it is the use to which you put the padlock that makes it an illegal weapon. The minute you slip the hasp over your knuckle(s) it is convereted into an unlawful usage.
If you mean a federal concealed weapons permit, there is no such thing. If you are a police officer or retired police officer, you can carry under federal law HR218, but other than that, you're out of luck.
AnswerIf you're asking about Terry's criminal trial (State of Ohio v. John W. Terry), it took place on October 2, 1964; if you're asking about his US Supreme Court appeal(Terry v. Ohio), which was not a trial, oral arguments were held on December 12, 1967, and the decision released on June 10, 1968.DetailsTerry and Chilton were arrested on October 31, 1963, and initially indicted by the State of Ohio on charges of carrying a concealed weapon in violation of Section 2923.01, Ohio Revised Code.Louis Stokes, Terry's attorney, filed a motion to suppress the weapon as evidence on the theory that the "stop and frisk" violated Terry's rights under the Fourth Amendment Search and Seizure Clause. The motion was denied.Bench TrialState of Ohio v. John W. Terry, 95 Ohio L.Abs. 321 (1964)The defendants waived a jury trial, and entered a plea of not guilty. Terry appeared before Judge Bernard Friedman at a bench trial in the Ohio Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County on October 2, 1964.He was found guilty of carrying a concealed weapon and sentenced to three years in prison.Court of AppealsState of Ohio v. John W. Terry, 5 Ohio App.2d 122 - Court of Appeals of Ohio, Cuyahoga Co. (1966)On December 10, 1966, the Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed Terry's conviction.Ohio Supreme CourtDenied appeal.US Supreme CourtTerry v. Ohio, 392 US 1 (1968)The US Supreme Court heard the case under appellate jurisdiction, so there was no trial. Oral arguments were delivered on December 12, 1967 and the Court released it's decision on June 10, 1968. The US Supreme Court affirmed the Ohio courts' decisions.For more information, see Related Questions, below.
It is an M4 misdemeanor (The lowest possible misdemeanor) aka a 4th Degree Misdemeanor in Ohio, just as long as guns or firearms are not involved. Then the charge becomes much more serious. But usually they will charge you with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon if you are using firearms, knives, or other deadly weapons.
There is no such weapon.
he goes to jail
Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana :)
Only for sales to people in Ohio.
david newman of brookville Ohio
david newman of brookville Ohio