Can you point me to what section of 18 USC 926(b) says that it must be agency issued?
Being that Federal Prisons are not issued handguns and their agency does not "allow" them to carry, yet they still have been able to carry after court rulings out of New York, after rulings by the MSBP, and after a DOJ memo was released.
LEOSA expert Steve McMannion testified at the Drew Peterson case. He was not allowed to possess a short barrled shotgun under Illinois law, not even as a cop except for limited on duty exemptions, yet they had to drop the gun charge because LEOSA allows for short barrled rifles and shotguns to be carried.
You're CA friends appear to be wrong (this is why it's never wise to ask a cop about the law
). I recommend they download Steve McMannion's seminar materials from his website for $10 found at www.hr218leosa.com
He had an AR-15 according to the five different reports I have read at this point. So from what I am seeing he didn't get out from the LEOSA act, he got out because he was a SWAT member and was issued a gun? I'm trying to see where LEOSA saved the Day, but I am having difficulty finding it? Do you know where this short barrel shotgun being presented, or was it a rifle?
re my CA friends wrong: I don't speak to police officers about the law (generally, and I didn't here); I consult with individuals who defend people wrongly arrested for gun crimes, leaders in other 2A groups, and more specifically "firearm" attorneys. I want nothing more than to be able to tell people when they travel (LEO etc.) that they can bring whatever guns they want to Hawaii, but I know this is not the truth for CA/NJ. Cops in CA are supposed to have bullet buttons on their AR-15's if they are not running them featureless, unless it's a duty gun (and then it doesn't matter).
re agency issued: 134-1/2/3/8 etc. doesn't apply to anything issued by a federal agency.
1. LEOSA permits short barreled rifles and shotguns, Hawaii can't compel registration since they can't register short barreled long arms in HI.
They can. As 134-8 does not apply to many individuals who would have them. That doesn't mean though, if you are retired and have LEO status, that you can have a SBR / Shotgun, or do not register. All firearms have to be registered if they are not property of a federal agency (134-8). You are not exempt from that, as the LEOSA only applies to carrying. If you are retired, you can't come into Hawaii carrying 11+ round magazines. I mean hell, New York mistakenly prohibited all magazines over seven rounds lol!
2. What Hawaii calls "assault pistols" are legal under federal law, therefore, they are legal for LEOSA carry.
Assault pistols are excluded from law enforcement under 134-8 (through exemptions), so none of that applies if they are LEO.
3. Hawaii prohibits some classes of people from possessing firearms, yet some of the provisions conflict with LEOSA and are null and void since they are legal under LEOSA and federal law.
This from what I can tell has never been litigated. But I could certainly see a resident alien or american national challenging it. Not because it is void under LEOSA, but because it's void under other parts of the constitution (14th Amendment).
Much of this falls into the area where the State likely doesn't want to enforce it, nor do they care. Doesn't do them much good to be seen going around arresting Law enforcement, and most boys in blue - won't arrest their out of state counterparts. Additionally, most people don't understand the law, pre-emption, or any other legal stuff, and guys will just say "Federal law says i can do this!" And then the officers are like, "Well.... uh... yeah fuck this I got better stuff to do!"