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Millie

Get on with your life!!!
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Because of your kind $2 donation to the North Carolina Sheriffs' Association (NCSA) through your county firearm permit application, the Association is providing you with up-to-date information on gun laws and firearms purchasing laws that affect you as a North Carolina citizen.

Questions have arisen about information circulating on social media regarding the ability of persons with a valid concealed handgun permit to carry a concealed handgun while wearing a mask.

Summary
There is no law in North Carolina that specifically prohibits a person with a valid concealed handgun permit from lawfully carrying their handgun concealed while wearing a mask.
However, wearing a mask by anyone in some circumstances is a misdemeanor and in other circumstances it is a felony. A person who is convicted of a felony will have their concealed handgun permit revoked and will not qualify for the issuance of a new concealed handgun permit. A misdemeanor conviction will have no impact on a person’s concealed handgun permit.
Wearing a Mask in Public is a Misdemeanor
G.S. 14-12.7 through G.S. 14-12.10 make it a Class 1 misdemeanor for a person to wear a mask on any public walkways or roadways, while on the public property of State or local government, while holding meetings or demonstrations, or while on private property without the prior written permission of the property owner.
There are limited exceptions that allow masks to be worn for traditional holiday costumes, persons engaged in trades and employment where a mask is worn for the purpose of ensuring the physical safety of the wearer, etc., in theatrical productions including Mardi Gras celebrations and masquerade balls, in civil defense drills and exercises or emergencies, while riding a motorcycle to protect the rider’s face, and other limited situations.
Wearing a Mask While Committing Certain Acts is a Felony
G.S. 14-12.12 through G.S. 14-12.14 make it a Class H felony for a person, with the intent to intimidate, to: (1) wear a mask while placing or causing to be placed a burning or flaming cross (whether real or simulated) on the property of another, on any public property or on any public street or highway; or (2) place any exhibit (such as a noose for hanging) anywhere in the State while wearing a mask.
The limited exceptions to the misdemeanor offenses described above DO NOT apply to these felonies.
Senate Bill 704 Temporarily Authorizes Masks in Public for Health & Safety Due to COVID-19
With the enactment in May, 2020 of Section 4 of Senate Bill 704, a person is now temporarily authorized to wear a mask in public and on private premises (such as in a shopping mall) for the “purpose of ensuring the physical health or safety of the wearer or others.” The person wearing a mask for health or safety reasons must remove the mask upon the request of a law enforcement officer during a traffic stop (including at a checkpoint or roadblock) or criminal investigation.
This temporary authorization only applies to the misdemeanors described above but DOES NOT apply to the felonies described above.
This temporary authorization expires on August 1, 2020. If the General Assembly does not extend this temporary provision of law, it will again be a Class 1 misdemeanor for any person to wear a mask in public (including those with a concealed handgun permit whether or not they are carrying a concealed handgun) unless one of the other exceptions described above applies.
Ability to Keep a Concealed Handgun Permit With a Criminal Conviction
Per G.S. 14-415.12 and G.S. 14-415.18, a person with a North Carolina issued concealed handgun permit that is convicted of a felony, including the Class H felony offenses described above, will have their concealed handgun permit revoked and will not qualify for the issuance of a new concealed handgun permit.
If a person with a concealed handgun permit commits the Class 1 misdemeanor offense of wearing a mask in public after August 1, 2020, that person would still qualify to possess the concealed handgun permit unless the judgment or condition of probation issued by the court prohibits the person from possessing a firearm.


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Because of your kind $2 donation to the North Carolina Sheriffs' Association (NCSA) through your county firearm permit application, the Association is providing you with up-to-date information on gun laws and firearms purchasing laws that affect you as a North Carolina citizen.

Questions have arisen about information circulating on social media regarding the ability of persons with a valid concealed handgun permit to carry a concealed handgun while wearing a mask.

Summary
There is no law in North Carolina that specifically prohibits a person with a valid concealed handgun permit from lawfully carrying their handgun concealed while wearing a mask.
However, wearing a mask by anyone in some circumstances is a misdemeanor and in other circumstances it is a felony. A person who is convicted of a felony will have their concealed handgun permit revoked and will not qualify for the issuance of a new concealed handgun permit. A misdemeanor conviction will have no impact on a person’s concealed handgun permit.
Wearing a Mask in Public is a Misdemeanor
G.S. 14-12.7 through G.S. 14-12.10 make it a Class 1 misdemeanor for a person to wear a mask on any public walkways or roadways, while on the public property of State or local government, while holding meetings or demonstrations, or while on private property without the prior written permission of the property owner.
There are limited exceptions that allow masks to be worn for traditional holiday costumes, persons engaged in trades and employment where a mask is worn for the purpose of ensuring the physical safety of the wearer, etc., in theatrical productions including Mardi Gras celebrations and masquerade balls, in civil defense drills and exercises or emergencies, while riding a motorcycle to protect the rider’s face, and other limited situations.
Wearing a Mask While Committing Certain Acts is a Felony
G.S. 14-12.12 through G.S. 14-12.14 make it a Class H felony for a person, with the intent to intimidate, to: (1) wear a mask while placing or causing to be placed a burning or flaming cross (whether real or simulated) on the property of another, on any public property or on any public street or highway; or (2) place any exhibit (such as a noose for hanging) anywhere in the State while wearing a mask.
The limited exceptions to the misdemeanor offenses described above DO NOT apply to these felonies.
Senate Bill 704 Temporarily Authorizes Masks in Public for Health & Safety Due to COVID-19
With the enactment in May, 2020 of Section 4 of Senate Bill 704, a person is now temporarily authorized to wear a mask in public and on private premises (such as in a shopping mall) for the “purpose of ensuring the physical health or safety of the wearer or others.” The person wearing a mask for health or safety reasons must remove the mask upon the request of a law enforcement officer during a traffic stop (including at a checkpoint or roadblock) or criminal investigation.
This temporary authorization only applies to the misdemeanors described above but DOES NOT apply to the felonies described above.
This temporary authorization expires on August 1, 2020. If the General Assembly does not extend this temporary provision of law, it will again be a Class 1 misdemeanor for any person to wear a mask in public (including those with a concealed handgun permit whether or not they are carrying a concealed handgun) unless one of the other exceptions described above applies.
Ability to Keep a Concealed Handgun Permit With a Criminal Conviction
Per G.S. 14-415.12 and G.S. 14-415.18, a person with a North Carolina issued concealed handgun permit that is convicted of a felony, including the Class H felony offenses described above, will have their concealed handgun permit revoked and will not qualify for the issuance of a new concealed handgun permit.
If a person with a concealed handgun permit commits the Class 1 misdemeanor offense of wearing a mask in public after August 1, 2020, that person would still qualify to possess the concealed handgun permit unless the judgment or condition of probation issued by the court prohibits the person from possessing a firearm.


If this is already here, please delete.
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I just got the same...

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I was about to post this in another thread...

Don't know about you, but after reading that I only have greater reservations about masked carry. It is clear to me, that legally, no one knows what the hell is going on and just stringing things together here and their post-eff ups.

Are they telling me I was [allegedly] breaking the law when protecting myself in April? Are they seriously trying to tell me that I could be breaking the law if I get used to the routine and dont constantly check dates? Im not an attorney, I dont have the time to stay on top of the 'legality of masks in north offing Carolina'. Maybe if NC drafts up a stimulus package where I can bill them for the time I spend looking into the different dates across counties versus state level with all the amendments of states across them and where/when im crossing county and state lines blah blah blah...

lol, nah. Ill just stick to what I know is the actual law, and leave the administrative rules on the side.

Last I checked sheriff associations dont make laws and are not judges issuing rulings. every sheriff can interpret their own way for their county.

Im not going to write to wake, durham and chatham county sheriffs to get their take (unless its billable hours). Barring a signed note from the top sheriff in each county that reads "if you are reading this and you are one of my deputies, fold this paper back up, and get the f*^% out of here" I aint trusting anyone. And then what about town police? My police effing wash peoples feet on the clock in uniform...WTF am I supposed to do with them? Tell them the sheriff said wash my butthole if ya got nothing better to do?
 
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I met a guy who tried to get me to work with him at a call center collecting donations for sheriff's offices. He said they got to keep like 3/4ths of every dollar. I passed right away but after taking for a while I found out he was a felon. I guess he was turning his life around....:rolleyes:
 
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