I'd be suprised if that cop was able to remember that it's illegal for felons to carry weapons, but somehow forgot it's illegal to waive a gun around. Especially seeing as how, by your hypothesis, he was just dispatched for that very illegality mere minutes before.
Lol I'm sure you're right. I didn't think he'd forgotten that it's illegal to wave a gun around; I am theorizing that maybe he thought that he had the right to stop anyone carrying a gun, no matter how peacefully, and check that the gun was properly registered, so he didn't ask the tipster for any details about the kid's behavior. He heard that the kid was carrying a gun and said, "thanks for the info." Just a theory.
Going in another direction...
Why is open carry legal anywhere? You'd think they'd make it illegal under the same rationale as to why you can't yell "fire!" in a movie theater despite 1st amendment rights. It instills panic and causes unnecessary stress for the public.
Lax, EXCELLENT point. Judge Williams of the 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals agrees with you.
Recently, in December 2012, Illinois's law prohibiting concealed carry was struck down by the 7th Circuit, the federal appeals court in Chicago, for violating the 2nd Amendment. The decision included broad discussion that encompassed more than just concealed carry; it also implicated open carry. The court reasoned that the Supreme Court had declared that, since time immemorial, there was and is an individual right to keep weapons in the home for self-defense and held that, if self-defense is the rationale for permitting citizens to possess weapons, there must be a right to carry weapons for self-defense outside the home, as you are more likely to need weapons for self-defense outside the home (where are you more likely to get jumped, on a rough Chicago South Side sidewalk or in your condo on the 20th floor of a doorman building in the River North? Surely the former).
The law's proponents had argued in the briefing that the Supreme Court's logic may have applied to keeping guns in the home, but did not apply to carrying guns in public because, at the time the 2nd Amendment was passed, it was not commonly understood that there was a right to carry weapons in public. These people cited an English law dating back to 1328 and still on the books in the late 18th century (relevant because we are trying to figure out how the 2nd Amendment was understood at the time it was passed) stating that no one could “go nor ride armed by night nor by day, in Fairs, markets, nor in the presence of the Justices or other Ministers, nor in no part elsewhere.” Pre-founding commentators interpreted this law to prevent carrying weapons i
n order to avoid terrifying the population. The court rejected this explanation, claiming that the law could not have forbid the carrying of all weapons; it must merely have forbid carrying particularly dangerous or unusual ones, or carrying weapons as part of a mob.
Judge Williams, in dissent, wasn’t so sure. She said that it was clear based on the contemporary commentary that carrying weapons in public was illegal in early-modern England
because the sight of people carrying weapons in public created terror or at least nervousness, and that carrying weapons in public was therefore a crime "against the public peace". So basically, under the very logic that the Supreme Court used to strike down laws that prevent the ownership of guns in modern cities and that the 7th Circuit stated, by extension, would make constitutionally suspect any law that prohibited guns from being carried in public, there is a good argument that it SHOULD be illegal to carry guns in public. Judge Williams went on to reason that, because the historical evidence was inconclusive, the federal judiciary was out of line in striking down Illinois’s law, duly enacted by a democratically elected legislature, as doing so interfered with the time-honored practice of allowing individual states to serve as “laboratories” for new policy ideas.
Interesting case, right? I was just writing something on this for work (I work in a criminal courthouse in Chicago.) Lax, you are as smart as 1/3 of the 7th Circuit panel that struck down the Illinois law … but not as smart as the other 2/3. Haha.