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<blockquote data-quote="jrusling" data-source="post: 3837451" data-attributes="member: 10401"><p>This has been a few years ago, but I was turning left with a protected green arrow and another car blew through the red light and hit my older explorer in the side just in back of the front tire. It ended up flipping the explorer end for end. I was carrying a Glock 22 with a tuckable IWB. The gun came out of the holster, but was still under my shirt. After I climbed out through the missing windshield I was standing there trying to get the gun back in the holster without showing it. I suspect that the Mustang officer there told the OKC officer that I was probably carrying, because when the OKC officer approached me I told him I had a CWL and was carrying. He ask where the gun was and I told him at my hip and he just said to keep it there and seem glad it was not in the vehicle. This was on a street that was the boundary between OKC and Mustang. At the time I was doing neighborhood patrol and all of the Mustang officers knew me. That taught me to always check the tension on my holster and reinforced the idea to always wear a seat belt. In today's world, it would not surprise me to have my weapon taken for a little while. This is especially true if you are going to the ER.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jrusling, post: 3837451, member: 10401"] This has been a few years ago, but I was turning left with a protected green arrow and another car blew through the red light and hit my older explorer in the side just in back of the front tire. It ended up flipping the explorer end for end. I was carrying a Glock 22 with a tuckable IWB. The gun came out of the holster, but was still under my shirt. After I climbed out through the missing windshield I was standing there trying to get the gun back in the holster without showing it. I suspect that the Mustang officer there told the OKC officer that I was probably carrying, because when the OKC officer approached me I told him I had a CWL and was carrying. He ask where the gun was and I told him at my hip and he just said to keep it there and seem glad it was not in the vehicle. This was on a street that was the boundary between OKC and Mustang. At the time I was doing neighborhood patrol and all of the Mustang officers knew me. That taught me to always check the tension on my holster and reinforced the idea to always wear a seat belt. In today's world, it would not surprise me to have my weapon taken for a little while. This is especially true if you are going to the ER. [/QUOTE]
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