As far as I am aware, anything which can be considered as assisted opening is illegal... which sucks
I was always curious what the penalty is for carrying a banned knife in the UK. I mean what if you forgot a lock blade in your pocket you were using around the house, and went out in public and for some reason were stopped or searched? You get a fine? Is it seen as a very serious offence? In canada if you were caught with a handgun in public that would be pretty serious, but surely it cant be take as serious for a knife? Has anyone heard of anything bad, or do police use good judgement usually if you aren't up some some criminal intent?
Quote from: Syph007 on December 09, 2011, 12:03:31 AMI was always curious what the penalty is for carrying a banned knife in the UK. I mean what if you forgot a lock blade in your pocket you were using around the house, and went out in public and for some reason were stopped or searched? You get a fine? Is it seen as a very serious offence? In canada if you were caught with a handgun in public that would be pretty serious, but surely it cant be take as serious for a knife? Has anyone heard of anything bad, or do police use good judgement usually if you aren't up some some criminal intent?We have to be very clear on what we're talking about here. Flick knives and gravity knifes are very specifically BANNED, simply owning one is a criminal offence, no excuses (unless you have owned it since before the law was brought in in 1959).Lock and fixed blades are a totally different thing. There are indeed restrictions to carrying them, but owning them isn't an issue. What happens to you if caught with one without good reason is going to be very circumstantial IMO. In the situation you describe, and having no prior offences, you might just get a slap on the wrist and told not to do it again. However you could just as easily get a fine or custodial sentience if they wanted to throw the book at you.IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER! - I'm not a lawyer and I take absolutely NO responsibility for any legal issues you might find yourself in. "But Gareth on MT.org said..." is not a reasonable excuse for carrying a knife.
Quote from: Gareth on December 09, 2011, 12:19:54 AMQuote from: Syph007 on December 09, 2011, 12:03:31 AMI was always curious what the penalty is for carrying a banned knife in the UK. I mean what if you forgot a lock blade in your pocket you were using around the house, and went out in public and for some reason were stopped or searched? You get a fine? Is it seen as a very serious offence? In canada if you were caught with a handgun in public that would be pretty serious, but surely it cant be take as serious for a knife? Has anyone heard of anything bad, or do police use good judgement usually if you aren't up some some criminal intent?We have to be very clear on what we're talking about here. Flick knives and gravity knifes are very specifically BANNED, simply owning one is a criminal offence, no excuses (unless you have owned it since before the law was brought in in 1959).Lock and fixed blades are a totally different thing. There are indeed restrictions to carrying them, but owning them isn't an issue. What happens to you if caught with one without good reason is going to be very circumstantial IMO. In the situation you describe, and having no prior offences, you might just get a slap on the wrist and told not to do it again. However you could just as easily get a fine or custodial sentience if they wanted to throw the book at you.IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER! - I'm not a lawyer and I take absolutely NO responsibility for any legal issues you might find yourself in. "But Gareth on MT.org said..." is not a reasonable excuse for carrying a knife. Ok I understand. Poor choice of word on my part, banned. Here they are called prohibited weapons. Stuff that you can't own at all. Switchblades, ninja stars etc. We dont actually (that I know of) have ANY laws about legal public carry at all. Just stuff you cant own period.