Or just decide to take up backpacking right after.
Makes sense. If you were an armed guard (private citizen) in most states, you’d have to be bondable or insured or fall under the umbrella of a company that had like $1mil liability insurance.
Do your research. One comment I found looking up this kind of insurance for people carrying, is this slightly modified,
"One of the BIGGEST DIFFERENCES between plans is # This is a HUGE amount of money that most people could not afford. — so DO read the Terms & Conditions before signing.
Another thing, plans either Exclude C&E completely (meaning you pay all C&E out-of-pocket as you go along), or they may Include C&E in with attorney fees UP TO your max limit (which means you have less money for attorney fees), or they may Cover C&E apart from attorney fees which is the best of both worlds. Which way you choose could make a HUGE difference in your immediate out-of-pocket expenses."
Insurance is guaranteed to try and weasel out of paying. That's their entire business model. The great thing about this type of insurance is that it's time-sensitive. It won't matter if you sue them to force them to pay, because by the time you win you will have already been convicted. You probably won't be able to sue them anyway because your policy is almost guaranteed to have an arbitration clause.
Don't pay any attention to testimonials from customers of these insurance companies. The reason so many advertisements have testimonials is because testimonials are exempt from truth in advertising laws.
Need to have a plan to pay for legal representation one way or the other if needed. Whether its in a shooting incident or otherwise.
Your insurance company can just deny you...'you violated our TOS'
read the policy guidelines and if it fits your needs get it. you should know what the agreement covers before you sign up for it.
Standard procedure is to deny payouts. You then must hire a jew lawyer, who may not be successful.
I had a situation where I needed my insurance company (not related to self-defense) to make a payout. Without getting into any details, the event in question probably cost them around 120-140k. They paid. No issues. No hassles. It was a completely smooth experience. I would say it all depends on your insurance provider.
I have an auto insurer I use that has never given me any hassles and I've had to use them a couple different times. Again, no issues when making a claim.
breathilizers for every car.
After-market breathalyzers are easy to bypass. I suspect factory breathalyzers would be equally simple to bypass. Remember that turning your key in the ignition is only doing two things:
1) Disabling the steering column lock.
2) Sending power from the battery to the starter motor.
Essentially all breathalyzer-based ignition interlocks do is add an extra check on step 2.
You can bypass an ignition interlock by turning the key far enough in the ignition to unlock the steering column, then touching a jumper wire from the battery to the starter motor fuse inside the engine compartment. It's absolutely trivial if you have a couple feet of wire.
Nope law 2-46?$b will include that the imbobilizer device will be integrated into the ecu via a encrypted communication. Any tampering and the ecu will contact the para-military police with your location and photos of the incident. This new safety device will increase the price of a vehical by $10,000, small price to pay for safety. Due to its cost no gov entity is required to have them.
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