A Lot of fuss over 3 inches! 😉

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  • Опубликовано: 7 июл 2024
  • Utility Knives and Multitools - Are they Legal for Camping?
    A discussion focussed on England and Wales law (broadly the same UK wide) for utility / swiss army style knives and going camping etc.
    Also check out brilliant EDC video I found here:
    • UK Knife Law Update 2023
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Комментарии • 747

  • @jackwaycombe
    @jackwaycombe 22 дня назад +132

    It's 3 or 4 years now since I was challenged by a pair of police officers over my 'deadly weapon.' A folding pocket knife with a blade just over one inch long. Traces on the blade showed clearly what it was used for - sharpening pencils (yes, I still use pencils.)
    But the blade was lockable and that made it a potential deadly weapon! Please leave it at home in future!
    And how did Mr Plod discover my deadly weapon? Spotted it on the keychain on my mobility scooter - 76 years old and with serious mobility issues.
    What would we do without such wonderful people to protect us?

    • @DanRichworth
      @DanRichworth 17 дней назад +6

      I'm sorry to hear that. You're absolutely correct. It's ridiculous.

    • @avallons8815
      @avallons8815 17 дней назад +4

      Sir, you are clearly a threat to the general public.

    • @jackwaycombe
      @jackwaycombe 17 дней назад +6

      @avallons8815
      I'm especially dangerous with dirty words at 10 paces. 😆

    • @Monkey-fv2km
      @Monkey-fv2km 13 дней назад +2

      Assuming the police are there to protect the public rather than enforce the law, which you would hope is the same, but in reality the priority of the law is to make people feel safe rather than be safe. Which is why I use mechanical pencils.

    • @lotuselise4432
      @lotuselise4432 7 дней назад +1

      Maybe they thought you where going to attach four of them to the centres of yours wheels a do a roman chariot with blades spree around the local shopping centre.

  • @billienomates1606
    @billienomates1606 22 дня назад +124

    I expect more law abiding citizens have been injured by their own 3inch or less knives because of the stupid non locking law for these blades. Most crimes that have been reported using knives have been kitchen knives, etc.

    • @davidwhitlock4526
      @davidwhitlock4526 22 дня назад +10

      Yes - I was opening a can of corned beef, (the key tab had snapped), and my non locking knife closed on my finger. I always carry a travel first aid kit with me after this painful event!

    • @Derecq
      @Derecq 22 дня назад +8

      That's the point, a non locking blade makes it very unsuitable for stabbing somebody, it's more likely fold up and injure the stabber.

    • @jackwaycombe
      @jackwaycombe 21 день назад +13

      @@billienomates1606
      I'm 80 and I've carried a pocket knife since my grandad gave me one at the age of 6. Never misbehaved with it and resent people who automatically asuume any form of practical tool constitutes a threat to others.
      Thing is - I would never carry a folding knife whose blade didn't lock. Anything else is plainly dangerous to the user.
      The knife I carry these days - purely to sharpen pencils and open parcels - has a one-inch blade. Not that long since I was given a warning by police officers who had seen it dangling fron the keychain on my mobility scooter !
      Don't we all feel so much safer with such legal guardians watching over us? The kind that took 25 minutes to travel half a mile when my 75yo wife was being assaulted?

    • @johnbarr9857
      @johnbarr9857 21 день назад +3

      would only use a blade that is fixed according to the handle just for safety.

    • @psibug565
      @psibug565 21 день назад +4

      @@DerecqSimple solution is not to stab people. Then you can have the locking or fixed blade knife, my kitchen is full of them. As is my cutlery drawer.

  • @Clembo
    @Clembo 22 дня назад +94

    The legislation is moronic.

    • @professor-viewsalot
      @professor-viewsalot 22 дня назад +17

      So are the MPs.

    • @lavrentievv
      @lavrentievv 22 дня назад

      BAN SHARP PENCILS!!!

    • @glynnepritchard2526
      @glynnepritchard2526 21 день назад +1

      100%, Colour is part of the legislation... not allowed sharp colours.

    • @Bradsurps
      @Bradsurps 19 дней назад +5

      Makes sense that the blokes who write these laws are worried about anything above 3" that can stay upright though

  • @DavidGetling
    @DavidGetling 22 дня назад +107

    Being able to lock a blade makes it a lot safer to use. So once again we have an example of how incredibly stupid the law can be.

    • @PORRRIDGE_GUN
      @PORRRIDGE_GUN 22 дня назад

      A locking blade or spring deployed blade is no less stabby than a non-locking folding pocket knife.

    • @jamieeames8934
      @jamieeames8934 21 день назад +5

      It does however also make it a lot more useful for stabbing people. A folding blade if slightly yawed centre is going to fold back in on itself if you try to stab with it. A folding knife won’t.

    • @PORRRIDGE_GUN
      @PORRRIDGE_GUN 21 день назад

      @@jamieeames8934 How many people have you stabbed?

    • @GwladYrHaf
      @GwladYrHaf 21 день назад +11

      ​@@jamieeames8934you believe criminals follow the law.

    • @jamieeames8934
      @jamieeames8934 21 день назад +4

      @@GwladYrHaf no. That’s why we have to set a standard for what counts as criminal and have a strong punishment for crossing that line. No point having the attitude criminals ignore the law so there’s no point in having laws. Laws literally exist so that they can be broken so that those who do can be punished and so that others question the risk v reward and not do it.

  • @stevefox5733
    @stevefox5733 22 дня назад +70

    I was arrested for a Stanley knife once, it was in the boot of my car with a whole load of of other tools and was being used in a car audio install, It locks which is why I got arrested.
    After 3 hours in a cell, before I even got to interview I had two plain clothed officers come to my cell and say they were my late night savour and said the arresting officer was an idiot and should have used some common sense and that they were releasing me.
    Got to say, I was pretty nervous about being arrested for a knife despite having it for a genuine and honest reason and it being well out of immediate reach, not that I would ever use a weapon!

    • @tomtucker83
      @tomtucker83 22 дня назад +2

      99.9% of drivers will go their entire life without the police searching their car.

    • @davedavids57
      @davedavids57 22 дня назад +17

      @@tomtucker83 I got the car searched in Hackney East London, by Officers from Operation Blunt (they seemed to find the name very cool) because they said me helping move a friends freezer was suspicious (they were just making excuses). They found a pair of scissors in my glove box which they demanded to know why I had them. I told them it was so I could cut the cable ties which were keeping my hub caps from being stolen easily if I needed to change a tire. After about a 10 minute lecture about the dangerous of scissors and what they had seen they insisted on putting the scissors under my spare wheel in the back.
      In the UK you're only going to get your car searched if your in an inner city neighbourhood with an ongoing anti knife crime operation. Also unfortunately they record the ethnicities of who they search so they are always looking for people from ethnic backgrounds such as white because it means the numbers look better. I had a friend of Chinese ethnicity who used to avoid Hackney as he would always get "randomly" stopped on the street and search by police. Basically to improve their figures of stop and search.

    • @tomtucker83
      @tomtucker83 22 дня назад +2

      ​@@davedavids57 I have jobs in East London and the delightful parts of Essex that border it most weeks. Fortunately, only in business hours. I guess I must be lucky, only a few months 'til retirement, so fingers crossed.

    • @darcsentor
      @darcsentor 21 день назад

      Dang , that sucks, glad the released you without any other issues. Not how you want your day to go.

    • @Omar_Little
      @Omar_Little 20 дней назад

      Acab

  • @simonbroddle754
    @simonbroddle754 22 дня назад +22

    The increasing legislation covering the carrying of knives appears has done little if anything to decrease their use as a weapon.
    Truth is anyone carrying a knife with intent won't worry too much about the law.
    Not sure the penny has dropped on this one at legislative levels! 🤔

  • @zuegma666
    @zuegma666 22 дня назад +35

    It always surprises me the amount of police that carry around leatherman tools with locking blades. They have no no good reason to carry them, but a blind eye is turned to this. I know of one case where someone was arrested for carrying a leatherman and when he was being interviewed his solicitor pointed out that they interviewing officers was also carrying a leatherman. After a brief discussion with the custody sergeant, he was realeased without charge and handed back his leatherman

    • @aaftiyoDkcdicurak
      @aaftiyoDkcdicurak 20 дней назад +1

      From one Leatherman fanboy to another your free to go 🤣

    • @lakevna
      @lakevna 20 дней назад +5

      I had a friend who was detained for carrying a UKPK (knife specifically designed to UK legal carry law). He was a security guard who was providing a witness statement about a fight he was uninvolved in.
      It was confiscated as "evidence" but he was never charged (not sure if he was even properly arrested). But we all know an officer got a neat new fidget toy that day.

    • @Yimmytheg
      @Yimmytheg 19 дней назад

      Tbf I remember a police officer being fired for using a knife with a windshield breaker to break someone's windshield during arrest

    • @SuperFunkmachine
      @SuperFunkmachine 18 минут назад

      @@Yimmytheg That one was acting way out of order.
      A resusal to exit car means you call for back up to pin them in place and you wait.
      Not smashing there windscreen and shouting.

  • @matthewtalbot-paine7977
    @matthewtalbot-paine7977 22 дня назад +46

    I'm so glad there's not loads of cops in the countryside. Probably get arrested for having a picnic.

    • @alanrogers8535
      @alanrogers8535 22 дня назад +6

      People were during covid...

    • @awatt
      @awatt 22 дня назад +4

      Two women got fined for drinking a take away coffee in a park during covid as it was , apparently, a picnic

  • @petergarner5991
    @petergarner5991 22 дня назад +31

    When I was growing up as a kid we all had knives. It was one of those things. I live abroad and when I worked we used to carry mora knives in the bank at dinner times. I always had 3 knives. Today as a pensioner I still carry a knife as it's always helpful to have.

    • @monteceitomoocher
      @monteceitomoocher 22 дня назад +6

      Pensioner here, man and boy, always had a pocket knife handy, sometimes two as i also carry the knife that belonged to my wife's mother's brother lost in action 1944 and known to have done a couple of tours of duty, I'm honoured to have been considered worthy to own it.

    • @petergarner5991
      @petergarner5991 22 дня назад +2

      @monteceitomoocher I still carry a knife, Have one in the car to. Just handy bit of kit.

    • @Yimmytheg
      @Yimmytheg 19 дней назад

      When you were a kid people weren't getting stabbed left right and center by little shits and scared little men.

  • @mickmcish
    @mickmcish 22 дня назад +16

    A locking knife is so much handier and safer to use than a non-locking knife. The fact that a law has been made making them illegal is a damning indictment of the state of law-making in the UK. Bad people create crimes not objects

    • @bananowyjestemsobie
      @bananowyjestemsobie 5 дней назад

      There is no law in the UK that "makes locking knives illegal". You have completely misunderstood the legislation. If rewatching the video doesn't clear it up, maybe go and read the actual thing on the gov website - it's only a 2 minute read at most and uses very simple language.
      TL;DR: locking knives are perfectly legal in the UK.

    • @mickmcish
      @mickmcish 5 дней назад

      @@bananowyjestemsobie I should've been more specific. The law about carrying a locking knife. A law that effectively makes them illegal as you can only have them in your private property.
      The point I was making is that constant need for making legislation does not stop criminals it just hinders normal people

    • @bananowyjestemsobie
      @bananowyjestemsobie 4 дня назад

      @@mickmcish Carrying locking knives isn't illegal either and it's not true you can only have or use them on your property. I'm not sure where the hindrance is for honest people as the legislation has never stopped me from having and using any knife I needed in any place or time that I needed it at, including larger fixed blades (and yes, I do follow the law, I'm not talking about ignoring it and getting lucky haha). The "criminals ignore the law" argument doesn't hold up. Are you saying we shouldn't have any laws at all then? The whole point of any law's existence is that crims break it and then society has a basis to penalise and/or isolate them for it. These knife laws allow certain people to be detained BEFORE they stab someone. Withouth them we could only punish them post factum. Inb4 you say "stabbings still happen", of course they do, but I guarantee there would be more without a means to stop and detain potential perps on their way to a potential crime scene.

  • @1954Antony
    @1954Antony 21 день назад +9

    I've got a locking knife, roughly 1" blade with Jack Daniels written on it. It came with a shot glass and a 5cl bottle. A Christmas novelty present from a time when the law wasn't quite so ridiculous. Perhaps the police should concentrate on the machete carriers, or would that be waycist?

  • @naznomad635
    @naznomad635 22 дня назад +32

    I'm dreading the day that they legislate against being in public with a sharp wit.

    • @adama1294
      @adama1294 19 дней назад

      Too late. They brand that speech and "hate speech"

    • @sorrysirmygunisoneba
      @sorrysirmygunisoneba 17 дней назад +2

      They wouldn’t know what one is.

    • @naznomad635
      @naznomad635 17 дней назад +1

      I'm sure they can bend the rules to make it what they think it is....

    • @moorshound3243
      @moorshound3243 17 дней назад +1

      They already have

  • @alexstewart9747
    @alexstewart9747 22 дня назад +71

    Imagine being caught with a sharpened pencil.

    • @user-xq2zn8bu9q
      @user-xq2zn8bu9q 22 дня назад +20

      Ban pencils, its the only way forward.

    • @BlackBeltBarrister
      @BlackBeltBarrister  22 дня назад +18

      😂

    • @laceandwhisky
      @laceandwhisky 22 дня назад +15

      Funny you say that, I was stopped before boarding an aircraft with hand luggage, they found and removed a small nail scissors. I asked wtf to their reply it could be used as a weapon, so I asked why they hadn't removed my pens. I told them I could cause as much if not more damage with a pen . They looked stunned 😊

    • @ashscott6068
      @ashscott6068 22 дня назад

      @@laceandwhisky That is a TERRIBLE argument. You go saying, But I could kill you more easily with a pen/pencil/my bare hands, you're giving them an excuse to escalate. They know it's true. They've heard the argument many times. They have had plenty of time to work on their response. A lot of things magically BECOME weapons, as soon as you acknowledge that they could theoretically be used that way. You were asking to be taken into the back room and get a guy's finger up your ass, or be barred from the flight altogether.
      And your right to not get a gloved finger up your ass, is mysteriously linked to their right to not let you on their plane. If you exercise yours, they will exercise theirs. And a lot of them will do it, too. What you said to them gives them all the grounds they need, to cover their own butts.
      An experienced cop would just say "Are you threatening me?", and know exactly how to escalate from there, getting you more and more worked up, until you talked yourself into handcuffs. And some of these people are looking for any excuse to make their day more interesting.

    • @kenh3344
      @kenh3344 22 дня назад +1

      So would a very sharp 3 inch pencil be ok. ?? 😮

  • @mrsu7353
    @mrsu7353 22 дня назад +89

    How do you know when you'll need a knife until you actually need one? Stupid law. Does nothing to prevent knife crime (criminals tend not to follow rules), but can turn an innocent person into a criminal for carrying around a useful tool. I loathe the state.

    • @user-xq2zn8bu9q
      @user-xq2zn8bu9q 22 дня назад +7

      And me.

    • @GreatSageSunWukong
      @GreatSageSunWukong 22 дня назад +9

      I'm more annoyed at the things they ban collectors from having because some idiot goes ape shit in the street, knee jerk reactions banning japanese swords and things while someone behind the wheel of a car could kill more people then someone with a sword ever could but they just ignore that.

    • @professor-viewsalot
      @professor-viewsalot 22 дня назад

      Thats exactly why the law exists.
      For the police (gov) to extort more money from innocent people trying to work to pay for all the illegul migrunts the terrorist gov traitors import & pamper.

    • @brolohalflemming7042
      @brolohalflemming7042 21 день назад +5

      This is the bit that still bothers me, relying on having a good reason. My EDC is a Swiss Army Executive model and my good reason is I may fancy an orange. It's got a great orange skin slicer and pith remover. Or I may break a nail and want to use the scissors and file, or tweezers to remove a splinter, or just use the blade to deal with the shrink-wrap or vacuform packaging that's on too much stuff. I probably don't *have* to carry it every day, but I often use it. I used to carry a Leatherman for much the same reasons, but stopped carrying that because it's got locking blade and the saw is 3 1/8th of an inch and I don't want the hassle if I'm stopped.
      I really don't like the way it turns tools into offensive weapons and reverses the burden of proof. If I've just stabbed someone with the orange peeler, then sure, it raises the issue but otherwise it's just a tool.

    • @conorstewart2214
      @conorstewart2214 9 часов назад +1

      @@brolohalflemming7042 It is ridiculous. They are just so useful to have on you. Unfortunately a lot of people think it is weird carrying a knife now even though it was common before. I grew up in the country so it may just be different there where even the local taxi driver was caught in an inspection driving kids to school with a chainsaw in the back, just for the purpose of clearing fallen trees or they could quite literally get stuck in the middle of nowhere, in the snow, with no phone signal. The kids and taxi driver were safer because he was prepared and had the chainsaw there which he had to use a good few times but the inspectors weren't happy.
      As you say so much comes in plastic packaging now, if you want to go into a shop and buy something you forgot or suddenly need then there is a good chance you would be left unable to open it.

  • @kendavidson6755
    @kendavidson6755 20 дней назад +6

    I am 88 years of age and for as long as I can remember have carried a pocket knife, my current one is street legal and in a leather case I still sail and use my knife for rope work etc. I can’t I again using my knife fir self defence as I would have to take it out of my pocket and remove it from its pouch by which time I assume I would be flat on the floor! I would feel strange without a pocket knife and hope it is never legislated against
    Thank you fir an informative summary
    Ken

  • @TheRealName7
    @TheRealName7 22 дня назад +10

    A non locking knife can be very dangerous if you're not used to it and also it easier for an accident to occur.

  • @dogglebird4430
    @dogglebird4430 22 дня назад +7

    The Section 139 offence is a complete and utter nonsense. It is poor legislation and should be repealed. The Section 1 Prevention of Crime Act offence. My adult son came to my house a couple of years ago and had to dash out to grab something from his car parked on the road. He hadn't brought his coat, so he borrowed his mum's gardening jacket as it was the nearest to hand. He didn't check the pockets and was unaware she had a small kitchen knife in one pocket as she had been cutting rhubarb. Had that been found on him, he would have had an excellent excuse - no "good reason" and he could have ended up in prison. By all means beef up the offensive weapon offence, but section 139 CJA should be repealed in my opinion.

  • @lulabellegnostic8402
    @lulabellegnostic8402 22 дня назад +36

    I live in a rural area. When i walk my dogs i always carry vetwrap gauze and a swiss army knife. One of my dogs got a very nasty leg wound and i had nothing but poo bags tissues and a phone, all utterly useless miles from home.

    • @greamespens1460
      @greamespens1460 22 дня назад +3

      Hope they are on the mend.

    • @fightforaglobalfirstamendm5617
      @fightforaglobalfirstamendm5617 22 дня назад

      EDC!

    • @ragnarthered2179
      @ragnarthered2179 22 дня назад

      I only took out 3 items which are purposely designed for use outside the home, Utterly useless. Haha what a wally

    • @conorstewart2214
      @conorstewart2214 9 часов назад

      In a similar story I also live in a rural area and our local taxi driver got caught with a chainsaw in the back of his taxi whilst driving kids to school. The routes he drives in the winter are up an hour or two into the middle of nowhere in the snow with no phone signal, if he gets stuck behind fallen trees then he would be pretty stuck with no way to phone for help. Him and the kids are actually safer because he is prepared for the conditions up there but some people that likely had never been up there weren't happy about it because it is dangerous.

  • @robg521
    @robg521 22 дня назад +8

    The laws around knifes have absolutely nothing to do with making the streets safer, what they are all about is making it easy for the police to get a conviction and making the politicians look good and producing statistic that they are actually doing something about the problem.
    I can understand the argument that when something is deliberately designed to do harm [military bayonets, stabbing blades etc] then they do not belong on the streets without good reason,
    But Literally anything can be a weapon if used with intent to do harm,
    and Just because something ‘COULD’ be used as a weapon is no reason for making it illegal.
    The law is currently based on ‘INTENT’ and so this should remain, and it should be the deciding factor on each and every individual bespoke case or incident.
    The repeated introduction of more and more oppressive laws leads to police overreach and needs to be restrained.
    This is why you had the case a few years back where an OAP guy was in an argument with a traffic cop and was charged for having a Swiss Army knife in the car’s glove box.
    [the Cop used the knife law as retaliation for the old boys disrespect]
    And also the case where another OAP had his walking stick confiscated, there was an ongoing incident in his street and they wouldn’t let him walk past to go home with the stick because they considered it a potential weapon.
    When he went to the station the following day to collect it they refused to hand it over because it had been officially classed as an offensive weapon so cannot be returned according to their procedures and guidelines.
    [so it was then included in the national statistic recorded for offensive weapons that have been confiscated]

    • @mrsteve170
      @mrsteve170 8 дней назад

      Poland for example has zero knife carry laws and less knife crime than the UK. The problem is not the object but the people. The UK is a multicultural diverse abomination. It's negatives far outweigh the positives.

  • @royblackburn1163
    @royblackburn1163 22 дня назад +9

    My swiss army knife is my survival knife, tin opener, bottle opener and corkscrew .

  • @iskrajackal9049
    @iskrajackal9049 22 дня назад +22

    Fuss over 3 inches? Not entirely unheard of.

    • @jackwaycombe
      @jackwaycombe 22 дня назад +2

      My wife used to think those 3 inches were quite important. Not an issue these days sadly...

    • @Johnsmith-ko9yj
      @Johnsmith-ko9yj 22 дня назад +3

      😂

    • @ApiaryManager
      @ApiaryManager 22 дня назад +3

      Stormy Daniels said the same about Donald Trump.

    • @GwladYrHaf
      @GwladYrHaf 21 день назад

      3 inches must be considered large in England

    • @iskrajackal9049
      @iskrajackal9049 21 день назад +3

      @@GwladYrHaf Yes, especially amongst politicians

  • @SenselessUsername
    @SenselessUsername 22 дня назад +11

    You haven't addressed a "locking or not?" question raised by several on previous topic: What if the locking mechanism is optional? Case in point: "Opinel" style folding knives with a ring next to the hinge (eg. Opinel 08), if you turn it some 90degrees it's locked. (Truly a safety feature!) So it is immediately foldable by default --- but also lockable.

    • @fuzzacker.
      @fuzzacker. 17 дней назад +2

      I would guess that in the eyes of the law the knife as the option to be locked, thus it is a lockable knife and so it is illegal.

    • @bananowyjestemsobie
      @bananowyjestemsobie 5 дней назад

      First of all, the Opinel 08 has a 3.3" blade so it doesn't matter. If it had a below 3" blade, I'm pretty sure it would be easy to get away with because you really have to know that the ring turns, 99% of cops wouldn't figure it out on the spot. If you come across the 1% that are familiar with it and at that very unlikely moment you behave dumb enough to get stopped and searched, then unlucky I guess ;)

    • @alec4025
      @alec4025 4 часа назад

      ​@@bananowyjestemsobie those knives are not as rare as you think lol. I imagine most police would be familiar with them

    • @bananowyjestemsobie
      @bananowyjestemsobie 3 часа назад

      @@alec4025 That's fair. I don't really think they're that rare, they're on sale in all outdoor stores. Was more betting on many cops not being the sharpest (pun not intended lol).

  • @WolfmanWoody
    @WolfmanWoody 22 дня назад +118

    This idea of folding or locked just shows how stupid the legislation and therefore law is. A folding knife of 3 inches can just as easily kill someone if you stabbed them. What did the Government think when making this distinction? The folding knife would fold automatically when pressed against someone's body and not cause the victim an injury? STUPID beyond belief. Locking knives are safe to use for many applications.

    • @ziggarillo
      @ziggarillo 22 дня назад +14

      If the locking blade makes no difference, why would you need one😂

    • @dunderhay9169
      @dunderhay9169 22 дня назад +15

      A non-locking folding knife is not very useful for stabbing into things like boxes etc, there is a very good chance the blade will fold cause injury to the user. This makes them pretty useless as a weapon, hence the exemption.

    • @warlockuk6939
      @warlockuk6939 22 дня назад +19

      ​@@ziggarilloLocking knives are safer to use, the blade is locked and therefore you are far less likely to have the blade fold in on your fingers and cut yourself causing severe injury in the process. Surely you can understand that.

    • @Eddygeek18
      @Eddygeek18 22 дня назад +6

      You are correct that they don't just automatically fold but the chances of it collapsing aren't 0. I believe the idea of that legislation is if you was to stab anything using force with an immediately folding knife the chances of it just closing on you is high enough to warrant caution ensuring you use the folding knife as a tool for cutting rather than stabbing or thrusting.
      I have attempted to drill holes in plastic and wood with a folding pocket knife and they just collapse but the chances i would need to do that kind of job while outside walking around shops for example is basically 0. As mentioned in the video you can still use locking knives but you need a good reason to be carrying it.
      A folding knife which collapses has a lot of cutting uses such as string, shoe laces, paper, etc and the point can be used with reletive safety if used carefully without force, but it makes them more dangerous to the user for self defence and less dangerous to the other person which I think is the idea. I'd bet on my fists over a folding pocket knife for self defence and i don't ever feel a need to carry a locking knife for anything a folding one can accomplish, which says in my opinion that the ligislation works perfectly.

    • @eddiecobbett
      @eddiecobbett 22 дня назад +8

      I believe the distinction with folding and locking knives originates from case law, not actual parliament law. It's a bit complicated and almost impossible to find out what the law really says.

  • @therealdojj
    @therealdojj 22 дня назад +13

    I keep worrying about carrying tools to and from my parents house up the road as I've had the cops pull me up for changing my shelf in my garden as they thought i was stealing them
    Twice!
    So you never know if you are just going to come across a bad tempered copper one day

    • @bob_mosavo
      @bob_mosavo 22 дня назад +1

      Next time, ask the coppers to help you hold the shelves. "Hey mate! Can you come over here and give us a hand? I'm changing these shelves, and they are bloody heavy." 😆😆🤣🤣😂😂

  • @MBaihaki
    @MBaihaki 21 день назад +4

    Whilst growing up, my mates and I always carried penknives many of the old WW2 Army black handled types, we also carried sheath knives on our belts on our scout uniforms. We never even thought of using them for offensive purposes. At school we would wander to the litter bin at the front of the class pull out a knife and sharpen our pencils. Nobody ever paid any attention except when o e lad pulled out a commando knife and had it confiscated.
    As an expatriate, I always used to carry a Swiss Army knife, I had two but only ever carried one at a time. These were bought at airport duty free shops and airport security were never bothered by them.

  • @sputumtube
    @sputumtube 22 дня назад +12

    I wonder if todays Boy Scouts carry a small sheath knife on their belts like we used to in the 1960's? It was part of the uniform back then and we were taught how to use them and (just as importantly) what to use them for.

    • @drstrangelove4998
      @drstrangelove4998 21 день назад +1

      I had a sheath as a boy, I was a boy Scout, it was normal.

    • @lakevna
      @lakevna 20 дней назад +2

      I've recently been reading the original publications of the right honourable first baron Baden-Powell. He's very clear throughout that the purpose of the scouts is to prepare men for military service, whether that be formal soldiery or as a civilian militia.
      The British scouting association has made steps to keep up with the times, but I fear they have lost something along the way. Their "digital literacy" challenge badges cover rotating passwords and telling an adult if you see something rude online.
      The lieutenant-general would undoubtedly have focused on offensive-security, every scout issued a flipper zero.

    • @conorstewart2214
      @conorstewart2214 9 часов назад +1

      When I was in the Scouts a good few years ago now we weren't allowed anything accept folding pocket knives. We were allowed to use fixed blade knives and axes at camps but only when supervised and they were provided by the leaders. After being taught how to handle and use knives safely we were allowed to carry folding pocket knives though, basically just ones that are compliant with UK law anyway.

    • @conorstewart2214
      @conorstewart2214 9 часов назад

      @@lakevna Most of what would be considered offensive security is illegal. As far as I know Scouts only do legal things.

  • @skisavoie
    @skisavoie 22 дня назад +7

    I worked on a farm in the early 1980’s and walked around with a 6 inch sheath knife on my belt, absolutely no problem back then! It was a rural community not in the middle of a city though. Thanks for the video. Best wishes, Colin.

    • @TestGearJunkie.
      @TestGearJunkie. 22 дня назад +5

      A friend of mine was in the Scouts aged 15 in around 1970 or so and wore a sheath knife on his belt all the time. Never got stopped or questioned over it. The world has gone to shit and I don't want to be in it any more. Any passing aliens want to give me a lift to a more sensible planet..?

    • @leopheard
      @leopheard 10 дней назад

      Well a farm isn't a public place so you can carry a broadsword, crossbow etc. on private land

    • @skisavoie
      @skisavoie 10 дней назад

      @@leopheard Also had it on in town and into the pub for lunch etc.

  • @MarkFidell
    @MarkFidell 22 дня назад +14

    A couple of useful terms when describing the knife:
    Choil, is the little cut away at the bottom of the blade that allows you to sharpen the whole cutting edge, many knifes do that have this, but your utility knife shown in the video does.
    Ricasso, this is the bit between the choil and the handle that is unsharpened.
    The length of the blade is from the tip, to the start of the handle and that length includes both the choil and the ricasso.

    • @leopheard
      @leopheard 10 дней назад

      True, but this guy must have been a CPS barrister because he deliberately told us in the video that it was the blade and not the "cutting edge of the blade" as the legislation says

  • @differentlevel-tf2in
    @differentlevel-tf2in 22 дня назад +40

    There was a recent case in the UK in 2020 where a Sikh man was attacked by a group of three men who were armed. He was carrying a kirpan, which is exempt under UK law under religious grounds. The guy killed his three attackers and was not charged.

    • @user-xq2zn8bu9q
      @user-xq2zn8bu9q 22 дня назад +9

      I'm becoming a Sikh. 😮

    • @bob_mosavo
      @bob_mosavo 22 дня назад

      Wow‼ Just wow.....😵

    • @UnCoolDad
      @UnCoolDad 22 дня назад +3

      Kirpans which ate carried in the U.K. have an exemption, but are meant to be blunt.

    • @stevenhodgson834
      @stevenhodgson834 22 дня назад +31

      Absolutely crazy that you can get around laws just by saying that you believe in a certain flavour of fairy stories.

    • @billienomates1606
      @billienomates1606 22 дня назад +8

      So if you want to carry a big knife change your religion, sorted.

  • @johnbones261
    @johnbones261 13 дней назад +3

    In ireland, they started out banning the carrying of blades over two inches. Now, you'll be arrested if you have a nail file on you

    • @leopheard
      @leopheard 10 дней назад

      I don't think that's true. The Irish law is near identical to the UK one, except Ireland doesn't have the exemption to allow you to carry a folding, non lockable knife with a cutting edge of 3" or less in public

  • @PaulOLearyRebelMartialArts
    @PaulOLearyRebelMartialArts 21 день назад +3

    You said the exact fact that everyone forgets about knife crime, it's mostly committed with common kitchen blades.

  • @TestGearJunkie.
    @TestGearJunkie. 22 дня назад +4

    I had a Swiss Army knife confiscated at Heathrow's Terminal 5 a couple of months ago as I'd forgotten it was in my handbag. The main blade on it is two and three-quarter inches (60mm) but they held it up against a scale and said it was too long. I don't recall by exactly how much, but it couldn't have been more than an eighth of an inch or so. Did they really think that a 69-yr old woman in a wheelchair was going to go on the rampage on the plane..? It was only an internal flight to Aberdeen by the way, not an international flight, don't know if that makes a difference. Talk about annoying, it cost £28.47 to get it posted back to me 🤬

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 17 дней назад

      If that were the US they would just trash it.

  • @hypo345
    @hypo345 22 дня назад +3

    I couldn’t even get a dough cutter from Amazon without an over 18 with proof to sign for it.
    At the end of my road this evening people trying to kill each other with 18”Machetes so at my age I don’t care what the law is I will carry what I want.

  • @alanw-g5050
    @alanw-g5050 17 дней назад +2

    I have carried one of the original Leatherman's since the 90s. As a teacher it came in very useful from time to time. When a child got a pound coin jammed in the slot of the chocolate machine, when a kid lost to key to his bike chain the pliers came in very handy. The screwdivers and blade opened and secured many things, as a Drama teacher for sets and costume running repairs the Leatherman was a boon. So let's not limit the work reasons to manual occupations.

    • @requiscatinpace7392
      @requiscatinpace7392 2 дня назад

      A person employed in a manual occupation would know how to spell screwdriver 😜.

  • @andljoy
    @andljoy 22 дня назад +5

    I do not understand the reasoning behind the locking distinction. Why can the law not simply use the intent to cause harm clause? Yes if i am carrying a blade and hanging around the streets at night then that is one thing, but people have been charged just for having a tool in there pocket and people have been charged for having a knife on them when going fishing or camping (think that was Scotland). Its crazy.

    • @TheRealName7
      @TheRealName7 22 дня назад +4

      Why cant they just scrap the stupid knife law all together, it's garbage. Let ordinary people carry the knives they want. Causing harm without reason itself should be what's punishable.

    • @TestGearJunkie.
      @TestGearJunkie. 22 дня назад

      @@TheRealName7 Yeah but if you carry a 12" kitchen knife around with you...

    • @keeran697
      @keeran697 18 дней назад

      ​@@TheRealName7because newspaper and TV news companies make money from generating moral panics based on reprinting police press releases about how "knife crime" has gone up a million billion percent in the last week (don't look at the long term trends pls). And politicians can cosy up with the media and the Police Federation by announcing and enacting legislation based on moral panics and saying they're "tough on crime" and therefore make themselves seem important and hopefully re-electable.
      The "ordinary people" being affected by these laws is a side effect of the feedback loops created by the above wherein the economic and social causes of people occasionally stabbing eachother (which has happened ever since someone knapped some flint, or snapped a bit of wood). Notice that police and government never, ever ask for fewer new powers, fewer new criminal offences. Nor do they follow the advice of the communities, academics etc who spend decades showing the ways that this stuff can be reduced in the first place. It's better for Kier to be able to look tough and demand the highest rate of imprisonment per capita in Europe go higher still!

    • @keeran697
      @keeran697 18 дней назад

      (also like most laws except ones affecting those who have expensive lawyers on retainer, the writing of the legislation is not informed by input from those outside of police, the CPS and politicians)

  • @skimmingstoness
    @skimmingstoness 21 день назад +10

    I remember a few years ago my mate was going on a biking holiday, he had a multitool on a keyring which had a bottle opener, mini screwdriver nail file and 1 inch blade. He carried it everywhere and used it to get stones out of tyres etc. He got detained at the airport, arrested and taken away and held for 3-4 hours, strip searched and questioned and then released at a police station several miles from the airport at 3am.

    • @TobyDenmark
      @TobyDenmark 19 дней назад

      Any knife is always illegal to have in Airports, regardless of size or locking ability.
      It's stated that certain places, such as Clubs or Airports, are subject to further restrictions.

    • @jerry2357
      @jerry2357 16 дней назад +1

      ⁠​⁠@@TobyDenmark
      You can put a knife in your checked baggage, so it's not true that "any knife is always illegal to have in airports".
      But this is fairly recent: I remember when the airside shops at Swiss airports sold Swiss army knives. It used to be that you could have a knife with a blade of less than three inches in your carry-on baggage.
      These days, you can't take a knife or other sharp item to airside through security, but you can take sharp items in your checked baggage.

    • @TobyDenmark
      @TobyDenmark 16 дней назад

      Yes, this would be secured in your checked bags at all times and then handed to staff almost immediately. What you're referring to is not a legal right but a potential exemption they themselves may allow as their own policy.
      By law airports have stricter controls alongside places such as clubs, as prior stated. @@jerry2357

    • @leopheard
      @leopheard 10 дней назад

      ​@@TobyDenmarkno it's not, lookup the Conditions of Carriage, the airlines T&Cs follow them closely and they're not as strict as you pretend, but the airports have the same info on the walls but they make out they're stricter, when they're not.

  • @sirshauniv511
    @sirshauniv511 22 дня назад +12

    That's what she said!

  • @netmarketingdirect6910
    @netmarketingdirect6910 18 дней назад +1

    I went to Spain to work as a musician. The hotel I stayed at was going through improvements so no restaurant, just a bar. So I bought a cheap Swiss army lookalike that had a blade, a spoon and a fork. It came apart so that you could have a fork in one hand while having a knife in the other.
    I didn’t see the need to measure the knife but I had it in my hand luggage on return, it was spotted by Spanish customs who claimed that the blade was too long after measuring against the width of three of his fingers.
    I explained the reason why I bought it but that didn’t satisfy him and it looked like he might confiscate it, but, when I told him that since it a only a cheap knife, to alleviate the situation I told him to keep it. At that he relented and returned it to my luggage. I don’t remember it lasting for longer than a month once I was back in the country.

  • @adrianthomas4660
    @adrianthomas4660 22 дня назад +3

    I carry my sharpened wit always.
    It’s used as a form of self defence !

  • @thebrr3594
    @thebrr3594 13 дней назад +1

    I built a 5ft claymore for a college project and I walked through my home town with it on my shoulder without a box.
    The interactions with the folks in the bus station were funny when I was buying my ticket to travel home.

  • @gonzo_the_great1675
    @gonzo_the_great1675 21 день назад +6

    I know someone who was stopped by an event security bag search, with a ornament/trinket knife on his keyring. Less than an inch long, no cutting edge to speak of, but it did have a barely functional lock which he wasn't aware of. It went to court and he was found guilty, even though everybody involved thought it was a waste of time. It went on to have a impact on his life.

    • @keeran697
      @keeran697 18 дней назад

      Check out Single Justice Procedures for lots of fun examples of the direction things are going in.

  • @inregionecaecorum
    @inregionecaecorum 22 дня назад +4

    Technically a folding pruning saw is illegal without a reason, however I do not think many people carry those around for assault. Mostly it is common sense. As for camping I take an axe and a fixed knife because I need to cut vegetables and wood for my stove.

    • @GreatSageSunWukong
      @GreatSageSunWukong 22 дня назад

      my brother used to carry one around for defense it was very intimidating looking he only opened it once when some chav threatened to set his pitball type dog on him. he changed his mind after seeing the saw.

  • @Obvsaninternetexpert
    @Obvsaninternetexpert 22 дня назад +3

    love to know your take on fixed knives, i carry them for work and they are often in my kit bag in my boot

  • @Johnsmith-ko9yj
    @Johnsmith-ko9yj 22 дня назад +2

    I had an argument with an officer over my pen knife, so glad you've explained it.

  • @lenprice2014
    @lenprice2014 22 дня назад +9

    What about a 4 inch fixed blade carried in the middle of the woods, surrounded by evidence that I had been using it for Bushcraft? (Creating feather sticks, tinder, kindling, etc, from bigger logs? - this would basically render bushcraft illegal - even if on private land, as one would need to convey the knife to that site.

    • @BlackBeltBarrister
      @BlackBeltBarrister  22 дня назад +5

      I can’t foresee problems with that!

    • @iangregory3719
      @iangregory3719 21 день назад

      ​@@BlackBeltBarrister Oh I can. The problem with police is that they're like little children....when they don't get their way they throw a tantrum. They WILL "find" a reason , they won't stop until they do.
      The worst, saddest part of this is the the average ordinary person simply cannot afford people like you to defend/argue their case - I was once told by a solicitor that their rate was 3 hundred pounds per HOUR, at a time when my WEEKLY take home pay was less the £200 - The police know this, and its used to intimidate and threaten, and to get their own way.

    • @lakevna
      @lakevna 20 дней назад +1

      From advice given to scout leaders for transporting - they recommend packing it first in a bag or box so that everything else is on top, giving yourself the additional excuse that it wasn't "readily accessible".
      They recommend a steel lockbox in a car boot, though this may only make sense if you have a collection of "dangerous weapons" to secure.

    • @lenprice2014
      @lenprice2014 18 дней назад

      @@lakevna thanks for your reply - sounds like good advice. I just wish we had clear guidelines for ‘dangerous weapons’ - I sometimes carry a machete… because I am clearing bush on a farm! A knife is a tool which can inflict harm - but so is a cricket bat. The law must allow for that.

    • @lenprice2014
      @lenprice2014 18 дней назад

      @@BlackBeltBarrister thanks for your reply. I just wish we had clear guidelines for ‘dangerous weapons’ - I sometimes carry a machete… because I am clearing bush on a farm! A knife is a tool which can inflict harm - but so is a cricket bat. The law must allow for that.

  • @GreatSageSunWukong
    @GreatSageSunWukong 22 дня назад +1

    I have a victorinox rambler been carrying it 30 years and never felt the need to carry anything bigger, its perfect, it has a knife, scissors, nail file and bottle opener on it.

  • @UK-Blue
    @UK-Blue 22 дня назад +2

    "You're what's called wrong" 😂😂

  • @themightychippy3756
    @themightychippy3756 20 дней назад

    I have a folding knife whos tang extends, on a hinge, into the handle, so that when you hold it with the handle it cant be closed, however it doesnt have a lock and so freely closes when not gripped in open position by the handle.
    A. Does that count as a locking knife
    B. Will they measure the blade from the handle to tip or from the extended tang that you hold it open with?

  • @davocc2405
    @davocc2405 22 дня назад +3

    @BBB - there was a discussion on a related forum about the UK interpretation of this around a tang that helps you open the blade more easily, the "flipper tab" was brought up and the creator of the forum said that it had been commented on by someone in Government related to the implementation of the regulations (no idea who or what they were but the implication was that they had some technical authority on the subject) - the flipper tab is a natural part of the blade and assistive in helping someone open the blade particularly important for someone who has impaired movement (or like me with near no fingernails, youtube makes me nervous). They said that banning the tab would be tantamount to infringing on a part of the knife that is intended to assist the disabled or impaired; I'm being VERY rough in my recollection of their point here but in a general sense that was the claim they said they'd had "verified".
    That tab is genuinely important for opening one-handed, it doesn't increase the length and affords no locking mechanism. You've displayed a Spyderco blade which had a finger intend which would permit your finger to stop the blade closing if held in that way, have these types of elements ever been tested by the courts?
    My personal concern is for EDC (everyday carry) - my intention is to carry with me several items including a pair of small multitools (non-locking) and other equipment such as paracord, torch, USB drives, screwdrivers, etc. on a daily basis (I'm an IT guy). Have you any perspective on these aspects at all?

    • @richardjames4632
      @richardjames4632 21 день назад +1

      If it's for your job AND you are actually during your working day, then it's legal. That's what BBB means when he says you make your case "robustly". He has a level of legal knowledge and speed of legal thought which makes this much easier for him, but that's open to all people to do the same. NEVER accept a caution except after formal legal (qualified) advice. When I go down to my smallholding, I carry a bag-load of sharp objects for use (and often a chainsaw!) and no scuffer can stop me from doing so, because I am in my working day and I have a GOOD EXCUSE, which is not the same as "what a scuffer thinks is a reasonable excuse".
      All this crap came about because some yob was caught in a disco with a lock-knife, and was prosecuted; the judge held that the lock was illegal. That's right, it was just his damned opinion in the moment. Everyone lost the right to carry a Leatherman on their belt "just in case of need" because of one yob and one compliant judge.

    • @davocc2405
      @davocc2405 21 день назад

      @@richardjames4632 was that the genesis case of it? The lock was breathtakingly idiotic, I had a slip joint close on me and cut my finger when unboxing a server many years ago. My question to BBB about the tab is more related to the daily carry beneath justification requirements.

  • @Elfin4
    @Elfin4 22 дня назад

    I have a Leatherman that I keep in my work bag simply as a multi-tool and it has a small knife on it that also requires the press of a bar to close it. Never seen that as illegal but from this it must be because it can't close without pressing the bar. I also have knives for outdoor camping and bushcraft use that have fixed blades. What is the maximum blade you can use legally if it has a fixed blade and is only used for outside bushcraft/camping. Do they need to be kept concealed or can you have these on your hip when in the forest etc.

  • @jennyearl5194
    @jennyearl5194 22 дня назад +2

    Yet in the 1970s I carried a machete externally tucked into the rucksack frame around Exeter…. Now that was a knife at 14 inches and had seen service in ww2. No problem then but I had been rough camping for two weeks. Never any idea of doing wrong.

  • @ApiaryManager
    @ApiaryManager 22 дня назад

    Very interesting.
    I have a Leatherman knife / pocket tool set which I've been afraid to use after watching your videos previously.
    The knife blade is only 2 5/8" from the hilt to the point (just under 7cm). However, the blade does lock in place when opened and only closes if you push on the locking mechanism. Why are these knives allowed to be sold if you can't really use them as they're intended?

  • @user-wd1cz8sl6z
    @user-wd1cz8sl6z 21 день назад

    What about knifeless? I have a knifeless rebar but its locking so the saw locks and the awl would these be classed as a locking blade? I have taken out the knife out Of the leatherman bond this has no locking mechanism but you would have to open the pliers to close the saw say so it is not instantly foldable as needed to be classed legal to carry both are sold leagal carry both looks like they are not if i have followed you correct? Thank you

  • @hamshackleton
    @hamshackleton 22 дня назад +4

    That thumbnail question is as daft as asking if it is legal for a scuba-diver to carry a knife, when he/she is going diving! It qualifies as an essential tool.

    • @balcomoz
      @balcomoz 22 дня назад

      Only if you walk with fins and mask on

  • @Fourby
    @Fourby 22 дня назад +1

    There are many many good reasons to carry a pocket pen knife. Locking or non locking, it doesn’t matter, a leatherman or swiss army is an expensive bit of kit. Carrying a cheap kitchen knife pinched from the kithen draw down the back of your jogger pants is a very different game

  • @dazt5831
    @dazt5831 22 дня назад +2

    i always carry when river fishing and always will do regardless of any legislation as i need a good size tool for killing and gutting any legal fish i catch and for using said tool to clear out any dead or fallen debris such as branches from my swim and occasionally theres other dangerous debris such as rope that i feel the need to remove from the water (could be dangerous to kids that swim in there during summer or to myself when wading) a non locking knife is also not safe for using in the way i use it when fishing (would likely eventually cut off a finger) and it never leaves my bag unless its going to be used for obvious reasons

  • @thecrocandsweepshow611
    @thecrocandsweepshow611 22 дня назад

    So if I carry a 2 3/4 inch folding knife that Locks for Work (cutting packaging etc) and it locks because of Health and Safety so I cannot cut my hand?

  • @sandcat731
    @sandcat731 22 дня назад +1

    Simply can carry a non locking knife with blade 3" or less tip to handle eg medium swiss army knife in all circumstances (not large)

  • @mallyredfearn6834
    @mallyredfearn6834 6 дней назад

    I use a folding, locking boxcutter in my work and often forget to remove it from my pocket, however, I always remove the blade and keep it in the handle (unless I forget lol) is this acceptable if stopped?

  • @archivist17
    @archivist17 22 дня назад +1

    I've learned so things today. I thought the relevant measurement was of the edged section, not the whole protruding metal piece. Thanks for putting me right. I carry a SAK every day, and camping knives when, er, camping. I used to carry a Stanley 99E and a cut-down scalpel for work.

    • @muchsake
      @muchsake 16 дней назад

      From the www.gov.uk/buying-carrying-knives website. It’s also illegal to:
      carry most knives or any weapons in public without a ‘good reason’
      sell most knives or any weapons to anyone under the age of 18
      The exception to these 2 rules are folding pocketknives that:
      have a cutting edge no longer than 3 inches
      are not lock knives (they do not have a button, spring or catch that you have to use to fold the knife)

  • @Dazrick247
    @Dazrick247 11 дней назад

    How would you rule on the Leatherman Bond or similar.
    It has a non-locking sub 3 inch blade and so would be ok, but whnlen the knife is out, and arms closed up, the blade can only be folded so far before it stops.
    Would still be classed as immediately foldable or would this prevention cause issues.

  • @greamespens1460
    @greamespens1460 22 дня назад

    Sir I have a question as I do not drink wine having a corkscrew function is redundant.
    Would a multi tool (non locking blade less than three inches) be legal that has functions you know you will not use?
    (I currently carry a nextool mini flagship that I have when I am traveling- I thought I would ask the question)

  • @brevanh1737
    @brevanh1737 21 день назад +1

    I've often wondered if leatherman knife tools are EDC because of the folding at all times part as it can fold when the blade is out and the handle is closed but it's not fully retractable.

  • @amarok5048
    @amarok5048 2 дня назад

    "What about the pointed stick?" Monty Python 1970s 😆

  • @John-cz2pe
    @John-cz2pe 21 день назад +2

    In Australia, a Bishop Mar Mari Emanuel was repeatedly stabbed in the face and neck earlier this year, whilst preaching in his church building. Resulting in the lose of his right eye. The attackers knife folded shut during the attack and severed the attackers fingers and almost certainly saved the Bishop's life. So maybe this legislation does have some merit after all 🤷

    • @ballistic9644
      @ballistic9644 20 дней назад +1

      do not lie, especially not about a bishop

    • @John-cz2pe
      @John-cz2pe 20 дней назад

      @@ballistic9644 look it up half wit, it was cover by MSN

  • @sarveale
    @sarveale 22 дня назад

    You knives for fishing. Filleting fish before you leave, cutting your line etc. Never been asked about that but it's much bigger than 3 inches. Can I get in trouble for carrying it whinge going from home to car and car to fishing spot?. Plus my locking knife doesn't lock any more it's locking mechanism is broken does it still count pled the point has broken off so it's no longer as long as it was. Is it the the length it would be if not broken or as it is now? I use knives at the horse yard and fishing is that ok to carry?

  • @HorsleyLandy88
    @HorsleyLandy88 22 дня назад +4

    I always carry a leatherman or a swiss army knife, just be aware that it will be confiscated if you take it to an airport when flying or if you go to a court. I went to Guildford Magistrates court on my way back from work to pay a fine for someone else, metal detectors picked up my Leatherman and they wanted to confiscate it, luckily I was able to give it to my wife who then waited outside.

    • @TestGearJunkie.
      @TestGearJunkie. 22 дня назад +2

      Yeah, I had my Swiss Army knife confiscated at Heathrow, they said the main blade was an eighth of an inch too long (it's 2¾ inches). They obviously thought a 69-yr old woman in a wheelchair was going to go on the rampage on the plane🙄

    • @stedmangruff
      @stedmangruff 22 дня назад +1

      Stolen. And who gets to keep it?

    • @TestGearJunkie.
      @TestGearJunkie. 22 дня назад +2

      @@stedmangruff Oh I got it back, but it cost me £28.47 in postage costs 😡

    • @stedmangruff
      @stedmangruff 21 день назад

      Postage at that price is still daylight robbery - a penal charge making a big profit from your mistake. RIP off Britain. At least you got it back.

    • @iandennis7836
      @iandennis7836 21 день назад

      I just put my SAK in the checked luggage when we fly to Spain and put it back on my belt when I get outside the customs area. I do keep a swiss card in my wallet and only once was it examined.....the security guy said " neat and handy, where'd you get it, just don't get it out while you're flying" . I thanked him and all was well. Go figure.

  • @peaoui165
    @peaoui165 16 дней назад

    2:10 - LMAFO!!!!! That is one of the funniest and most British things you have ever said

  • @techwg
    @techwg 16 дней назад

    Very nice video. I carry millions of things on me, including a knife. I also have the bladeless Gerber MP600 multi-tool. My knife is a sub-3 inch folding non-locking Spyderco Squeak and I keep it clipped inside of a zipped up Maxpedition pocket organiser in my trouser pocket. I wanted to go above and beyond to prove it's not carried with any intent of being a weapon because I do not have super quick access to it.

  • @KarrierBag
    @KarrierBag 22 дня назад

    Any chance you can answer this?
    On the last video on this I asked about a pack of the stanley knife blades where a single blade can be slid out at a time from a plastic pack of 5 BUT you can leave half sticking out and it is kind of locked, so is this legal to carry?

  • @genuinelyconcerned3504
    @genuinelyconcerned3504 22 дня назад

    So is the boker xs legal to carry as the sharpened cutting edge is below 3 inches however the blade entirety is 3.3??

  • @HighWealder
    @HighWealder День назад

    I remember about 60 years ago, aged 14, I won a sheath knife at a bingo session at a coastal village while on a family holiday in Norfolk.
    I put it on my belt and walked around with it for weeks and nobody ever said a thing.

  • @stevewilliams2895
    @stevewilliams2895 15 дней назад

    im still confused on friction folders like the svord pesant mini. the way it folds means it cant be closed when youre holding it, but requires you to move your hand away from the grip to close it.
    ive heard some say that that makes it not immediately foldable. by that logic, no knife is immediately foldable because it would cut through your fingers.
    it has no mechanism/switch etc. its just an extended tang that folds back into the handle.

  • @lakevna
    @lakevna 20 дней назад +2

    Would be very interested to hear your take on all the material published by the met and the london mayor's office about how "there's no good reason to carry a knife". Since several reasons are explicitly laid out in the legislation this would seem to be far more misleading than any of TV Licensing's material.
    Also to mention, I have heard of cases where "carrying for work" was considered an inadequate excuse since the person was still carrying when they had stopped at the store on the way home, rather than leaving it in the car or making a separate trip. I dont have caselaw to cite on this one though.

    • @leopheard
      @leopheard 10 дней назад

      It seems that they have not read the law, because there is good reason to carry one otherwise the fucking legislation wouldn't have the words "without reasonable excuse or lawful authority".

  • @johnstott140
    @johnstott140 22 дня назад +2

    Hi, whilst you are on this subject would you please answer a question for me. I have lots of knives accumulated over the years none of which I would dream of taking out of my house for any reason. Therefore I have a fair knowledge of what makes a good useable knife. So when the new knife laws came into effect I was disappointed to realise that I could no longer take it with me for circumstances that although good reason in my mind may be considered not a good reason by a judge. For instance in the car, taking my dogs for a walk, etc. So checking on my leathermans all of the blades are sub 3 inch. However as you no doubt are aware all items are locking. After taking one apart I deduced that I could grind away the locking mechanism on the blade so that it would not lock and also it would not be possible to return this blade to be able to lock. This therefore make it a sub 3 inch none locking pocket knife although it retains the other functions.
    Now this is my question what about the other items or screwdrivers files saws scissors can they still be locking? Because some of these would be very difficult and dangerous to use without the locking mechanism. The backwards and forwards motion of use would more than likely cause the item to fold thereby trapping the finger's and with the saw imparticular cause severe harm.
    If as I am aware you can not answer due to legal restraints were can apply to find out a definitive answer. Having suffered from the vague interpretation of the law in the past I do not want this to happen again. Under most normal circumstances I would consider common sense would prevail however as I am sure that you are only to aware some police officer's these days would rather try and charge you than see common sense in the situation in front of them. I have just considered taking my modified leathermans to the police station but I know that I won't get a straight answer and also have the chance of having them seized under the pretext of some unknown reason.
    Many thanks John

    • @Fourby
      @Fourby 21 день назад

      @@johnstott140 just carry it, the weapon is the mind, not the tool

  • @craiglyness3518
    @craiglyness3518 22 дня назад +1

    You mention multi tools the main one that would be massive clarity would be the leatherman bond which is advised and sold as uk legal but seems abit of a grey area with the way the blade folds

  • @TheEulerID
    @TheEulerID 22 дня назад +1

    Another point is that I believe the legislation about carrying around knives and offensive weapons in general includes having them in the boot of your car.

  • @barryausten3578
    @barryausten3578 21 день назад +1

    I wanted to buy a beautiful folding Damascus knife whilst on holiday, but when I looked at the knife I noticed it was locking. I explained that the locking feature was a legal quagmire in the UK, and asked if they had any that didn't lock. The guy looked at me like I was crazy and said "But...if it doesn't lock, you could get hurt". I didn't get one in the end, but that's the view that other nations have towards our laws. Criminals do not obey the law, so overly strict laws serve no purpose other than to punish and control the law-abiding masses. If the law does not distinguish between a 3 inch locking knife and a machete, the criminals may as well carry machetes, whereas those who just want a functional tool have to jump through hoops to not be considered a criminal.

  • @conorstewart2214
    @conorstewart2214 9 часов назад

    The silliest thing about folding vs locked knives is that with the right hinged geometry a folding knife could be made ideal for stabbing too and not fold when stabbed. Also the law says nothing about the force required to fold, so a very stiff folding knife with the right geometry would probably be as good at stabbing as a fixed knife. Plus there is no restriction on the direction it folds is there? So could it fold backwards or sideways?

  • @gerrymolloy7036
    @gerrymolloy7036 22 дня назад +2

    I have a knife for field craft. I am more worried about being stopped with the knife over the rifle or shotgun 😂

  • @professor-viewsalot
    @professor-viewsalot 22 дня назад +2

    I work for uk HMG.
    The government employed HSE officer has banned all of us including highly quallified machinists and engineers & scientists etc, from using Non Lockable blades (any and every length) and Only permitting the official purchase of fixable blade knifs.

  • @timhaines8207
    @timhaines8207 22 дня назад

    How does the law work with Opinel knives? These don't lock when opened but can be locked by twisting the metal clip on the hinge. Would they only be illegal if you used them in the locked position as otherwise they would be immediately foldable?

  • @georgesmith9901
    @georgesmith9901 16 дней назад

    What about the special places thing can I take my non locking less then 3 inch Swiss Army knife to collage where I’ll start studying agriculture in September

  • @treesoul00
    @treesoul00 22 дня назад +8

    When are they moving on to regulating scissors lol

    • @xo2quilt
      @xo2quilt 22 дня назад +1

      Can you carry a single side of a broken pair of scissors?? I'm taking it to the shop to replace with the exact same scissors, right?

    • @jimmydesouza4375
      @jimmydesouza4375 22 дня назад

      They already do, they're classed as offensive weapons if you're carrying them without good reason, same as everything else, and collapsible scissors are straight illegal.

    • @xo2quilt
      @xo2quilt 22 дня назад

      @@jimmydesouza4375 So my 1-inch blade folding travel scissors are illegal? Insane!

    • @jimmydesouza4375
      @jimmydesouza4375 22 дня назад

      @@xo2quilt Depends on what the arresting officer considers to be the start of the blade.

  • @sahhull
    @sahhull 22 дня назад

    I carry a small locking knife its 2 inches long. I use it for work and hobby. It lives in the van.
    I will not carry or use a slip joint knife. Ive had too many slip joint knives close on my fingers. Ive just nicely healed from the last time.

  • @jack1d1XB
    @jack1d1XB 3 дня назад +1

    It's about the blades penetrative area of effect ie from point tip to its handle.

  • @markh7484
    @markh7484 День назад

    Would have been helpful to also clarify what is meant by "in your possession" and "in a public place". For example, people may not realise that the boot of your car is a public place! Get stopped on the motorway due to some traffic issue, the police decide to search your car and if there's a locking knife in the car, you could very well be prosecuted.

  • @-Gumbo
    @-Gumbo 22 дня назад

    I carry a glass bottle of water (I hate plastic). The neck is 4.5 inch after I smash it on the nearest hard surface. What does the Law say?

  • @pnyarrow
    @pnyarrow 22 дня назад +1

    Thank you for that information. Most useful. Stay safe. ATB.

  • @poo7481
    @poo7481 21 день назад

    What about an opinel with the locking color removed and put somewhere else in the same bag so i can make it locking later ?

  • @redcruben
    @redcruben 8 дней назад

    From what I have read the measurements are from the end of the handle around the curve to the tip which would be longer than a straight line

  • @markdrummond7
    @markdrummond7 22 дня назад +1

    Excellent, straightforward guidance that sets straight many urban myths.

    • @leopheard
      @leopheard 10 дней назад

      No, he has missed out some important pieces of legislation here. He has forgotten that the legislation says "cutting edge of the blade must not exceed 3" instead of "the blade must not exceed 3" which is what he said, and he also forgot that an offensive weapon has to be made, intended or adapted to cause INJURY to a PERSON. Something that doesn't cause injury or dog spray isn't an offensive weapon by law

  • @sahhull
    @sahhull 22 дня назад +1

    As we have already seen.
    The pen is far more dangerous. Yet no one has legislated or licensed them yet.

  • @liamhgd581
    @liamhgd581 20 дней назад

    What if I'm out with my RC car For cutting fuel pipe if I need to ?

  • @loveanicefigure
    @loveanicefigure 22 дня назад +8

    I carry a telescopic baton. Never had to justify having it. I just like the feel of it when im nervous. It comforts me.

    • @jm19592011
      @jm19592011 22 дня назад +3

      Not a 'baton', please. A 'carrier bag rod' for use with multiple bags.

    • @loveanicefigure
      @loveanicefigure 22 дня назад

      @@jm19592011 yes. Perfect!

    • @Ayeskint
      @Ayeskint 22 дня назад +1

      Also illegal in the UK. Be careful out there.

    • @TheRealName7
      @TheRealName7 22 дня назад +4

      It's your God given right to defend yourself.

    • @TestGearJunkie.
      @TestGearJunkie. 22 дня назад +1

      @@TheRealName7Not in the UK it would seem.

  • @citizenwolf8720
    @citizenwolf8720 22 дня назад

    Good video (also the previous video you did). Just for the general audience: remember people that other countries have their own laws, some of which are even more restrictive than the UK. In Ireland, for example, any blade, or sharpened object, is illegal, no matter what the length, or whether it's immediately foldable or not. This includes ALL ultility knives, kitchen knives, scissors, swiss army knives, screwdrivers, anything and everything. You could of course have a good reason for carrying a utility knife, or swiss army knife, just like the UK, but if the police decide to charge you with possession, then you'll have to defend your reason in court. The default position is that ALL blades and pointed objects are illegal to have in public.

  • @leemichel8199
    @leemichel8199 17 дней назад

    If you disengaged the locking mechanism on a knife and are under 3 inches, does that make it legal to carry? Lee

  • @crustyzimmerman3324
    @crustyzimmerman3324 22 дня назад +1

    Years ago there was a journalist for The Guardian, I think, and he’d just been away on scouts weekend.
    During the week he was driving through London (towards a bridge I think ) when 2 policeman step into the road and stop him. The one explains he has a trainee with him, he’s conducting a training exercise and would the driver mind if they searched his car? Well they did and found a fixed blade sheath knife in his boot. They were going to prosecute this middle class proffesional and the only reason they didn’t was because he got his story run in several broadsheets. He did make the point, it wasn’t fair that he be prosecuted or 2. be able to influence the decision not to because he had more access to the press than the next man.
    Take away: once a body politic starts down a course and gathers momentum, then common sense might no longer carry and weight.

  • @PerilousPaddy
    @PerilousPaddy 22 дня назад

    I would like your opinion of Opinel knives, they don't automatically lock and will immediatly fold UNLESS you engage the safety ring which I only do when the knife is in use disengaging the ring before putting the knife down. I have cut myself really badlly many times using knives that do not have a safety lock and one of those times I feared that my finger would have to be amputated due to the severiity of the cut (to the bone!). That specific injury was from an Opinel knife that I had removed the safety ring from to make it undeniablly a UK legal carry knife, after the incident I put the ring back on for safety reasons. If I had to defend myself on the legaity from a jobsworth Police officer then my good reason would be I don't want to injure myself again!. Opinel knives are extreemly lite and wickedly sharp and I have carried one ever since I found out about them 30 years ago, the knife I prefer is the no8 (80mm) or no12 (120mm) for camping but they is over 3 inches so either use the no7 (70mm) or no6 (60mm) mainly. For a laugh I also own a no13 (130mm) which is virtually a short sword lol, when I am going or coming back from camping the non llegal carry knives are always in my backpack where they can not be easily reached. Just for the record I do not carry anything for self defence as I do not like the idea of doing any jail or prison time!

  • @markcairns9574
    @markcairns9574 22 дня назад +1

    I took a knife out to one of the back alleys the other week to remove the magnetic seal on an abandoned fridge. I remember when i was a wee laddie not to play in abandoned fridge/freezers because you can quite easily get yourself stuck in one and suffocate. Hopefully, that was a good reason to have it with me.

    • @TheEulerID
      @TheEulerID 22 дня назад +1

      The problem was not with magnetic seals. They are easily opened from inside. The problem was entirely limited to those older refrigerators and freezes which used latches. They have all been taken off the market.

    • @markcairns9574
      @markcairns9574 22 дня назад

      @@TheEulerID I remember being told that when you close the door, you're breathing creates a difference in air pressure inside and it's more diffficult to push the door open. Either way, scared me enough to never go inside a fridge.freezer and remove the magnet on abandoned ones anyway.