MN: Because of state definition of “public place,” no RS for gun possession in one’s own yard

Syllabus: “Because the Minnesota handgun statute that prohibits a person from carrying a handgun ‘in a public place’ defines ‘public place’ only as government land or as private land that is clearly dedicated to the public for public use, police officers do not have reasonable suspicion to detain a man merely on a report that he possesses a gun at a private residence and on their finding him walking from that residence into its front yard.” State v. Theng Yang, 814 N.W.2d 716 (Minn. App. 2012).

Defendant’s stop was factually based and valid without regard to pretext. Because the trial court’s suppression order was based on the finding of an illegal stop, the case is remanded for a determination of the independent basis for the inventory. People v. Vissarriagas, 2012 CO 48, 278 P.3d 915 (2012).*

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