COMMENTARY ON §702-202
Offenses of possession are pervasive in the law, but possession per se is not a bodily movement or an omission, although the course of conduct leading to or continuing possession might include a voluntary act or omission. Therefore, this section makes it explicit that possession is an act, within the meaning of §§702-200 and 201, if the possessor knowingly procured or received the thing possessed or was aware of control thereof for a sufficient period to have been able to terminate possession. The "thing possessed" refers to the physical object per se, knowledge of particular qualities or properties of the physical object possessed is dealt with as a mens rea problem in subsequent sections.
Hawaii law has had many statutes making various kinds of possession illegal.[1] When considered with the previous statutory requirement that penal liability must be based on "doing what the penal law forbids"[2] the logical implication of such statutes was that possession is an act within the penal law. This section merely states that position with greater clarity.
Case Notes
Under the Hawaii Penal Code, the word "possess" in §134-7(b) means to (1) knowingly procure or receive a firearm or ammunition, or (2) be aware of one's own control over a firearm for a sufficient period to have been able to terminate that possession. 89 H. 59 (App.), 968 P.2d 1070.
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§702-202 Commentary:
1. E.g., H.R.S. §134-51 (concealed deadly weapon); H.R.S. §134-52 (switchblade knife).
2. H.R.S. §701-1.