Yes and no (depending on literal interpretation). According to 23123(a), yes, you can scroll through contacts looking for Hot Momma #32 (not that I morally condone scrolling and searching while driving, nor infidelity), peck at numbers, and activate a bluetooth feature.
If analyzing your question literally, someone would be "talking and listening" with their phone even though the bluetooth were on. If functionally possible, I would imagine that would be a violation.
23123(a) only prohibits "listening and talking" while not in hands-free mode. Yeah, don't stick your phone to your ear and have a conversation. If that wasn't legislative intent, they could have made it much clearer. In fact, additional laws reinforce this view. I didn't write them, I just try my best to follow them. Personally, I think they could have been much more strict for safety reasons. I wouldn't outlaw all phone touching while driving, however.
I said, "I could then continue to hold the phone after re-engaging in a bluetooth conversation. Legally." Where did I say otherwise?
I'm trying to enforce my right under AB 1536(miller). You bring up a good point about the definition of conversation, however. For instance, one could argue that they did not engage in a conversation at all, that they merely let their wife rant on and on without responding. If a conversation is defined as "listening AND talking", this may not violate the law, though you are probably correct in regards to their liberal interpretation. In regards to delineation of periods within a conversation, it's hard to define a line. I reason that a physical/electronic disconnect, such as a bluetooth disconnect, is probably the best definition rather than latency.
In another instance, suppose a landline conversation was intermittently disconnected because the cord was cut, but the conversation continued upon reconnect. Is this the same conversation or a new one? It doesn't really matter. What matters is that a person must connect to the other party again by means of physically touching the phone, which is legal, and the method of communication while connected (hands-free communication only).
You would be remiss in thinking that all the time and effort I've put in is merely to get out of a cell phone ticket that I've already paid for an that puts no points on my license.
so you are saying I can hold my phone in my hand and I can scroll through my contacts looking for hot momma #32 and then open my dialing screen and peck away at the numbers and then before the call connects, activate my bluetooth capability and then continue to talk and listen on my phone and remain in compliance of the law?
So, in effect the only thing the law requires is you don't hold it up to your ear?
You really believe that was the intent of the appellate court?
but wait, this is what they said
so contrary to a claim you made not long ago, you could not continue to hold your phone while engaging in a conversation, even if using the bluetooth system.
at least there's that much; you can't hold it while engaging in conversation, but wait, what did you say about your situation:
Oh, I see your problem: you are misinterpreting the term "conversation" and confusing it with listening and talking. Using your definition, one could legally pick up their phone as long as one party or the other was not actively speaking. Well, when I have an hour long conversation with my wife, I can assure you there are not a full 60 minutes of active speech. I believe you are trying to stretch their statement to cover what you need it to to escape this ticket when in fact the court intended to consider the more liberal use of the term "conversation".