Maybe need to be more careful. When I enter the St Louis Federal building, they allow absolutely NOTHING. Not even a tiny keychain blade. Can't even enter the parking lot with "weapons" in your vehicle.
We're much easier down here in GA. In 2014, the Gov signed what's been called by the gun grabbers the "Guns Everywhere" law. It relaxed a lot of laws that were on the books restricting carry, and they were already pretty lenient.Maybe need to be more careful. When I enter the St Louis Federal building, they allow absolutely NOTHING. Not even a tiny keychain blade. Can't even enter the parking lot with "weapons" in your vehicle.
Before more nonsense gets posted in this thread, please understand the differences: St Louis Federal Building vs. GA State Capitol.
Noted; however, so far, all that's been posted are FACTS. What's the "nonsense" to which you referred? Oh, I think I get it. Are you referring to my comment about things being easier here in GA, which refers to our STATE laws? OK.
FACTS combined in the wrong way can still be nonsense. See your last post about that, starting out with "We're much easier down here in GA.". Given that you replied to a post that talked about a federal building, there is NOTHING easier down there in GA. The guns everywhere laws of GA, which I really like, don't apply to federal buildings. You still can't legally carry into a Post Office or leave your gun in the car parked in the Post Office parking lot, for example. Mobuck, however, did start this confusion by talking about the laws for federal facilities in a thread about a state facility in the first place.
Gotcha! As long as the PO doesn't own the parking lot, though, it's OK to have a gun in the car. Right? Like if the PO is in a rented space in a strip mall. And wasn't there a case out west somewhere a few years ago where that whole gun in the car in the PO parking lot got challenged and the person in trouble for it got off?
If the parking lot is not owned by the PO, then the PO rules of conduct on PO property (39 CFR 232.1) don't apply.
As for the case you speak off: US Appeals Court: No Firearms On U.S. Postal Property At All. Sorry, Parking Lot!
no metal detectors? carry anyway....
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