Search found 2 matches

by android
Thu May 09, 2013 10:53 am
Forum: New to CHL?
Topic: School Employees and the parking lot law
Replies: 39
Views: 10147

Re: School Employees and the parking lot law

jsenner wrote:
jmra wrote:I work at a high school. Handbook says no guns on property. I am reluctant to ignore this policy as several times a year dogs are brought in to sniff out drugs in parked cars. Don't know if they are trained for detecting firearms/ammo but not willing to risk it.
If I worked at the elementary campus, no brainer.
Have you thought about saving the rags/etc from cleaning your guns and tossing them in the glovebox or trunk as a test? if the dogs light on it, you'll know and no foul...
I thought dogs had a specialty and are not normally trained to find a lot of different scents.

I've heard of cadaver, drug, explosives and firearms dogs, but I thought they were all different, not the same dog.
by android
Thu May 09, 2013 9:47 am
Forum: New to CHL?
Topic: School Employees and the parking lot law
Replies: 39
Views: 10147

Re: School Employees and the parking lot law

nightmare69 wrote:
Keith B wrote:
nightmare69 wrote:
Actually, this is not 100% correct. MPA does not exempt a person carrying in their vehicle from the Gun Free School Zone Act. They can be arrested and charged under federal law if they are within 1000' of a school and unlicensed. However, the question comes up if local law enforcement can actually enforce that federal law. Either way, the school can ask the person to leave and if they don't then they can be charged with criminal trespass.
We have had high school kids bring rifles and shotguns in their vehicles on school property. Our school LEO says there is nothing he can do about it but tell them to go home and put the gun away. The DA will not prosecute them so he won't arrest them.

In general, this is good if it's just a gun left over from the weekend or whatever. (you shouldn't really leave them in the car, but sometime I forget too)

But it's crazy that in other states, they're willing to go all out for a finger or sandwich chewed into an L.

Return to “School Employees and the parking lot law”