I had the same question. I searched and searched. I could never find a case where Federal charges on firearms were made without some other condition - drug sales, etc. involved. The feedback from Corps employees on firearm carry on USACE property is the same - nothing is going to happen unless there is some other condition. There are some cases where someone used a firearm in self-defense and was acquitted of murder charges only to have Federal charges filed afterward, based on the testimony from the original trial. The problem isn't the likelihood but the consequences. The prison terms being sought were 10 years. An you KNOW that under the current administration, the DOJ would gleefully press charges against someone who dared to use a firearm defensively if the excuse of Federal property were somehow involved.K.Mooneyham wrote: ↑Sat Nov 27, 2021 7:33 pm So, I have a question, since this thread was "brought back to life". Does anyone know of any case law where a person's vehicle was searched without other provocation (an altercation, other crime committed, etc.) while parked in the open-to-the-public parking lot of a Post Office, a firearm was discovered, and the person was prosecuted and convicted of a violation of Federal law, resulting in fine or imprisonment? Additionally, if that case law can be pointed out, does anyone know exactly which portion of Federal code was used in said prosecution? Inquiring minds want to know...
I did find this from a concealed carry group. https://www.usacarry.com/carrying-conce ... st-office/ It was as close to answering the question that you and I have as I could come up with. On one level, it fascinates me that I can drive to Yellowstone and be perfectly legal carrying my Texas licensed firearm among hundreds of tourists watching Old Faithful but am a threat to humanity if I drive onto Postal property to use the drop off mail box. But I've stopped trying to make sense of what the Federal folks think that I should and shouldn't do. I also have given up hope that law abiding people will be acknowledged in Federal law.