LarryH wrote:williamkevin wrote:I work on a federal installation, privately owned firearms are not allowed.
ditto
Our vehicles have always (as near as I can remember) been subject to search (the big sign posted at each gate says so), but in working here since November of 1977, my car has been searched once.
For most federal property, that's only a policy matter, not law. Employees would be subject to discipline, but not prosecution. Contractors can be terminated immediately, of course.
In
Derrick A. Wiley v. Department of Justice, a federal employee was suspected of having a pistol in his car, and investigators received a written tip. The investigator requested to search Wiley's car. He declined, said he was taking sick leave, and left the property. A short time later he returned and submitted to a search of his car.
The agency fired him for not cooperating in the investigation. Well, there's
Weingarten,
Garrity, Form A, Form B,
Miranda, 4th Amendment, and all sorts of issues at play here. Plus, the agency had a policy against personal firearms in cars, but it wasn't actually against any law or CFR. He won his job back.
Here is the case:
http://www.ll.georgetown.edu/FEDERAL/ju ... -3044.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;