The key question is whether or not "you wanted the place 30.06 posted." There is no evidence that the company had or wanted a policy prohibiting concealed handguns.sjfcontrol wrote:So, are you saying if you leased a building with a valid 30.06 sign in place, and you wanted the place 30.06 posted, you'd have to remove the old (perfectly valid) sign and replace it with a new one to be enforceable?WildBill wrote:Interesting. IANAL, but I would think that only the person in control of the property could post an enforcable sign. For example, I could go to any building of my choosing and post a 30.06 sign meeting the legal language and size requirements, but I don't believe it would be valid unless I controlled the property.TxBlonde wrote:I know now to tell a judge that
There new tactic is they fired him because they think the old Article 4413 (29ee) posted at another building they leased at the time and the sign was there before they occupied it. (I know no bearing on who put it there) They think it is the Proper 30.06 Sign.
The OP is suggesting that the company had no policy preventing employees from having handguns on the property until they wanted to use that as a reason to fire someone for reporting an illegal activity to the DOT. In his dispostion, a former manager of the company swore that, three days after the fact, they issued a policy prohibiting the handguns. IMO, trying to use the old sign as a justification for firing the employee is stretching the truth and their credibility.