Wednesday, January 13, 2016

Going Postal

Bonidy is a responsible, law-abiding citizen with a permit to carry a firearm who lives in rural Colorado.  Like millions of other Americans, he obtained such a permit so that he might be prepared to defend himself outside of his home.  When the U.S. Postal Service advised Bonidy that he would be subject to prosecution simply for momentarily storing his firearm in the trunk of his vehicle in an unsecured parking lot made available for postal patrons, Bonidy sought a determination that applying the postal regulation to him under such circumstances would violate the Second Amendment. [More]
So where are all the Republicans courting gun owner votes showing leadership by fixing this?

1 comment:

FedUp said...

If it's illegal to leave it in the parking lot, and equally illegal to walk into the building with it, and if leaving it in the parking lot means unholstering in view of surveillance cameras, wouldn't keeping it in the holster be the logical thing to do?