Another potential DC test case

Status
Not open for further replies.

Rem700SD

Member
Joined
Dec 8, 2005
Messages
541
Location
South of Houston, TX
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,261583,00.html

I didn't realize Sen. Jim Webb was pro gun. This might be interesting.
Dan
WASHINGTON —

Virginia Sen. Jim Webb said Tuesday he did not give aide Phillip Thompson the gun that led to his arrest in a Senate office building. Webb did not say whether it was his gun.

Thompson is awaiting arraignment in D.C. Superior Court after being arrested Monday for trying to enter the Russell Senate Office Building, where Webb's office is located, carrying a loaded pistol and two fully loaded magazines.

The judge will determine whether Thompson, 45, will have to pay bail to get out of jail, and will set a date for a preliminary hearing. Thompson spent the night in a D.C. jail after U.S. Capitol Police determined Monday that he did not have a permit to carry a gun in Washington, D.C., where only law enforcement officials are allowed to carry handguns.

He is charged with carrying a pistol without a license and possession of an unregistered firearm and unregistered ammunition. According to the court docket, Monday was Thompson's birthday.

A senior Democratic aide said Monday evening that Thompson forgot that he had the weapon when he sent the senator's bag through the X-ray machine at the office building. The aide said Webb gave the bag that contained the gun to Thompson when the aide drove the senator to the airport.

Webb said he has been in New Orleans since Friday and returned Monday night. He denied that he gave the weapon to Thompson.

"We had three cars on Friday that were being moved about because of my trip, and that is probably a reason that this inadvertent situation developed. And that's really the extent to which I think I should be discussing. That's really all I can say," he said, adding that he couldn't talk about the case because of the legal proceedings and his desire not to prejudice the situation.

But Webb did shoot down rumors that he carries a gun in the Capitol complex.

"I believe that it's important — it's important for me, personally, and for a lot of people in the situation that I'm in, to be able to defend myself and my family," Webb said. "Since 9/11 for people who are in government I think in general there has been an agreement that it's a more dangerous time. Again, I'm not going to comment, again, with great specificity about how I defend myself, but I do feel that I have that right."

Thompson, a former military reporter based in Virginia, joined the senator's staff at the beginning of Webb's Senate campaign. Webb was elected to office in November. Thompson travels frequently with the senator.

Asked what support the senator was giving to his aide, Webb told FOX News, "We're doing all we can."

"I want to emphasize, first of all, that Phillip Thompson is a long-time friend. He's a fine individual. ... I have a tremendous amount of respect for him," Webb told reporters. "I think this is one of those very unfortunate situations where, completely inadvertently, he took the weapon into the Senate yesterday."

Handguns are illegal in Washington, D.C., but nearby Virginia allows residents to carry concealed handguns. Capitol Police rules allow members and their employees to bring a weapon onto Capitol grounds if it is unloaded and securely wrapped. In this case, it was allegedly neither.

Webb said he is a big supporter of the constitutional right to bear arms and thinks Virginia's concealed handgun law is a "fair law."

"Everyone here knows that I am a strong supporter of the Second Amendment, that I have had a permit to carry a weapon in Virginia for a long time," he said.
 
where only law enforcement officials are allowed to carry handguns.

Not entirely true.

Private security officers can officially carry in DC as well.
 
Hopefully it will make the "us vs. them" laws a little more obvious to the common people, and they too will bitch about such elitism.

"I believe that it's important — it's important for me, personally, and for a lot of people in the situation that I'm in, to be able to defend myself and my family," Webb said. "Since 9/11 for people who are in government I think in general there has been an agreement that it's a more dangerous time. Again, I'm not going to comment, again, with great specificity about how I defend myself, but I do feel that I have that right."


Anyone know how many "people who are in govt" were murdered on 9/11 vs how many civilians?
 
Unfortunately it demonstrates the "Caste" system that exists in the US today.....those that are somehow more important and that should be able to protect themselves and everyone else that should not be able to protect themselves and their families.

If we're talking about the POTUS and immediate chain of succession then the need to take additional steps to protect these leaders is obvious.......Senators and Reps like Webb are chump change and should be treated no differently than the common citizen
 
"Strong Supporter of the Second Amendment?"

Okay, let's take the good Senator at his word and make him an Ally of ours.

The best thing we might do as an immediate action is to flood his website first with supportive comments as as a 'fellow CCW permit holder" (which he is in the state of Virginia) and then suggest he could put his vote behind both the restoration of D.C. carry rights AND also National Reciprocity.
 
Senator Webb still hasn't (to my knowledge) introduced the guns in National Parks bill he promised
 
Virginia Sen. Jim Webb said Tuesday he did not give aide Phillip Thompson the gun that led to his arrest in a Senate office building. Webb did not say whether it was his gun.
If it was Webb's gun, he should say so - now. If not, there may not be a lot he can do for his aide.

"I believe that it's important — it's important for me, personally, and for a lot of people in the situation that I'm in, to be able to defend myself and my family," Webb said. "Since 9/11 for people who are in government I think in general there has been an agreement that it's a more dangerous time. Again, I'm not going to comment, again, with great specificity about how I defend myself, but I do feel that I have that right."
This is not a comforting indicator of his true "support of the Second Amendment." :(
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top