Florida “Guns-Locked-Up-In-Your-Car-Bill”

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camacho

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From a NRA email alert:

**URGENT NEW ALERT**


Date: March 21, 2008
TO: USF & NRA Member and Friends
FROM: Marion P. Hammer
USF Executive Director
NRA Past President

Senate Bill 1130 by Senator Durell Peaden (R-Crestview) will protect your right to have a firearm in your car or truck for self-defense and other lawful purposes.

SB-1130 has been scheduled for a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee next Tuesday, March 25th at 12:45 pm.

It is now time to start sending emails to members of the Senate Judiciary Committee to let them know how important this bill is to law-abiding gun owners who carry firearms in their vehicles for protection and other lawful purposes.

Please immediately send emails to members of the Committee and URGE THEM TO REMOVE THE AMENDMENT THAT WAS ATTACHED IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE COMMITTEE AND SUPPORT SB-1130 by Senator Peaden

The amendment was a so-called "compromise" to accommodate the business groups -- we never agreed to this language.

Some lawyers say it is so broad it even gives immunity from tort liability to employers, even when employers are careless and negligent, including when they knew something criminal was about to happen and did nothing.

Following the so-called "compromise" for the business groups, their lobbyists stood up and supported the amendment and then continued to oppose the bill.

We must remove that amendment and then pass the bill.

Below is a list of the email addresses of those you need to IMMEDIATELY contact:

IN THE SUBJECT LINE OF YOUR EMAIL PUT:

PLEASE SUPPORT SB-1130 the "Guns-locked-up-in-your-car bill"

(To send one email to all committee members at the same time, block or highlight the entire list and then copy and paste the block into the address section of the email. A colon or semi-colon could be needed after each name depending upon the email system you are using.)

SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE

[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]

BACKGROUND:

The bill protects your right to have a firearm locked in your vehicle for self-defense and other lawful purposes when it is parked in a business parking lot.

The bill never has been a "guns-to-work" bill. That is a phrase made up by anti-gun opponents of the bill, to confuse people and legislators.

For a copy of SB-1130, please click here.

For more information on the issue, please click here.

ADDITIONAL BACKGROUND:

This bill will stop business entities from searching private vehicles and violating the constitutional rights of customers and employees.

Your Second Amendment rights are at the very heart of this issue.



In addition to prohibiting searches of private vehicles in parking lots, the bill will also prevent businesses from asking customers or employees to disclose what personal private property is stored in a private vehicle and prevents action against customers and employees who refuse to divulge that private information. Further, it prohibits action against a customer or employee based on information provided by a third party.

Some Florida businesses are trying to ban guns in cars in parking lot used by customers and employees. They are discriminating against people who exercise their constitutional rights – they are violating the constitutional rights of gun owners and Florida law.

Corporate giants have been trampling constitutional rights. Some are even attempting to coerce and intimidate gun owners into giving up constitutional rights as a condition of employment.

Your Rights are in Danger!



(1) YOUR Second Amendment right to keep and bear arms - to have firearms in your vehicle for self-defense and other lawful purposes must be protected from anti-gun businesses;

(2) YOUR property and privacy rights - against searches of your private vehicle in parking lots must be protected from anti-gun businesses;

(3) YOUR right to freedom - from coercion, intimidation and termination of employment for exercising constitutional rights by anti-gun employers must be preserved; and

(4) YOUR right to meaningful self-protection - must be maintained regardless of where you park your car.

This bill protects your right have a firearm in your locked vehicle for lawful purposes and to park your vehicle in parking lots when shopping, working or transacting business.

Carrying firearms in a vehicle for hunting, target shooting or protection of yourself and your family obviously means you can leave that firearm locked in the vehicle in a parking lot when you go grocery shopping, to the doctor's office, to the movie theater, to visit a sick friend in the hospital, to rent a movie, to the shoe store or anywhere else normal people travel to conduct business.

Florida law, the U.S. Constitution, and the Florida Constitution clearly and unequivocally give law-abiding citizens the right to have firearms in their vehicles for lawful purposes.

Since there are CURRENTLY NO PENALTIES for this law and numerous businesses are violating the law and are banning firearms in their parking lots. Some gun ban policies apply to customers and employees.


Please continue to check www.NRAILA.org for updates on Senate Bill 1130.
 
The ABCDE troll was dealt with on another thread. Ignore.

Despite the poison-pill amendment I sent emails to the state senators on the judiciary committee. If it will help, here is what I sent (and constructive criticism is welcomed too to help me improve!)

Dear Senator,
I am writing as a concerned Florida resident and voter, to urge you to please support SB-1130, the so-called "Guns locked up in your car bill". This bill would protect my right to have a self-defensive firearm locked up in my car when I must conduct business with an establishment that does not normally allow firearms. I and the hundreds of thousands of Floridians who rely on a firearm to help protect us from crime need this legislation in order to provide us with a safe and secure place (our personal vehicles) in which to disarm and securely store our defensive firearms. We are law-abiding citizens who carry firearms in our cars for protection, and many of us have concealed weapons permits and carry concealed weapons for self-protection elsewhere. We respect the wishes of businesses who do not want firearms in their place of business, and will gladly disarm before entering. One hopes that criminals who already flout the law by committing armed robberies and other crimes will be so accommodating! We are trying to do the right thing and respect the wishes and property rights of business owners, while keeping our right to armed self-defense intact during transit to and from these businesses. Current law would criminalize us simply for disarming and securing a firearm before entering. Thus, we need the protection of this legislationt. Please support SB-1130.

Sincerely,

If anyone on the staff reads these in any detail, I was hoping to convey 1) this bill protects the most-reasonable right to self-defense and 2) we're really trying to be reasonable here even though places with "no gun" signs aren't, help us out by giving us legal protection for the occasions when we have to do business with these zipperheads and their no-guns signs. I hoped the line reminding the senators that criminals aren't going to obey the damned signs anyway would underscore that we're trying to be reasonable.
 
How about lockers

If they don't want to allow guns in our car, why can't they provide a secure location (lockers) where we could secure our gun while at work,but still be able to carry it to and from work. I konw there are a couple of states that do this at courthouses and other federal and state owned property. I am actually worried that someone could break into my car and steal my gun while I am at work, it does happen to others and it could happen to me. I do have a cwfl and carry my ccw almost all the time. I actually don't feel good about leaving it (my ccw) unattended anywhere.
 
Personally, I am more in favor of a bill that extends this kind of protection to all legal items, as opposed to just firearms.

What if an employer decided bibles should be banned from his parking lot? Or political bumper stickers? Its just none of the employer's business what an employee has in his vehicle, presuming it is legal.
 
I am shocked that they even mentioned guns. They should have been SMART and made it to cover anything not-illegal in the vehicle.. and then once passed. "oh, by the way.. firearms are within the group of 'anything not-illegal"
 
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