kwiebe
Regular Member
imported post
Recently I visited one of the dams on the Columbia, it happened to be Bonneville. At the gate before driving up to the visitor center, the private security guard asked some questions, including "any firearms with you today?"
I wasn't carrying and didn't have time to get into a conversation about it, content to research it when I got home. So I just said "No." But I'm guessing the guard was not merely taking a survey.
As you may know, the management/operation of these dams appear to involve many different agencies (e.g., US Army, Dept of the Interior). But as far as I know, they're public property.
Is there a "terrorist law" or something that gives them the right to screen firearms from these properties?
Curious. I couldn't find anything about it on the web, readily.
Recently I visited one of the dams on the Columbia, it happened to be Bonneville. At the gate before driving up to the visitor center, the private security guard asked some questions, including "any firearms with you today?"
I wasn't carrying and didn't have time to get into a conversation about it, content to research it when I got home. So I just said "No." But I'm guessing the guard was not merely taking a survey.
As you may know, the management/operation of these dams appear to involve many different agencies (e.g., US Army, Dept of the Interior). But as far as I know, they're public property.
Is there a "terrorist law" or something that gives them the right to screen firearms from these properties?
Curious. I couldn't find anything about it on the web, readily.