Lawmaker May Seek Airport Gun Limits
House Homeland Security Chairman May Pursue Gun Restrictions Following New Ga. Law
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(CBS/AP)
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Interactive Guns In America State-by-state gun laws and death rates, maps of recent school and workplace shootings and facts on who's at risk.
Apparently surprised that some airports long have allowed guns in unsecured areas, Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said the new Georgia legislation represents a significant hole in national security and a threat to travelers.
He asked the Transportation Security Administration to clarify federal law governing weapons in areas outside security checkpoints. In a letter Monday to TSA Assistant Secretary Kip Hawley, he said "the committee may seek legislative action to correct this omission" if there are no restrictions.
TSA spokesman Christopher White said Tuesday that no federal prohibitions apply to areas outside security checkpoints and that the agency follows local regulations. He said he didn't know how many airports allow firearms and declined to say whether the agency has a position on the matter, maintaining that it is focused on keeping guns from getting through security.
"We work within the framework of local laws," he said.
At issue in Georgia is a law signed by Republican Gov. Sonny Perdue earlier this year that allows residents who have passed criminal background checks to carry concealed weapons onto mass transit, as well as into state parks and restaurants that serve alcohol. The law took effect July 1.
A legal battle quickly erupted over whether the law applies to public areas of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport before travelers pass through security checkpoints.
On the day the new law took effect, Atlanta officials who oversee the airport declared it a "gun-free zone" and said anyone carrying a gun there could be arrested and charged with a misdemeanor. Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin argued that allowing guns could endanger people because airports remain attractive targets for terrorism.
Gun rights supporters filed a federal lawsuit challenging the designation, saying the airport qualifies as mass transportation and has restaurants that should be accessible under the new law.
Sean Broderick, spokesman for the American Association of Airport Executives, also said he did not know how many airports allow handguns. Andrew Arulanandam, a National Rifle Association spokesman, said he thinks guns are at least partially allowed on airport grounds in most states.
The Dallas-Forth Worth International Airport, for example, allows weapons in areas outside checkpoints, while Washington's Reagan National and Dulles International airports eased rules several years ago to allow weapons on grounds and parking lots, but not in terminals and other buildings that access airfields.
Hartsfield spokesman Herschel Grangent said airport and TSA officials were scheduled to meet late Tuesday on the guns issue.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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opps correction:
WITHOUT the First Amendment..
Imagine where we would be WITHOUT the almighty Second Amendment. Daggone founding fathers.
I got your "well-regulated militia" right here!
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Posted by Keithle1 at 05:16 AM : Jul 23, 2008
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I know where you would be with the FIRST AMENDMENT..
buried in a shallow grave with a bullethole on your forhead...
Think about it.
Imagine where we would be WITHOUT the almighty Second Amendment. Daggone founding fathers.
I got your "well-regulated militia" right here!
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I can''t think of anything more important for our politicians to be doing than mixing loaded bar patrons with loaded guns. It''s the ''murkin way. After all, when some terrorist shows up in your airport bar somebody has to shoot him, right? Aside from that, how are we gonna get everybody to carry guns if we don''t have more shootouts every year? More people need to carry guns so we can have more killin'' so more people will carry guns. It all makes perfect sense. If you''re a moron.
And since it makes perfect sense to about 40 percent of the population, it doesn''t take a rocket scientist to figure out why the nation is currently circling the drain - or to figure out why we elect the incompetent, mentally ill vampires that seem to infest the halls of government at every level.
- by kansas1946 July 23, 2008 3:51 AM EDT
- Apparently surprised that some airports long have allowed guns in unsecured areas, Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said the new Georgia legislation represents a significant hole in national security and a threat to travelers.
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Oh, BS. The usual hysteria. The key here is "long allowed guns in unsecured areas."
I haven''t heard of dozens of shoot outs in airports. Just keep them off the planes!