Militarypol21
Expert
I'm asking your input on the LEGAL aspects of the following:
I am a police officer in a city north of Indianapolis and the other day a female walked into the department asking if it was legal if she had a compound bow in her trailer. The officer working stated, of course, why not?
The female stated, according to her lease no firearms were allowed in any trailer in this trailer court. (Note: This female obviously did not know the definition of a firearm and that is a different story all of its own.) Also note, the property itself is considered private property but once you declare residency in my opinion, according to our second amendment it is our right to own a firearm. Because the property as a whole is private property the property owner can trespass anyone carrying a firearm on the property if they are just walking through.
So answer this...
Normally the property owner goes over your lease line by line. When you come to the line that states "No Firearms" you ignore it. The next day the property owner sees you loading/unloading guns from your vehicle and starts the eviction process for breach of lease. Now technically you did breach the lease by having a firearm when your lease specifically states "No Firearms". But our second amendment states it is our right to own a firearm. Your input?
I am a police officer in a city north of Indianapolis and the other day a female walked into the department asking if it was legal if she had a compound bow in her trailer. The officer working stated, of course, why not?
The female stated, according to her lease no firearms were allowed in any trailer in this trailer court. (Note: This female obviously did not know the definition of a firearm and that is a different story all of its own.) Also note, the property itself is considered private property but once you declare residency in my opinion, according to our second amendment it is our right to own a firearm. Because the property as a whole is private property the property owner can trespass anyone carrying a firearm on the property if they are just walking through.
So answer this...
Normally the property owner goes over your lease line by line. When you come to the line that states "No Firearms" you ignore it. The next day the property owner sees you loading/unloading guns from your vehicle and starts the eviction process for breach of lease. Now technically you did breach the lease by having a firearm when your lease specifically states "No Firearms". But our second amendment states it is our right to own a firearm. Your input?