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Bang / Guns Title: Tampa to ask governor: Let us ban concealed weapons outside RNC TAMPA The City Council is adding its voice to an appeal asking Gov. Rick Scott for help clearing the way for Tampa to ban concealed weapons outside the Republican National Convention. "We believe it is necessary and prudent to take this reasonable step to prevent a potential tragedy," council member Lisa Montelione said in a letter her colleagues agreed on Thursday to send to Scott. The letter describes Tampa's dilemma it can ban squirt guns outside the convention, but not real ones carried with a concealed weapons permit as an "extraordinary circumstance." It asks Scott to consult with the Cabinet and legislative leaders on "how best to quickly address this paramount issue of public safety." Mayor Bob Buckhorn has said he also expects to write to Scott about the issue. A law passed last year by the Legislature pre-empts cities and counties from passing laws regulating firearms or ammunition. As a result, Buckhorn says Tampa finds itself facing an "absurd" irony. "We look silly in the eyes of the world," Buckhorn said recently, adding that the city has "become fodder for the late-night comics because of something that has nothing to do with us and nothing to do with our ability to control the situation, and it's elevated by Trayvon Martin, obviously." Legal experts have said that, with emotions running high, someone carrying a concealed weapon in the protest area could end up in a confrontation covered by Florida's "stand your ground" law, the statute at the center of the controversy over a neighborhood watch volunteer's fatal shooting of Martin, 17, in Sanford. Buckhorn anticipates sending Scott a letter asking the state to explore a way to suspend the law temporarily during the Aug. 27-30 convention. He hopes to ban concealed weapons inside the city's proposed "Event Zone," which covers downtown and a few surrounding areas. In the event of an emergency beyond local control, Florida law does authorize the governor to issue executive orders that carry the force of law. Among other things, the governor could "suspend or limit the sale, dispensing or transportation of alcoholic beverages, firearms, explosives and combustibles" in the emergencies. How Scott will receive these entreaties is not clear. As of late Thursday, his press office had not responded to three Tampa Bay Times inquiries over the past week about the issue. Despite the state law, the Secret Service plans to ban concealed weapons inside the convention. Its federal authority trumps the state law in the area that it controls to protect the Republican nominee. The agency has said no one but on-duty law enforcement officers will be allowed to take guns inside the convention's secure perimeter. Glimpses of security perimeter Tampa officials are saying a little more about their expectations for the security perimeter around the Republican National Convention. The perimeter will be set by the Secret Service, which is expected to use metal detectors to screen anyone going into the convention. It has not said where the perimeter will be, but city officials have said they assume it will encompass the Tampa Bay Times Forum, the Tampa Convention Center, Embassy Suites Hotel, Tampa Marriott Waterside Hotel & Marina, some of the waterfront and maybe the Tampa Bay History Center. Speaking to two groups over the past week, Mayor Bob Buckhorn suggested three other possibilities: Poster Comment: When Mitt loses the GOP nomination, the neocons could riot, attack people with Ron Paul buttons, and try to overturn cars with Ron Paul bumper stickers. A well armed neighborhood watch ready to "stand your ground" is needed outside, to keep the progressive neotards from getting too wild.
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#1. To: hondo68 (#0)
Yeah, and someone COULD beat someone else to death with a mud shark! Better ban mud sharks too! Common sense says that people will be very wary of attacking another who may or may not be armed, BECAUSE OF the Trayvon Martin incident and the stand your ground law.
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