Satellite image of Tropical Storm Irma pictured here in the Eastern Atlantic Ocean on August 30, 2017. NASA/NOAA /Goddard Rapid Response Team/Handout via REUTERS
U.S. Virgin Islands Gov. Kenneth Mapp signed an emergency order allowing the seizure of private guns, ammunition, explosives and property the National Guard may need to respond to Hurricane Irma.
Mapp signed the order Monday in preparation for Hurricane Irma. The order allows the Adjutant General of the Virgin Islands to seize private property they believe necessary to protect the islands, subject to approval by the territorys Justice Department.
Mapp issued an emergency declaration Tuesday and mobilized National Guard units to prepare for the massive storm.
This is not an opportunity to go outside and try to have fun with a hurricane, Mapp said. Its not time to get on a surfboard.
Irma strengthened to a Category 5 storm Tuesday, with wind gusts hitting 175 miles an hour. Irmas eye is expected to pass just north of the heart of the U.S. Virgin Islands on Wednesday and bring four to eight inches or rain and 60-mile-per-hour wind gusts.
The National Hurricane Center is calling the storm extremely dangerous. Weather forecasters say Irma is headed towards the Florida coastline, and should bring devastating conditions to the region in the next four or five days.
GOP Florida Gov. Rick Scott and Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rosselló both declared states of emergencies in anticipation of Irma.
Scott said President Donald Trump offered the full resources of the federal government as Floridians prepare for Hurricane Irma.
Irma comes more than one week after Hurricane Harvey brought devastating floods to the greater Houston area.
Click below to read a copy of the order:
Virgin Islands Emergency Order
Poster Comment:
All guns are supposed to registered in the VI, so they'll come for the copsuckers' first.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_laws_in_the_United_States_Virgin_Islands
We'll have to wait and see if Katrina style gun confiscations happen in Florida. The fact that they didn't happen in Houston is an encouraging precedent.