Dan Mullen No Weapons Policy

DudznSudz

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It really is like a bad American version of Australia down there. It's crazy.
 

otismotis08

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So it's legal to have an un-cased AR-15 sitting in the back seat? (not trying to argue whether or not it's appropriate)
 

Huskerfan2112

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Haven’t lived in Nebraska for many years, but believe you can have any legal firearm in your vehicle in plain view providing it’s not loaded. Believe that’s the case in the majority of states.

I think its rifles only. Additionally Omaha has a whole different set of rules.


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Aug 27, 2006
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Got pulled over once in a hopped up 70's Dodge Challenger (It was bright red and loud so I get it) with a bunch of rifles and guns in the back seat. Cop laid every one out on the roof and trunk and made it look like a huge crime scene and every passerby probably thought I was in big trouble. Not a one was loaded and he was kind enough to put all of them back and I didn't even get a ticket for whatever traffic violation I supposedly got pulled over for and in the end he was kinda cool about it. But I'm betting most people who saw that scene probably think I'm still in prison.
 
Nov 3, 2005
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I think its rifles only. Additionally Omaha has a whole different set of rules.

Could be true, but I don’t believe an unloaded pistol in plain sight is illegal in most areas/states. I know in California and other states, it must be in a lockable case
If you’re not allowed to transport a handgun at all, not sure how you could ever take a pistol any place for any purpose (to the shooting range, a gunsmith for maintenance, and so forth)?



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Cornicator

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Got pulled over once in a hopped up 70's Dodge Challenger (It was bright red and loud so I get it) with a bunch of rifles and guns in the back seat. Cop laid every one out on the roof and trunk and made it look like a huge crime scene and every passerby probably thought I was in big trouble. Not a one was loaded and he was kind enough to put all of them back and I didn't even get a ticket for whatever traffic violation I supposedly got pulled over for and in the end he was kinda cool about it. But I'm betting most people who saw that scene probably think I'm still in prison.

I guess I just always assumed your posts did originate from a Correctional Facility.
 

otismotis08

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Haven’t lived in Nebraska for many years, but believe you can have any legal firearm in your vehicle in plain view providing it’s not loaded. Believe that’s the case in the majority of states.



.
That was my thinking as well for most states. But was thinking Florida had steeper regs.
 
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That was my thinking as well for most states. But was thinking Florida had steeper regs.

Apparently more lenient than many:

Guns in Vehicles in - Florida: Florida generally allows a person 18 years of age or older to possess a concealed firearm within the interior of a private vehicle, without a license, if the firearm or other weapon is securely encased or is otherwise not readily accessible for immediate use. Nov 16, 2017”




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DudznSudz

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Yeah, no, Florida has that crazy NRA lobbyist woman basically writing their laws. They have insanely lenient laws and were one of the first real "stand your ground" states. It's nuts.
 

gw2kpro

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9and4_rivals188421

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Covering UF was such fun during the late '80s and early '90s:
  • Vernon Maxwell, now with the San Antonio Spurs, said he bought and used both crack and powder cocaine during his final three basketball seasons at Florida: 1985-86, 1986-87 and 1987-88. The Gators advanced to the NCAA Tournament in 1987 and `88. Defense attorney George F. Schafer, representing Scott, asked Maxwell how he got the money to buy cocaine from Scott while he was on attending Florida on a grant-in-aid. ``I`m sure everybody knows,`` Maxwell testified. ``The people at the University of Florida paid me. I had a sports agent who paid me."
  • Former University of Florida basketball star Dwayne Schintzius says that in the six months after he quit the school's team, a UF booster paid for four encounters the two of them had with prostitutes in Gainesville. In a rambling, 25-minute, tape-recorded statement given during a state prostitution investigation last fall, Schintzius, who now plays for the San Antonio Spurs of the NBA, said under oath that he had sex with a prostitute in one bed while booster Bobby McKibbin had sex with another. He said the two repeated the sessions on at least three occasions, usually after evenings of heavy drinking.
  • Football Coach Galen Hall made illegal payments to assistant coaches from 1986 to 1988 and to a player in 1987 — both violations of NCAA rules — and resigned in 1989.
  • On Oct. 16, 1989, quarterback Kyle Morris and three other Gator football players were suspended for betting on professional and college football games. The four did not bet on Florida games or on games involving Southeastern Conference teams.
  • In December 1989, it was disclosed that Hall and Florida basketball Coach Norm Sloan used a little-known expense account to ring up $41,000 in purchases of golf sweaters and pistachio nuts, among other things. Some of the players told the grand jury they received money from Sloan and assistant Monte Towe. Sloan, Towe and two other assistants resigned in October 1989 in the wake of mail fraud and perjury charges.
  • In September 1990, the NCAA imposed two years' probation on the Gators for violations dating back to 1985 under Sloan. The Gators' 1987 and 1988 NCAA Tournament appearances were erased from the record books due to Maxwell being retroactively declared ineligible; Maxwell had admitted to taking money from agents without Sloan's knowledge. Sloan had also purchased a plane ticket to Boston for Maxwell in the summer of 1987 so that Maxwell could serve as a counselor at a basketball camp. Two years earlier, one of Sloan's assistants had allowed a recruit's mother to use the return leg of the recruit's airline ticket to return home after the recruit enrolled in summer school. In the NCAA's view, this amounted to the university paying for the travel expenses of recruits and players. It also harshly criticized Sloan, finding that he had engaged in unethical conduct by paying Maxwell's airfare.
Pistachios? Those bastards.
 
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Covering UF was such fun during the late '80s and early '90s:
  • Vernon Maxwell, now with the San Antonio Spurs, said he bought and used both crack and powder cocaine during his final three basketball seasons at Florida: 1985-86, 1986-87 and 1987-88. The Gators advanced to the NCAA Tournament in 1987 and `88. Defense attorney George F. Schafer, representing Scott, asked Maxwell how he got the money to buy cocaine from Scott while he was on attending Florida on a grant-in-aid. ``I`m sure everybody knows,`` Maxwell testified. ``The people at the University of Florida paid me. I had a sports agent who paid me."
  • Former University of Florida basketball star Dwayne Schintzius says that in the six months after he quit the school's team, a UF booster paid for four encounters the two of them had with prostitutes in Gainesville. In a rambling, 25-minute, tape-recorded statement given during a state prostitution investigation last fall, Schintzius, who now plays for the San Antonio Spurs of the NBA, said under oath that he had sex with a prostitute in one bed while booster Bobby McKibbin had sex with another. He said the two repeated the sessions on at least three occasions, usually after evenings of heavy drinking.
  • Football Coach Galen Hall made illegal payments to assistant coaches from 1986 to 1988 and to a player in 1987 — both violations of NCAA rules — and resigned in 1989.
  • On Oct. 16, 1989, quarterback Kyle Morris and three other Gator football players were suspended for betting on professional and college football games. The four did not bet on Florida games or on games involving Southeastern Conference teams.
  • In December 1989, it was disclosed that Hall and Florida basketball Coach Norm Sloan used a little-known expense account to ring up $41,000 in purchases of golf sweaters and pistachio nuts, among other things. Some of the players told the grand jury they received money from Sloan and assistant Monte Towe. Sloan, Towe and two other assistants resigned in October 1989 in the wake of mail fraud and perjury charges.
  • In September 1990, the NCAA imposed two years' probation on the Gators for violations dating back to 1985 under Sloan. The Gators' 1987 and 1988 NCAA Tournament appearances were erased from the record books due to Maxwell being retroactively declared ineligible; Maxwell had admitted to taking money from agents without Sloan's knowledge. Sloan had also purchased a plane ticket to Boston for Maxwell in the summer of 1987 so that Maxwell could serve as a counselor at a basketball camp. Two years earlier, one of Sloan's assistants had allowed a recruit's mother to use the return leg of the recruit's airline ticket to return home after the recruit enrolled in summer school. In the NCAA's view, this amounted to the university paying for the travel expenses of recruits and players. It also harshly criticized Sloan, finding that he had engaged in unethical conduct by paying Maxwell's airfare.
Pistachios? Those bastards.

Aaron Hernandez killed a man. At least one... most likely three... possibly more.