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Gun-Ho! How I learned to stop worrying and love carrying my gun

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

news_cover1-2_13.jpgDon’t miss Andisheh Nouraee’s first-person account of packing heat around Atlanta. A law that took effect on July 1 allows gun permit holders to take their weapons into restaurants (including places such as the Earl and Manuel’s Tavern) and on MARTA.

Our own Andisheh happens to have a gun permit and volunteered to wear his gun on his hip for several excursions around town, including a MARTA train and a trip to Target to buy deodorant. Just to see what would happen. He even went to dinner with about 50 gun supporters, all of whom were openly carrying,

(Photo by Joeff Davis)

Brady Campaign weighs in on guns at Atlanta’s airport

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

The city’s stand on no guns at the Hartsfield/Jackson Airport — despite a new state law that seems to allow folks to carry guns up until the security check point — has not only garnered national press. It has caught the attention of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, the organization founded by former Reagan Press Secretary James Brady.

Paul Helmke, president of the Brady Campaign, issued the following statement:

“I want to praise the sensible managers at Atlanta’s Hartsfield International Airport, for putting public safety first in declaring yesterday that they will strenuously enforce the firearms rule in that facility. These public servants are doing their job and should be congratulated for that.

“The Atlanta airport is one of the busiest in the world. Seven years ago, our nation learned what can happen when airport security is breached. None of us will ever forget the consequences.

“The gun lobby leaders in Georgia should be ashamed of themselves for being willing to trade on our nation’s safety for the purposes of advancing their extremist agenda.”

Morning headlines

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

WITHDRAWAL METHOD: Third of three candidates for president of Georgia State withdraws his name from consideration, leaving no active candidates.

STORK LIFT: South Georgia’s endangered wood stork is making a comeback, having doubled the number of nests found last year, according to the DNR’s Wildlife Resources Division.

DOT: Settles sexual harassment charges against two former board members for nearly $150,000.

PACK LIGHT, PACK HEAT: State Rep. Tim Bearden thinks better of bringing a gun to pick up his family, but Georgia Carry continues his crusade, suing the city, Mayor Shirley Franklin and Hartsfield-Jackson GM Ben DeCosta for the right to bear arms at the airport. Also, giddy gun carriers congregated Tuesday at a Cobb County restaurant to mark the first day they could do so.

STUDY: Finds Georgia needs to raise college graduation rates.

T.I.: Andrew Young is working to mold the rapper into a different kind of King.

VOTER REGISTRATION: Continues to grow in Georgia. But don’t take my word for it — this AccessNorthGa news graphic answers all your questions.

Guns in the airport: A lawyer’s perspective

Wednesday, July 2nd, 2008

The pro-gun group GeorgiaCarry.org filed suit in federal court yesterday claiming the city of Atlanta cannot ban state firearms license holders from carrying weapons in the Hartsfield-Jackson terminal.

Last night I spoke to the group’s president, attorney Edward Stone, who revealed one of the group’s possible legal strategies against the city.

As you might (not) have read, yesterday Mayor Shirley Franklin and Hartsfield-Jackson General Manager Ben DeCosta said Atlanta is entitled to ban guns from the airport terminal, despite a new state law allowing firearms license holders to carry weapons while on public transportation.

Franklin and DeCosta say the new law does not apply to the airport because the airport is covered by state code 16-11-127 which restricts possession of weapons in public buildings and at public gatherings. (more…)

Airport is ‘gun-free zone’ say city leaders flanked by armed police

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Mayor Shirley Franklin and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport General Manger Ben DeCosta held a press conference at the airport’s atrium this morning to say that Georgia’s new gun law, which as of today allows state firearms license holders to carry weapons on public transit, in restaurants that serve alcohol, and in city and state parks, does not apply to the airport.

“There is no change at this airport,” said DeCosta, who explained that the airport is a city building and thus covered by state law 16-11-127 prohibiting people from carrying weapons in public buildings. “Hartsfield-Jackson is a gun-free zone” said DeCosta.

DeCosta’s statements were reiterated by City of Atlanta attorney Elizabeth Chandler and by Mayor Franklin, who added that no one needs to bring a gun to the airport for protection.

“You can come to the airport and be safe because there is law enforcement here,” said Franklin.

As for the rest of Atlanta, with its soaring crime rate and chronic police shortage, it’s every man for himself!

She didn’t actually say that last sentence. I’m inferring.

Morning headlines

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

A BRIDGE TOO FAR: Study shows that many Georgia bridges deemed “structurally deficient” by inspectors still go years before being repaired, often driving up the costs.

DYLAN: Popular sea turtle is released into the wild after nine years in captivity.

GINGREY DISCOVERS WATER: State Rep. Phil Gingrey took part in the Lake Allatoona Preservation Authority’s congressional cruise Monday, noting that the lake is “a real treasure” and has made him appreciate the importance of water: “After being in a level-four drought, you look at water the same way you look at gasoline.” True. The only difference is we couldn’t live without gasoline, silly.

TAKE YOUR GUNS TO TOWN: And on MARTA, to your business lunch and at the wildlife refuge, starting today. That’s still not enough for state Rep. Tim Bearden, though, who’s filing a federal lawsuit to prevent the city of Atlanta from banning guns at Hartsfield-Jackson, where he says he’ll be packing heat today when he goes to pick up his family.

NOT READY FOR MARTA: Clayton County Commission Chairman Eldrin Bell injures his hand firing a gun at a strip club owner’s family outing.

JOSHES: Hawks want and need to keep them, but they won’t come cheap.

OBAMA AND THE SOUTH: In a NYT op-ed today, Thomas Schaller writes that Obama can’t win Mississippi, Georgia or North Carolina, but maybe can win Virginia and Florida.

Morning headlines

Monday, June 30th, 2008

HERSH REALITY: Seymour Hersh writes in the New Yorker that the United States is covertly preparing the battlefield in Iran.

MUGABE: Sworn in as “president” of Zimbabwe following his “win” in the “election.”

UGA IV: Will be buried in Sanford Stadium in Athens today.

CUMBERLAND ISLAND: Wildfire has consumed more than 1,600 acres.

MARTA: Time flies when you’re having gun.

OBAMA: To visit Atlanta July 7, part of his campaign’s strategy to reclaim the South for Democrats.

WRECKLESS ABANDON: A leaking shrimping boat off the Savannah coast becomes the first ship destroyed under legislation passed last year allowing authorities to seize abandoned vessels.

Guns ride free on MARTA starting July 1

Friday, June 20th, 2008

Polish your Glocks, licensed firearm carriers. On July 1, your lifelong dream to legally carry a pistol on the city’s public-transit system will be realized. In uneasy anticipation of the event, MARTA’s trying to get the word out.

So sayeth the people-moving machine:

Georgia law prohibits the carrying of a pistol, revolver or other firearm on public transit unless a person has a valid firearms license to carry a gun. This license must be carried at any time that an individual is carrying a firearm on MARTA. MARTA police will strictly enforce all provisions of this law. Any individual found to be carrying a firearm without a permit will have it confiscated and will be issued a citation pursuant to Georgia law.

Ya hear that? You gotta have a license.

MARTA’s work rules strictly prohibit all employees, whether licensed or not, from the possession of any type of firearm while on MARTA property. This prohibition applies to employees’ vehicles while vehicles are parked on any Authority property designated as a secured employee parking area.

If you work for MARTA, no dice.

When taking MARTA to Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, customers need to be aware that firearms laws governing the Airport are different from those governing MARTA. Please see the Airport’s website to review their firearms regulations.

If you see something creepy, MARTA advises you to discreetly contact a staff member, press the emergency call button, or dial (404) 848-4911 or by pressing #MPD on any AT&T, Verizon, or Sprint/Nextel cellular phone. Blackberry users can press #673.

If you outlaw turkey sandwiches, only outlaws will have turkey sandwiches

Monday, May 19th, 2008

A friend of mine was ticketed on MARTA last week for sipping a beverage on a train.

He got me thinking — if I walk onto a MARTA train with a pistol on my belt and a turkey sandwich in my hand, I could only be cited by MARTA police for the sandwich.

The lobbyists for Big Sandwich need to get on this.

Morning headlines

Friday, May 16th, 2008

CHINA EARTHQUAKE RELIEF: Fourteen Atlanta Chinese organizations have banded together and will hold various on-site donation drives this weekend and next. Another 5.5-magnitude aftershock hit the China quake zone today, causing landslides.

MOTHER’S DAY TORNADOES: Damage in Georgia has already reached $100 million, may exceed $125 million. The tornadoes also caused environmental damage, such as an industrial park in McIntosh County that was leveled, leaking fuel, oil and acid into the soil.

SOUTH RISING: Record black voter turnout for Obama could loosen the GOP’s decades-long stranglehold on the South.

TRIGGER MORTIS: Now that guns are the new iPod in Georgia, police are gearing up for a trigger-happier public, especially now that we don’t have to hide our guns in our glove compartments while driving anymore.

BODIFORD: Can stay on the Brian Nichols case, despite comments he made to the Marietta Daily Journal shortly after the deadly shootings.

ATLANTA TRAVEL PROFILE: Aw shucks, St. Pete Times.

LIZARD MAN: After a mystery animal chews up the bumper of someone’s car in Sumter, S.C., residents assume what anyone would — Lizard Man. They’re also willing to consider Bigfoot as a suspect, though, as a “renowned Bigfoot hunter” tells the local paper that there are more than 3,500 “Bigfoot creatures” nationwide.

SUSPICIOUS PACKAGE: Closes Indian Creek MARTA station.

BRAIN TRUST: Scientists are studying the only three known hyperthymestics, or people with superhuman memories, to learn more about how memory works, hoping to help those with failing memories.

Sonny Perdue takes Georgia to the Old West with gun law

Thursday, May 15th, 2008

Gov. Sonny Perdue signed legislation yesterday that takes Georgia back to the days of the wild, wild west. Registered gun owners here can now take their weapons into public places, such as restaurants and MARTA and parks.

news_feature1-1_41.jpgPerdue’s spin is that the issue is headed to the courts regardless, and that it’s better to get it over with than to do a veto and have the General Assembly waste time next year squabbling over the issue all over again.

But that doesn’t satisfy critics, which include the parents of Professor Jamie Bishop, one of the 32 victims of the Virginia Tech massacre of April 16, 2007. It was the deadliest shooting rampage in U.S. history.

Michael and Jeri Bishop released a letter to Perdue this morning that takes the governor to task for signing the bill into law.

“How … could you possibly allow this bill — this unholy tangle of venomous snakes — to wriggle its way into law?” write Michael and Jeri Bishop.

Read their full statement after the jump.

(Photo by Joeff Davis)

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