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The Range
Law & Order
Employers can forbid guns, a judge rules, issues an injunction against OK law.
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<blockquote data-quote="Pepper46" data-source="post: 312764" data-attributes="member: 1684"><p>Michael,</p><p>You are correct as far as you went.</p><p></p><p>Police need probable cause, but the Supreme Court, has ruled that probable cause needs to be supported by fact, not <em>mere</em> suspicion.</p><p></p><p>That does not allow them to come onto the companies propery and do carte blanch searches at the companies request.</p><p></p><p>If the item is not in plain sight, from the outside of the veh, no search is valid without a warrant, which must be supported by affidavit of the requesting party citing cause and pleading for the warrant to be issued.</p><p></p><p>In a nut shell, they can't have an arbitrary witch hunt.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Pepper46, post: 312764, member: 1684"] Michael, You are correct as far as you went. Police need probable cause, but the Supreme Court, has ruled that probable cause needs to be supported by fact, not [I]mere[/I] suspicion. That does not allow them to come onto the companies propery and do carte blanch searches at the companies request. If the item is not in plain sight, from the outside of the veh, no search is valid without a warrant, which must be supported by affidavit of the requesting party citing cause and pleading for the warrant to be issued. In a nut shell, they can't have an arbitrary witch hunt. [/QUOTE]
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