Does your workplace get bomb threats? Then maybe don't keep guns there.

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Suck My Glock

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Guy who had an office at a hospital kept a bunch of guns in his office closet. A bomb threat was called in. Bomb-sniffing canines searched the hospital. They hit on his closet. This was New Jersey,...so straight to jail, do not pass GO.

https://www.nj.com/hudson/2022/08/cache-of-guns-found-in-hudson-regional-hospital-closet-marketing-director-arrested.html
 
So, it was because of the type of firearm and mags, not that they were actually in the hospital.

The article reads a bit funky. One part says they were in "unsecured storage", while later it says it was in a locked office. He was the Director of Marketing, but was not an employee. Just a consultant.
 
XJThrottle said:
So, it was because of the type of firearm and mags, not that they were actually in the hospital.

The article reads a bit funky. One part says they were in "unsecured storage", while later it says it was in a locked office. He was the Director of Marketing, but was not an employee. Just a consultant.

The point is - bomb-sniffing dogs are also gun-sniffing dogs. No matter where you are or what you're doing, or how legal you are or aren't,...consider what would happen if some nitro-sniffing canine came poking around your space.
 
Not really, they're ammo/powder sniffing dogs. If you're really that paranoid, store the ammo separately from the (cleaned) guns. Problem solved!
 
kptaylor said:
Not really, they're ammo/powder sniffing dogs. If you're really that paranoid, store the ammo separately from the (cleaned) guns. Problem solved!

A distinction without a difference. The only way your gun doesn't smell of nitrate residue to a dog trained to look for it is if it has never been fired or is recently cleaned. (And I know y'all have filthy guns.)
 
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