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  • 5
    Feb
    2013
    5:36pm, EST

    Police: 5th grader in custody after brandishing toy gun

    By Alyssa Moody, NBCWashington.com

    Police charged a fifth grade student in Alexandria, Va., with brandishing a weapon during a bus ride home from Douglas MacArthur Elementary School on Monday.

    The 10-year-old student apparently showed a phony weapon to his peers during the afternoon bus ride, which prompted an immediate investigation by school officials, Alexandria police said.

    Alexandria police and school administrators stopped the student for questioning as he entered the school building on Tuesday morning. Officers discovered a toy replica weapon with an orange tip in the child's backpack, police said, and the student was immediately taken into custody. No students were harmed during the incident.

    "The safety of our students is always our first concern,” said Superintendent Morton Sherman. “We appreciate the quick response and action by our police. The student is suspended from school. The school division will complete its investigation in cooperation with the police as we consider further disciplinary action, including expulsion. As always, we encourage direct communication from parents, including personal phone calls."

    27 comments

    We all understand the need for safety first but that doesn't mean we put sanity last.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: virginia, school, guns, weapon, nbcwashington
  • 5
    Mar
    2012
    5:52pm, EST

    Colorado court: Students can carry guns on college campuses

    By msnbc.com news services

    DENVER -- Gun-rights advocates won an important victory on Monday after the Colorado Supreme Court ruled that students and employees with concealed weapon permits can carry handguns on University of Colorado campuses, overturning a ban by the school's regents.

    "We're disappointed in this instance that the State Supreme Court ruled that the regents don't have the statutory and constitutional authority to govern our campuses,” Ken McConnellogue, vice president of communications for CU, said. “We believe they are in the best position to make determinations about campus safety and the safety of our students, faculty, staff and visitors."


    Gun-rights advocates had challenged the university policy that was adopted in 1994, arguing that the university's governing board had superseded state gun laws.

    The justices agreed, noting that the state's concealed-carry law, passed by the state legislature, trumped the university's policy.

    The court said state lawmakers had passed the concealed weapons law to provide a uniform statewide law because of "widespread inconsistencies" among jurisdictions about how to enforce gun laws.

    "CU is going to have to fall in line and follow the state law just like Colorado State has been doing since 2003," said Jim Manley, an attorney for the Mountain States Legal Foundation, which represented Students for Concealed on Campus. "The problem with CU's argument is that Colorado State has been doing the opposite. They've been allowing licensed concealed carry on campus for almost a decade and they've had no problem, no safety issues."

    The State Supreme Court decision remands the case back to a lower court and it may take several weeks before CU is forced to drop its ban.

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    25 comments

    That is a good thing. One legally armed person in a classroom can save the lives of all of them if the SHTF.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: campus, guns, weapons, weapon, cu, concealed, nra, permits

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