Calif. Lawmaker Cited After TSA Finds Loaded Gun
Topics: From the Wires, News
FILE -- In this April 4, 2011 file photo is Assemblyman Tim Donnelly, R-Twin Peaks, in Sacramento, Calif. Donnelly, who previously sought the right to carry a loaded weapon inside the state Capitol has been cited for trying to bring a loaded handgun onto a Sacramento-bound flight. Transportation Security Administration spokesman Nico Melendez says Donnelly had a Colt .45 with four rounds in it inside his carry-on luggage at Ontario International Airport. He says another magazine with five rounds also was in Donnelly's carry-on bag. The lawmaker was passing through a security checkpoint at 6:45 a.m. Wednesday. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)(Credit: AP)SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A Republican state legislator who is an outspoken advocate for gun rights was cited Wednesday for trying to bring a loaded handgun onto a flight.
California Assemblyman Tim Donnelly was detained after a Colt .45 with four rounds was discovered inside his carry-on bag as he passed through a screening machine at Ontario International Airport, said Transportation Security Administration spokesman Nico Melendez.
Another magazine with five rounds was in Donnelly’s carry-on bag at the airport, which is 35 miles east of Los Angeles, Melendez said.
Donnelly, a self-proclaimed tea party Republican who lives in the Southern California mountain community of Twin Peaks, said he inadvertently left the gun in his briefcase.
He said he had it close by because of death threats he has received since he began spearheading a petition drive for a referendum to overturn a recent state law that allows illegal immigrant college students to apply for public financial aid.
He told reporters at the state Capitol that he placed the gun in the briefcase to hide it from his wife.
“I didn’t want her to see that I had my firearm out because we have received death threats with what I’ve been working on,” he said. “So I do tend to always be armed. The issue is strictly one that I completely forgot, coming back to work this morning, that it was in that briefcase.”
Donnelly does not have a permit from the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department to carry a concealed weapon, department spokeswoman Jodi Miller said. That is the law enforcement agency that has jurisdiction over the area in which Donnelly lives.
Donnelly did not respond earlier when reporters asked if he had a concealed weapons permit, and his office did not immediately return a phone message later Wednesday seeking comment on that particular issue.
Any charges for failing to have such a permit would have to come from the agency involved in the original incident, Miller said. Ontario Airport Police Sgt. Belinda Nettles said in an email that “to my knowledge the possession of a loaded firearm is the only charge.”
State lawmakers do not have any special exemption that would allow them to carry concealed weapons without a permit, said John Vigna, a spokesman for the Assembly Speaker’s office.




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