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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. More than two years after Florida State University moved to ban concealed weapon permit holders from keeping ammunition in their cars while parked on campus property, an appeals court heard arguments Tuesday in a lawsuit alleging administrators violated state law.
What You Need To Know
More than two years ago, FSU banned ammunition from being stored in cars on campus
An appeals court heard arguments Tuesday in a lawsuit claming the school violated state law with the rule
Experts say the outcome of the lawsuit could have wide-ranging implications in Florida
The suit was filed by Florida Carry, a gun rights group, shortly after Tallahassee s First District Court of Appeal struck down a 2018 FSU policy that barred guns from being stored in parked cars. In the wake of the ruling, the university released a proposed student code of conduct that included a moratorium on ammunition.
âItâs nice to see that Commissioner Nikki Fried is taking time out of her vacation to send out an ill-informed, irresponsible letter on social media that prioritizes politics over helping Floridians who are interested in the vaccine. Frankly, she should be embarrassed to have signed this letter (letâs be honest â it was auto-penned), RPOF Executive Director Helen Aguirre Ferre said. âEither the Commissioner is asleep at the switch or she is intentionally sharing misinformation.
As Gov. Ron DeSantis liaison to the federal government s vaccine distribution operation, Moskowitz has secured an outsize volume of doses. For now, he says, the limiting factor isn t supply; it s the staffing required to administer the vaccines.