Montana Honor Student Faces Expulsion for Hunting Rifle In Car

<p>rr, Where do you live? Encourage your son to move to south Texas when he’s ready to marry, we have a lot of gals with a passion for hunting!</p>

<p>Idaho, pugmadkate. He’s got a good bird dog, if that helps…</p>

<p>She needs to contact the NRA their attornies can help her out of this one. Especially since she was the one that told the administration she had to gun.</p>

<p>I am a life member of the NRA. I am going to see if I can find a link to send her parents or attorney an email.</p>

<p>Times sure have changed. and IMO not for the better.</p>

<p>Ok I just got off the phone with the legal department at the NRA in Washington. They are going to attempt to contact the girls family as soon as possible.</p>

<p>I noticed on the article that she has an attorney. But believe me the NRA knows how to handle these cases.</p>

<p>We had a day my senior year of high school where they brought in k9 units and searched all the parking lots and all the lockers in the entire school-- which I think shocked most of us, there are drugs everywhere including our school but it’s not known for having a big drug culture any more than any other suburban high school. The big story from that day (aside from the discovery of a drug dealing construction worker) was that one of the teachers was escorted out of class by the police because they had found a rifle and a knife in his car. There may have been some kind of discrete disciplinary action by the school but so far as I ever heard it was understood that it was just a misunderstanding. Makes me wonder if a student in our school would have been granted the same reprieve.</p>

<p>Gator4evor:</p>

<p>NRA and gun rights (however you define that) are one thing.</p>

<p>Keeping elementary, middle, and high schools gun-free is another.</p>

<p>Can’t you see the difference?</p>