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NM: Are New Mexico Gun Bans at Rest Areas Legal?
Gun Watch ^ | 5 August, 2015 | Dean Weingarten

Posted on 08/06/2015 5:14:44 AM PDT by marktwain


When I crossed the border into New Mexico from Arizona on I-40 this summer, I stopped at the Manuelito Visitor Center/Rest Area.  I saw the rest area rules and read them.

The line at the bottom of paragraph 2. said:

 ALL FIREARMS MUST REMAIN IN VEHICLES.


New Mexico has a strong pre-emption law, enforced by their Supreme Court.  Rest areas, according to handgunlaw.com(pdf) are not a prohibited area.   From the map below, it seems that the Manuelito rest area, which is on I-40 across the border from Arizona, on the way to Gallup, is not in an Indian reservation.


The sign seems fairly new, and the visitor center was opened in May of 2008. 


Rest areas can be a dangerous place for travelers, especially single women.  In 1998, two local Arizona organizations, Brassroots and S.A.F.E., joined forces to protest the illegal signs at the Sacaton rest area near Tucson.   Within a month, Arizona DPS employees were busy removing the prohibition from Arizona rest area signs.   The bad signs at the Arizona rest stops had identical wording to the New Mexico signs in paragraph 2, where the prohibition on firearms outside of the vehicle is listed.



Arizona continues to correct the odd old/bad sign that is found in place.

Recently, Second Amendment activists fought the Alabama Department of Transportation, won the support of Governor  Bentley, and had illegal "No Weapon" signs taken down from Alabama rest areas.

The similarity of the signs makes me wonder if someone in New Mexico made a conscious decision to ban firearms in rest areas, or if they simply copied a design for rest area signs.

A quick search of the New Mexico DOT web site did not come up with any reference to rest area rules.

I contacted the NM DOT.  The person that I talked to knew that licensed concealed carry was legal in New Mexico, and that people did not need a license for open carry.    They were uncertain where the wording had come from, but agreed that it might have been something that was historical and simply continued.  They agreed to pass the query along.  I expect to hear back before too long.

Anyone who has pictures of signs at other New Mexico rest areas, please let me know so that we can document them.


©2015 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice is included.
Link to Gun Watch


TOPICS: Government; Politics; Society
KEYWORDS: banglist; gunban; nm; restarea
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To: crz

When you only have 6 shots to work with, you tend to make them count. The high cap semi allows one to lay down suppressive fire however which is known to be useful in combat.


21 posted on 08/06/2015 7:24:48 AM PDT by RC one
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To: RC one

This was long before M9’s or Glocks were even thought of. Yes, shot placement was much more critical with 6 or 7 shots


22 posted on 08/06/2015 7:49:32 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$ (Section 20.)
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To: marktwain
Did a bureaucrat just use one state's sign as a template for the other? Are there other states that have signs banning guns in rest areas?

Could well be that the sign manufacturers used the general layout of the first such sign ordered by one state as a template for later orders from other governmental customers. Slight changes in the wording of state statutes and the like would be necessary, of course, but you'd be surprised at how common that practice is among government equipment suppliers.

23 posted on 08/06/2015 8:19:14 AM PDT by archy
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