Gun-toting U.S. Representative Boebert aims to pack more than her lunch
on D.C. streets
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[January 05, 2021]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Newly elected
Representative Lauren Boebert, who has vowed to carry her Glock pistol
when she is at work in the U.S. Capitol, has so far failed to fulfill
that promise and earned a rebuke on Monday from the D.C. police chief.
The Republican congresswoman, 34, will be "subjected to the same
penalties as anyone else caught on a District of Columbia street
carrying a firearm unlawfully," Police Chief Robert Contee told a news
conference on security measures this week as the city girds for a string
of protests by supporters of outgoing President Donald Trump.
Boebert had traveled the 1,800 miles (2,900 km) from her home in Rifle,
Colorado, to Washington and boasted on Sunday, her first day as a newly
sworn-in member of the highly secured U.S. Congress: "I will carry my
firearms in DC and in Congress."
The self-described "5-foot tall, 100-pound" member of the House of
Representatives backed up that pledge, saying she intends to protect her
Second Amendment right to bear arms and that of her constituents - even
if things in the nation's capital are not done quite the same way as in
Rifle, where she operates the Shooters Grill restaurant.
But Boebert has quickly found that promises are sometimes difficult to
keep in Washington.
Two days into the new, 117th Congress, Boebert has reported to work
minus the Glock, according to an aide who asked not to be identified.
Never mind that Boebert, who has also made supportive statements about
the online conspiracy theory known as "QAnon," posted a video on Twitter
in which she reaches for her Glock semi-automatic pistol, placing it in
a holster on her hip. The video then cuts to her striding down a street
that appears to be in the city of Washington and then across the U.S.
Capitol grounds.
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Construction for the upcoming presidential inauguration ceremony is
seen outside of the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, U.S.,
December 28, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo
"I don't go to work in a motorcade or armored car," Boebert said,
describing Washington as one of the most dangerous cities in the
nation. "I am my best security."
That may be so. But the District of Columbia for years has had tough
handgun controls and open carry is illegal. Similarly, firearms are
generally prohibited on the grounds of the Capitol.
Members of Congress are allowed to have guns, however, in their
congressional offices, according to a House source. That policy was
mainly intended to let lawmakers display ceremonial weapons on their
walls, the source added.
Boebert's aide said she and a posse of other House members would
soon propose changing the Democratic-controlled chamber's rules so
that she can pack her Glock wherever and whenever she wants.
U.S. Capitol Police, which enforces the law and congressional rules
across the Capitol grounds, did not immediately respond to a request
for comment.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan and Jonathan Landay; Editing by Scott
Malone and Peter Cooney)
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