On Tue, 21 Sep 2004 23:50:40 -0500, Robert Woolley wrote:

>This doesn't specify any conduct which one is required to conform to or
>refrain from in order to be in the designated areas. It seems, rather, to
>allow complete exclusion of unauthorized persons. Further, I doubt that,
>e.g., a campaign speech site is designated as a "residence" or "office." It
>appears to me that this is for, e.g., hotels that the president is staying
>at, or major portions thereof.

I think you're right, and one of the links says that the Senate Report (many 
years old) supports your comments; HOWEVER, recent media coverage of the 
"pre-jail" at the DNC in Boston suggests that understanding "is no longer 
operable."

Other recent media coverage of arrests has said, summarized and restated, 
that the Secret Service gave oral notice to protestors that permission to be 
within the restricted area had been withdrawn, the restricted area being 
defined by the Secret Service as pretty much wherever the protestors were.

Along with you, I'd appreciate an update from anyone who has managed to stay 
current with this part of the law.  

The other thought I have is that the statute and the regulations are careful 
to say that state and local law are not preempted.  So if the protestors 
argue with the Secret Service, they are arrested for disturbing the peace.

The extension to your original question about licensed firearms would be that 
if the agent says "no," then the answer is "no.  I recall a news article 
several years ago about a licensed/authorized carrier (he might have been 
some kind of judicial officer) who was briefly detained when he was somewhere 
back in the crowd at a presidential appearance.  Poor judgment on his part, 
perhaps, but in the absence of formally designated restricted areas and/or 
metal detectors hardly a crime.  Or so I would think.




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