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Interesting situation with ccw and alcohol sales. Need help

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lunchbox:

--- Quote from: 00BUCK on October 29, 2012, 03:12:36 PM ---Is the booze sold for on-site consumption? If not, then you can legally carry there - just as you can in a liquor store.

--- End quote ---
Thats my dilemma. I work in the production area behind the fence divide. On the other side of the fence we have a tasting room that does serve to the public part time. The only day the tasting room is open and I'm at work is Wednesday from 6pm-8pm. Other than that, the brewery is closed to the public. The fence is(by Nebraska definition) A business divide. The tasting room is in the distillery and technically a different company. All owned by the same LLC.

smitty81:

--- Quote from: 00BUCK on October 29, 2012, 03:12:36 PM ---Is the booze sold for on-site consumption? If not, then you can legally carry there - just as you can in a liquor store.

--- End quote ---
Hmm............I could be wrong here but I think your info is incorrect. This is word for word the state law.

"Establishment having a liquor license which derives over onehalf of its income from the sale of alcoholic liquor"

It does not say anything about on-site consumption....................you have to abide by the way the laws are written until fruther changes in the written law state otherwise.

Other states have it written out even fruther that you may carry in places where there is no on-site consumption but Nebraska's law isn't written like that.

Can anyone confirm one way or the other?

smitty81:

--- Quote from: lunchbox on October 29, 2012, 04:29:33 PM ---Thats my dilemma. I work in the production area behind the fence divide. On the other side of the fence we have a tasting room that does serve to the public part time. The only day the tasting room is open and I'm at work is Wednesday from 6pm-8pm. Other than that, the brewery is closed to the public. The fence is(by Nebraska definition) A business divide. The tasting room is in the distillery and technically a different company. All owned by the same LLC.

--- End quote ---


I would say that according to state law, your SOL. You can however keep it in your vehicle.

bullit:
PRIVATE PROPERTY..PRIVATE PROPERTY...He is an employee on his companies private property. No different from you pr I chugging down the suds on our couch at home with our gun stuffed in our pocket. By the way I don't do this personally.  Open carry if it makes youto feel better and your owner is cool with it.

smitty81:

--- Quote from: bullit on October 29, 2012, 08:16:43 PM ---PRIVATE PROPERTY..PRIVATE PROPERTY...He is an employee on his companies private property. No different from you pr I chugging down the suds on our couch at home with our gun stuffed in our pocket. By the way I don't do this personally.  Open carry if it makes youto feel better and your owner is cool with it.

--- End quote ---


I guess you can do what you want. If you owned a bar and you were working while you were carrying, its still breaking the law private property or not. Just because you own the business or work there doesn't exempt you from the law. An example would be doctors, just because they work at the hospital doesn't make them exempt from the law.

Law states "Establishment having a liquor license which derives over one half of its income from the sale of alcoholic liquor"

Does not state any stipulations about private property or consumption at said business. Your adding your own stipulations and reading to far into the written law.

It's one thing for an applebees to post no weapons but Nebraska state law takes a step further and basically says no concealed carry at an establishment having a liquor license which derives over one half of its income from the sale of alcoholic liquor. Dosen't matter if the owner says it's ok because the state already said it's against the law.

Your home is quite different then out in the public rather you own the business or not.

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