Posted June 19, 2017 8:51 am by Comments

By Chris Eger

A vendor who has been booking gun shows at the fairgrounds for more than 30 years has lost another round in his suit against the venue over their new policy against such events. (Photo: WKRN)
The Tennessee Court of Appeals last week sided with the Metro Nashville Fair Board’s decision restricting gun shows at its venue.
In a 3-0 opinion handed down last Thursday, the court rejected the challenge by gun rights advocates with the Tennessee Firearms Association and long-time gun show event organizer, Bill Goodman Gun and Knife Shows. In a 15-page ruling, the court held that neither plaintiff had standing to question whether the fair board was violating the law, and that the grounds were recreational in nature, thus skirting state preemption laws.
“Making a decision to allow or disallow a gun show at a government-owned recreational facility is a power specifically recognized ‘by state law,’” said Court of Appeals Judge Brandon O. Gibson. “It is not an unauthorized or preempted de facto local limitation on the transfer of firearms.”
Goodman had been renting fair space since the 1970s, but in 2015 ran afoul of local gun control advocates who pressured Metro to clamp down on the events. The show organizer argued

Source: Guns.com

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