seamusTX wrote:DSARGE wrote:Does the presence of a detector alone make it "off limits"?
No, but if they tell you to turn around and leave, you are obligated to do so. Operators of private events can refuse admittance for all sorts of things like not wearing a shirt or having "gang insignia."
People can argue ad infinitum about publicly owned venues, but you're not going to win this one on the ground.
- Jim
Another incident was argued in Seguin at the KingRanger Theatre. For some reason, this small town theatre has had its share of folks trying to do things the management doesn't allow.
For instance, a few ladies were openly breast-feeding infants not long ago, and the theatre management asked them to stop or stop and leave. The grandmother pulled a card out of her purse quoting a "Texas Law" that allows mothers to breast feed in public. She was excited and threatened some type of legal recourse.
I read this story in the Seguin Gazette and contacted the theatre management. I commented to them that I believe the law does not apply to privately owned businesses and that the texas breast-feeding law was meant to protect breast-feeding mothers on public property. I suppose the only question would be, what, when, and where is public property?
The breast-feeding women got really arrogant with King Ranger Theatre, posted news articles in the Seguin Gazette, and threatened a protest but the theatre ownership won this one because it is private property. King Ranger told them, If you come onto our property, you must buy a theatre ticket. The women were too cheap to do that. They also knew that they were going to be escorted off the property by the police department.
This is just another example supporting what you are saying Jim. When management of private property asks someone to leave, it is a good idea although it might sometimes be a bad management decision.
I could not help but write the Editor of the Seguin Gazette and side with the King Ranger Theatre on the basis that it is private property, not public property.
Hoppes