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sugar_in_your_tea ,

As a kid… defeated locks

I watch LockPickingLawyer on YouTube, and it seems every gun lock/safe has some gaping security issue, and many that I see at stores that haven’t been covered look like they’d have similar issues.

So until I find something that LPL would approve for use around kids, I’m not buying a handgun.

That said, I’ll probably get a small rifle soon (probably 22lr) that I can store in the attic. My kids could find it, it would take a lot of effort and it isn’t that interesting. I mostly want it to teach my kids to shoot “real” guns (they’ve shot BB guns) and maybe go hunt some rabbits. I may also get a 22lr pistol, but that’s a bit higher on the “cool” factor and thus higher risk.

If I find a lock that I can trust, I might pick up a 9mm or .357 for personal use. I’ve taken my wife shooting, and she really liked it, so I’d like to take her out to fed land and shoot sometimes. If I did, I’d get a CCW (unnecessary in my state, but necessary for travel) and carry sometimes when I go out to get comfortable with it. But the lock comes first.

egress and alarm with one action?

Our muster point for most emergencies is right out front of our building, in full view of the front doors and windows where the shooter is likely to be. Our active shooter muster point (blue light alarm) is across the street behind the building in a parking garage (can see from the rear balcony, but there’s a place to hide).

If I trigger the fire alarm, people will go right into the shooter’s path. If someone else pulls it (far more likely), I would go right out front into the shooter’s path. The alarm would also increase the shooter’s stress level, which could be the difference between them shooting and not.

having trouble visualizing

It’s an office building built into a hill. The front is ground level and the rear has a ledge/balcony about 2 floors above the rear ground level that runs the length of the building in either direction. One side of the building has a parking garage, and the other has the truck loading zone down one level. Here’s some crappy ASCII art (top is front, I work bottom right, t is truck loading, p is parking garage, XX is building, and | and - are the railing).


<span style="color:#323232;">t | XX p
</span><span style="color:#323232;">  |---|
</span>

I work near the parking garage, and the no-alarm exit is ~2/3 of the way across the building toward the truck loading zone. From there, I can either run back to the parking garage (lots of windows), or toward the truck loading zone (some windows, drop onto cement).

since it would be illegal

It’s not a gun free zone, it’s merely against company policy and probably landlord policy. There is no posted signage, but I did need to sign something when I started acknowledging that I understand the rules. So violation wouldn’t result in a criminal case, but it could result in my termination and/or official trespass order.

It’s possible some people here carry (constitutional carry state), but given company policy, that number is probably pretty low. I would certainly risk violating that rule if I believed there was an elevated risk, like we fired someone over culture fit reasons (I’d probably just WFH honestly), otherwise I’d comply.

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