A couple of events prompted this post.  First, as I was driving to work last week, I saw a car sporting an "Insured by Smith & Wesson" bumper sticker.  Perhaps this will officially out me as an employment law nerd, but, being that it was on a vehicle, this bumper sticker made me think of Florida’s Bring Gun to Work, which I’ve posted about before.  Interestingly (scarily?), that law (Fla. Stat. 790.251) is one of the most searched terms on this blog.

Then, as those of you in this area have undoubtedly heard, there was an incident in Naples where an Ave Maria School of Law student was arrested for attempted murder, after allegedly threatening to shoot and even shooting at two fellow law students. This story has received widespread media coverage.  Of course the local papers like the News-Press and Naples Daily News have covered it with multiple articles, but it was even picked up by national legal publications like the ABA Journal (article) and top legal blog Above the Law(article).

How is this relevant to you and your workplace?  Interestingly (to the employment law dork, at least!), the Above the Law article quotes Ave Maria’s spokesperson, who said the school "doesn’t have a policy regarding students who are arrested."  Now, this guy was a student, not an employee, but this quote still raises a whole host of issues in my mind.  Should you have a policy on arrests?  Should you have a policy on workplace violence?  What if your employee is arrested for a violent act after hours, remains employed, then later commits a violent act at work?

While I could go on at length about these and other issues implicated here, I want to focus on a couple of things you, as business owners and HR professionals, can — and should — do to address violence at your workplace.

More after the jump.

Continue Reading Insured by Smith & Wesson: Revisiting Workplace Violence Issues

Most employers know about Florida’s “Bring Gun to Work” law, even if they do not agree with it.  The law, which is codified as Florida Statute Section 790.251 prevents employers (with a few exceptions) from banning firearms on their premises under certain conditions.  More specifically, if the employer has an employee with a concealed weapons