Friends, this is the kind of thing that just makes you shake your head in disgust. With all of the jew activist judges out there, largely Clinton appointees, we should be supporting judges who are fair, impartial and armed, not persecuting them. What is the world coming to when a judge isn't even allowed to do his Godly duty? Have the sodomites taken over in Brother Jeb's state too?
By mentoring, I hope they mean that Judge Hauversburk will be mentoring the other judges in Florida...Maybe some Godly target practice out behind the prison would inspire a few confessions from the terrorist scum being held there.

Judge gets mentoring after bringing loaded gun to courtroom
PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP) -- A first-year Bay County judge was ordered to accept mentoring after bringing a loaded gun into his courtroom and announcing he was "locked and loaded."
County Judge Michael Hauversburk said he brought the handgun to court because he was frustrated that a defendant facing a felony parole violation was being tried for a separate misdemeanor charge in a courtroom with inadequate security, The News Herald reported for Sunday editions.
According to the courtroom's recording system, Hauversburk told the defense attorney he was "locked and loaded," then said: "Tell your client that the deputies have certain constraints about the rules of engagement, but I do not. If he does anything that I see as a threat to me or anybody in this courtroom, then I'm going to fire first and ask questions later."
Hauversburk told the newspaper that he overreacted. This year is Hauversburk's first on the bench.
"I got frustrated when I shouldn't have," he said.
The July 24 incident was not reported to Chief Circuit Judge William Wright until last month. Wright said Hauversburk assured him it was an isolated incident and accepted mentoring.
"He made the wrong decision," Wright said. "All new judges have a learning curve they have to go through, and it takes a while to get adapted to the system."
Judges are permitted by state law to carry concealed weapons
PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP) -- A first-year Bay County judge was ordered to accept mentoring after bringing a loaded gun into his courtroom and announcing he was "locked and loaded."
County Judge Michael Hauversburk said he brought the handgun to court because he was frustrated that a defendant facing a felony parole violation was being tried for a separate misdemeanor charge in a courtroom with inadequate security, The News Herald reported for Sunday editions.
According to the courtroom's recording system, Hauversburk told the defense attorney he was "locked and loaded," then said: "Tell your client that the deputies have certain constraints about the rules of engagement, but I do not. If he does anything that I see as a threat to me or anybody in this courtroom, then I'm going to fire first and ask questions later."
Hauversburk told the newspaper that he overreacted. This year is Hauversburk's first on the bench.
"I got frustrated when I shouldn't have," he said.
The July 24 incident was not reported to Chief Circuit Judge William Wright until last month. Wright said Hauversburk assured him it was an isolated incident and accepted mentoring.
"He made the wrong decision," Wright said. "All new judges have a learning curve they have to go through, and it takes a while to get adapted to the system."
Judges are permitted by state law to carry concealed weapons

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