Man with gun stopped by security at N Carolina legislature

August 2, 2019 GMT
This undated image provided by the Wake City-County Bureau of Identification shows Abraham Zeiger, who was arrested Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at the North Carolina Legislative Building on misdemeanor counts of carrying a concealed gun and violating Legislative Building Rules. (AP Photo/Wake City-County Bureau of Identification)
This undated image provided by the Wake City-County Bureau of Identification shows Abraham Zeiger, who was arrested Wednesday, July 31, 2019 at the North Carolina Legislative Building on misdemeanor counts of carrying a concealed gun and violating Legislative Building Rules. (AP Photo/Wake City-County Bureau of Identification)

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A man faces charges of carrying a concealed handgun into North Carolina’s legislative building, which this year implemented airport-style security measures for people seeking to interact with lawmakers.

Abraham James Zeiger, 36, of Raleigh was charged with trying to carry the gun into the building on Wednesday, police records show. He sought to enter the building to speak to his legislator and didn’t realize he was carrying the gun, attorney Emily Gibson said in an email Friday.

“It is unfortunate that any malice be attributed to such an upstanding citizen who merely made an oversight,” Gibson wrote.

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The General Assembly’s police chief and its chief management officer didn’t return a call Friday seeking more details about the arrest.

Zeiger was stopped by officers who spotted a suspicious item as his bag passed through an X-ray scanner, The News & Observer of Raleigh reported . Officers found a 9 mm handgun and two magazines, each loaded with 15 bullets, General Assembly Police Chief Martin Brock told the newspaper.

The arrest marked the first instance of a gun being found during the screening process at the entrance to the state’s legislative building, which hosts staff and legislative offices, hearing rooms and the chambers where the 50-member Senate and 120-member House meet.

Legislative activities were minimal this week as lawmakers try to overcome Gov. Roy Cooper’s veto of the two-year state budget. On Wednesday, House members discussed a commission to oversee the purchase and sale of milk and approved legislation to expand the requirement for adults to report claims of child sex abuse to the authorities.