AMonger
Veteran Expediter
The DOT's opinion on the matter is irrelevant. It's a law enforcement issue. (Yes, I know the DOT are considered law enforcement in some states).My suggestion is to ask a DOT cop what a concealed weapon is, and whether you're able to keep an unloaded shotgun in the truck.
There's the Federal Firearms Owner's Protection Act, which guarantees your right to transport an UNLOADED firearm from a place it's legal to another place it's legal, as long as it's inaccessible to the driver and separate from the ammunition. From Wikipedia:Again, I contend that you can. Either a shotgun or rifle is legal to transport in a truck.
"Safe Passage" provision
One of the law's provisions was that persons traveling from one place to another cannot be incarcerated for a firearms offense in a state that has strict gun control laws if the traveler is just passing through (short stops for food and gas) and the firearms and ammunition are not immediately accessible, unloaded and, in the case of a vehicle without a compartment separate from the driver’s compartment, in a locked container.[6]
An example of this would be that someone driving from Virginia to a competition in Vermont with a locked hard case containing an unloaded handgun and a box of ammunition in the trunk could not be prosecuted in New Jersey or New York City for illegal possession of a handgun provided that they did not stop in New Jersey or New York for an extended period of time.)
That, of course, would make it useless in an emergency.
Carry of a loaded firearm in a vehicle, including a rifle or shotgun, varies state to state. I no longer live in Nebraska, so it might have changed, but when I did, it was unlawful to carry a loaded shotgun in a vehicle. The explanation I was given was that a shotgun would give you more firepower than the police. The state sees that as a bad thing, unfortunately. I was an armored car guard at the time, and we had two of them in the truck all the time. (Cue Judas Priest: "Breaking the law! Breaking the law!")
I have no idea how many states ban shotguns in vehicles, but more than a few, I'd guess, and those that don't ban them have differing laws on how they may be carried.
As has been pointed out, keeping it visible will all but guarantee that you'll be an ex-shotgun owner after you leave your truck or van