Watch the video at top of article. Gun is only identified as Sig, but says there are other instances with this model.
https://www.wcpo.com/news/local-news...ibextid=Zxz2cZ
This is 2 counties south of me.
Watch the video at top of article. Gun is only identified as Sig, but says there are other instances with this model.
https://www.wcpo.com/news/local-news...ibextid=Zxz2cZ
This is 2 counties south of me.
Formerly known as xpd54.
The opinions expressed in this post are my own and do not reflect the opinions or policies of my employer.
www.gunsnobbery.wordpress.com
Striking the window with a baton while holding a gun. Sounds like sympathetic reflex to me. Have they released video?
I’d forgotten about that one, there wasn’t much coverage locally.
Formerly known as xpd54.
The opinions expressed in this post are my own and do not reflect the opinions or policies of my employer.
www.gunsnobbery.wordpress.com
Occam's Razor.
I witnessed a sympathetic discharge on a buy-bust. The officer had approached the guy with his revolver out and when he tried to runnoft the officer grabbed him.
Kaboom! Right into the dirt.
I have a beautiful slo-mo memory of flame and smoke boiling out of that model 10, and the puff of dust where the bullet struck the ground.
Good times.
Formerly known as xpd54.
The opinions expressed in this post are my own and do not reflect the opinions or policies of my employer.
www.gunsnobbery.wordpress.com
Interesting report as folks have made a big deal out of trigger pull as a defining safety feature for various handguns. The DA/SA debate, 1911s with safeties that have to be removed as they have a light pull. The Glock trigger - then the NY Trigger - revolvers has being safer due to the heavier pull.
The human factors folks have reported for quite a few year that trips, yips, sympathetic squeezes, etc. overcame the supposedly safer heavier pulls on revolvers and DA semis.
A good reference is: Human Factors Issues in Handgun Safety and Forensics 1st Edition
by Hal W. Hendrick (Author), Paul Paradis (Author), Richard J. Hornick (Author)
and Force Science may have done some also. The conclusion was finger on trigger was the variance as compared to trigger pull.
Cloud Yeller of the Boomer Age
I remember years(decades) ago Ayoob citing a test that showed the convulsive squeeze to be in the neighborhood of 20 pounds.
"Keep your booger hook off the bang switch..."
But that takes more than a simple admonition, it takes training, practice, self monitoring and constant vigilance.
Ain't nobody got time for that!
After the aforementioned ND, the Narcotics captain(who had just come from the Academy) angrily said "He was told to keep his finger off the trigger!"
Yes. Yes he was. Told. In one part of one lecture.
My department had this identical incident occur in the early 90s. Buy bust, 2 undercover narcotics officers tried to arrest a very large dealer. He turned to run and one of the officers grabbed his collar with both hands to stop him.....one of which held his DA/SA 9mm. Shot went into the back of the unarmed dealers head, killing him.
There was of course huge "community uproar", but it evolved in an interesting way. The 2 officers, both African-American, with their lawyer attended a community meeting where they apologized for the mistake and expressed remorse. One of them, the non-shooter, became a member of the Nation of Islam a week later. All was forgiven, and the whole thing went away within a couple of weeks. They both continued to serve for years. The shooter (a really good dude that everyone liked) retired a few years early. He was never the same after the incident. The other officer pursued promotion and is currently a Deputy Chief. Kind of a Jekyl/Hyde personality. He'll be the most articulate and outspoken advocate for officers in use of force cases one day, and then just come out with some flat out crazy ideas the next day. You never knew which guy you were gonna get.