Jacob Sullum | April 17, 2006
Lee Paige, the DEA agent notorious for shooting himself in the foot immediately after telling a classroom full of children, "I'm the only one in the room professional enough...to carry a Glock .40," has sued his employer, blaming the drug agency for releasing the videotape of his ill-fated weapon safety lesson. Paige says the tape, which has been widely viewed online, has made him the "target of jokes, derision, ridicule, and disparaging comments," ruining his career as an undercover agent and motivational speaker.
[via the Drug War Chronicle]
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I might as well be the one to say it - anyone who boasts of their professionalism in handling firearms and the very next instant shoots themself in the foot deserves to be the "target of jokes, derision, ridicule, and disparaging comments."
If anything, the asshole should be paying reparations out of his
own pocket to the kids who had to watch him.
-jcr
Incidentally, I don't doubt that his claim to being "one of the
best undercover agents in the DEA". That outfit is a pack of
Keystone Kops if there ever was one.
-jcr
Never unsheath one's firearm to show off what a bad dude you
are. This guy's IQ has got to be double digit. I'm sorry that he
ridiculously shot himself; however, it's a travesty that the man's
idiocy endangered the classroom. So his lawsuit could very well be
countered by a lawsuit from the young spectators whom he placed in
harm's way trying to be a bad law enforcement dude.
Idiot. Affirmative action idiot.
Is it just me or on some level aren't "undercover cop" and "motivational speaker" mutually exclusive career paths?
How 'bout the kids reaction when he subsequenly held up an
assault rifle after trying to act like nothing happened? I think
all trust had been breached. They didn't seems to want to listen
anymore.
What the fuck was he thinking having the gun loaded and cocked for
a simple show and tell? Was he planning to shoot himself or someone
else?
Besides, I had only seen the clip through a link on an obscure website and it dissapeared from view for a long time. But now that he's suing, there is national TV coverage on top of it and now he's even more (in)famous than before.
I wonder who this douche would be blaming had he inadvertently shot one of the kids at the assembly?
How does this guy get into a classroom full of kids with a
laoded weapon???
Insane.
He should thank his lucky stars that nobody got seriously hurt.
Superfluous =
"affirmative action" idiot?
SO... you think he's an idiot... partly because he's black?
not to forgive this idiot one whit... but i'd like to hear your
argument about how some MESA ivy league white guy would be better
suited to be an undercover drug agent in the inner city.
JG
You know, I was kind of impressed by the way he kept right on going with the presentation, and even tried to work the self-inflicted wound into the act. He may not know much about safe handling of firearms, but you have to admit he's a trouper.
I, for one, think that a firearms accident should in no way diminish one's stature in the public eye.
I don't know that his career as a motivational speaker is ruined--I'd sure pay to see him shoot himself in the foot again.
Is it just me or on some level aren't "undercover cop" and
"motivational speaker" mutually exclusive career paths?
It's not just you, Stephen.
Something that I'm surprised isn't getting more attention is that the DEA apparently attempted to cover this up originally by erasing the videographer's tape and that it apparently only came to light because somebody inside the DEA found it funny enough to save a copy. And yes, I had wondered about the whole "I'm a top undercover agent who gives lectures to school groups" thing myself when I first saw the complaint.
The sad thing is, the DEA will probably use this as an excuse to ask for an increase in their budget. "If we hadn't had to cut back on firearms training..."
We could end the drug war tomorrow if we put this guy in charge of firearms training for all personnel involved in drug enforcement (DEA, your local PD's narcotics squad, military units involved in Plan Colombia, etc.).
Glocks do not have a safety. The idea is that your finger is supposed to be the safety. I always thought that that was a good point and the objections to glocks no having safeties was stupid. No one is really dumb enough to shoot themselves with it, safety or no. I guess this guy proves me wrong again. What a moron.
The part when he wanted to show them his rifle was the best. Hole in foot, the man says, "THIS one is unloaded ..."
I have to say that at least this guy wasn't an ATF agent.
"Now, kidz, only I is professional enough to defuse dis.."
BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM!!
IIRC, the problem wasn't the trigger on the Glock. The problem
was that he pulled back the slide and asked somebody to verify for
him that there was no round in the chamber. Then he closed the
slide. Either the person who did his verification screwed up (and
he also failed to check it himself, a big no-no) or else he left
the magazine in so a new round was chambered.
The problem was that he handled a gun as though it was unloaded,
when in fact there was a round in the chamber. Dumber still, he
failed to take the appropriate measures to make sure that there
wasn't a round in the chamber.
Rule #1: The gun is always loaded.
Rule #2: See rule #1.
Self-inflicted gunshot wounds: My Anti-Drug
My vote to crimethink for best post on the thread.
"What the fuck was he thinking having the gun loaded and
cocked for a simple show and tell? Was he planning to shoot himself
or someone else?"
Here's how he "cleared" the gun in the video:
He draws the slide back, ejecting the round that is in the chamber,
and then lets the slide move back into battery.
Since he failed to first remove the magazine, the slide just simply
chambered another round.
The man is an unsafe, egotistical jackass who shouldn't be
entrusted with anything more dangerous than a pair of those rounded
plastic scissors they give to kindergartners.
Mediageek,
Page 1 paragraph 1 of the "handling an automatic pistol safety
manual for morons" is "drop the magazine BEFORE you clear the
chamber" and "always assume the weapon is loaded even if you have
cleared the chamber". Even if he didn't clear the weapon properly,
which is a simple yet surprisingly common mistake, you still don't
pull the trigger in a room full of grade school students. Again,
your finger is the best safety. Weapons never just "go off". What
an idiot.
Incidentally, this isn't the first time this has happened. Over
the last decade or so, there have been a ton of lawsuits filed by
incompetent cops who have mishandled Glock pistols resulting in
negligent discharges.
Of course, every time, they always claim that the gun
"accidentally" fired, or was broken.
Bullshit.
If you don't want a gun to fire, keep your finger off the
trigger.
John, completely agree.
As I once heard it put in Redneckese:
"Keep your booger hook off the bang switch!"
you still don't pull the trigger in a room full of grade
school students
Correction: you don't bring a loaded gun into a room full
of grade school students, and Lee Paige would know this if he
weren't a mentally underdeveloped fuckmuffin.
"So his lawsuit could very well be countered by a lawsuit from
the young spectators whom he placed in harm's way trying to be a
bad law enforcement dude."
Unfortunately, this incident happened in Florida, which has fairly
high requirements for negligent infliction of emotional
distress:
The elements required for this cause of action are: (1) the
plaintiff must suffer a discernable physical injury; (2) the
physical injury must be caused by the psychological trauma; (3) the
plaintiff must be involved in the event causing the negligent
injury to another; and (4) the plaintiff must have a close personal
relationship to the directly injured person.
I doubt anyone in the audience had a "close personal relationship"
to the DEA agent.
Great to know this guy lives in the Orlando area. Now that his motivational speaking career is over, he'll probably catch on with local law enforcement. (After he becomes born-again).
motivational speaker
Well, if the idea is to motivate kids to fear the DEA, I'd say
mission accomplished.
Superfluous ="affirmative action" idiot? SO... you think
he's an idiot... partly because he's black? not to forgive this
idiot one whit...
It's time like this I want to recall the Denis Leary as the
painfully white inner-city drug dealing hood in "Judgement Night"
or Ice T as the painfully white good guy crack kingpin in
"Ricochet."
Nonetheless, I don't think Superfluous was suggesting he was an
idiot because he was black. He was suggesting the he was a DEA
agent because he was black. Affirmative Action merely allowed him
to become one despite being an idiot. That he shot himself in the
foot...infront of a classrom of kids...while a camera was rolling
further confirms his incompetence.
...but i'd like to hear your argument about how some MESA ivy
league white guy would be better suited to be an undercover drug
agent in the inner city.
So are my only choices for an undercover DEA agent an ivy league
white guy and an arguably (and in my book visibly) stupid black
guy?
Why not find a smart black guy?
"Correction: you don't bring a loaded gun into a room full
of grade school students, and Lee Paige would know this if he
weren't a mentally underdeveloped fuckmuffin."
From a safety perspective, all guns are always loaded. The only
ones that ever seem to "accidently" go off are the ones that people
assume are unloaded.
I will also note that he broke another cardinal rule of gun safety:
Never point a firearm at anything you are not willing to
destroy.
One other thing to consider, imagine if Joe sixpack had taken his pistol to show and tell at his child's school and this had happened? Joe would be doing God knows how many years in federal prison for violating God knows how many "safe school laws". Further imagine if the round had hit a child. Joe would more than likely never again see the light of day. Had that round not hit this moron but hit a child, I would be dollars to doughnuts, there never would have been one thought of filing charges against this clown. We don't have federal law enforcement anymore, we have a pretorian guard.
mediageek says:
Here's how he "cleared" the gun in the video
Yeah, "cleared" for the next round.
It's been long time since I've seen the vid but I don't think I'd
even have the ammo clip in place or at least I'd look at it myself
before the presentation and not assume a damn thing.
Some of those kids are probaly already more competent at handling a
weapon.
From a safety perspective, all guns are always loaded. The
only ones that ever seem to "accidently" go off are the ones that
people assume are unloaded.
True enough, but if I were taking a gun to show and tell I'd damn
sure take any bullets out of the thing before bringing it into one
of our super-safe gun-free zones.
If I recall the video correctly, didn't he wave the gun in the
direction of the kids before he shot his foot with it? Why the hell
isn't this moron facing criminal charges along the lines of child
endangerment? Oh, right, I keep forgetting the laws don't apply to
those idiots who are supposed to enforce them.
It's been a while since I've seen this vid, anyone have a link? I could use a laugh today.
The problem was that he handled a gun as though it was
unloaded, when in fact there was a round in the chamber. Dumber
still, he failed to take the appropriate measures to make sure that
there wasn't a round in the chamber.
what about John's point of the gun not having a safety and his
implication that a safety would have prevented this accident?
"what about John's point of the gun not having a safety and
his implication that a safety would have prevented this
accident?"
The gun does have a safety, jackass.
I once heard a ruefully ironic adage..."50 of all accidental
shootings involve unloaded guns."
For bob, here's a link courtesy of poetv.com:
http://www.poetv.com/video.php?vid=345
The fact that the weapon discharged when he pulled the trigger
is absolutely indicative of negligent handling. The firearm
operated exactly as designed.
Or should we start designing guns that don't expell a bullet when
the trigger is pulled?
If you don't want the trigger to squeeze so easily you can put some corn syrup inside to gum it up. That results in a heavier trigger pull.
Here's the
video.
You think maybe he was on PCP? I mean, he kept going after getting
shot. Whoa.
What we need is for the tort lawyers to design some sort of
device that would prevent triggers from being pulled when the
person holding it isn't prepared to fire, and to prevent the owner
from pointing the gun in an unsafe direction.
Maybe we could call this device a "brain."
Then again, if people used those we wouldn't need nearly as many
personal injury lawyers.
No, Dave.
It's funny because, once again, you've obviously failed to take
your meds, and have, again, elected to pontificate on a topic you
obviously know nothing about.
What we need is for the tort lawyers to design some sort of
device that would prevent triggers from being pulled when the
person holding it isn't prepared to fire, and to prevent the owner
from pointing the gun in an unsafe direction.
It seems like a safety catch would accomplish at least enough of
these objectives to prevent some accidental shootings. It seems
like it could have prevented the accidental shooting on the
vid.
I don't, in fact, have much idea how a safety catch works. That is
why I am so inclined to follow astroturf johnnie's view of the
sitch, at least til I hear something more convincing.
The word "safety", in gun parlance, can mean a number of
different things. To many people, a "safety" is a mechanical device
that disables the trigger. Such a device, if properly used, can be
a very good feature to have on a gun. However, the key is "if
properly used."
What this guy did gives me very little confidence that he would
have made proper use of a firearm with a mechanical safety.
However, "safety" means a number of other things as well. The most
important safety is your brain. If you use it properly and think
about what you are doing at all times then you will almost
certainly never have a negligent discharge. (We say "negligent"
rather than "accidental" because the burden of responsibility is on
the person handling the deadly weapon.)
Many manufacturers also use the word "safety features" to describe
internal mechanical mechanisms that prevent the gun from firing if
the trigger is not pulled. This is to prevent discharges when the
gun is dropped, or when the decocking lever is used (e.g. on my
Sig), or when the hammer is cocked, or in any other situation where
the gun is handled but the trigger is not pulled. I have heard of
safety demonstrations where sales reps drop a gun from a roof (the
gun is loaded with blanks and dropped into a sealed off area),
repeat several times, and then take it to a range to fire it.
During the drops the gun does not fire, indicating that the safety
features are working properly.
There's a lot more to gun safety than just a little button to
disable the trigger. And that button is only useful if the user has
his wits about him.
Bottom line: A well-designed gun is safe in the hands of a safe
user. No gun of any design is safe in the hands of an unsafe user.
The Glock is a well-designed gun.
What this guy did gives me very little confidence that he
would have made proper use of a firearm with a mechanical
safety.
I think the guy would probably not have shot himself if the gun had
one of those mechanical safeties. I think the guy would not have
taken the safety off in the classroom. I think the trigger would
not have pulled because of the mechanical safety and the shot would
not have been fired.
There is a contributory negligence problem here in that the guy
shot himself. If he had shot my kid instead, I would have no
problem suing Glock so that they fully appreciate the real world
consequences of their design decision in the language they goodest
understand. I'd be pretty pissed if my kid's suit were blocked by a
federal law. It is certainly fair of Glock to demand a sharing of
the responsibility with the shooter. I don't care where those
millions come from so long as my paralyzed kid gets her solid gold
wheelchair.
Dave-
Not too long ago you said that you didn't have kids, so I take it
that Mrs. Dave recently gave you some good news?
A most sincere congratulations to both of you!
Ok, Dave, let me ask you this:
Let's pretend that Glock included a manual safety on the
pistol.
Now, let's further posit a hypothetical situation in which a police
officer is attacked by a criminal, and in the rush to respond,
draws his pistol, and pulls the trigger without first disengaging
the safety.
As a result, the firearm does not discharge, and the officer is
killed by the criminal.
Should Glock now be liable for that officer's death because the
manual safety kept him from firing the weapon when he needed
it?
Why or why not?
ABsolutely not. Glock makes some of the best most reliable firearms in the world. There are good reasons not the have a mechanical safety. Namely, that police and military sometimes need to fire quickly and a manual safety gets in the way of that and can cost people their lives. In buying a glock you weigh the risk of not having a safety versus a risk of getting shot while you are fiddling with a safety. It is a perfectly reasonable choice for law enforcement to choose the glock and the train their people so they don't accidentily shoot themselves. The bottomline is that the standard of care with any weapon requires that you treat it as if it were loaded at all times. This guy didn't do that and is thus responsible for his own injury, not Glock. The parent in all of you people will just have to live with the sad fact that sometimes individuals are responsible for accidents not evil corporations.
Should Glock now be liable for that officer's death because
the manual safety kept him from firing the weapon when he needed
it?
That's a little specious, don't ya' think?
I mean, it's not like the safety is a brand new idea. It's been on
semi-automatic pistols for decades and used (or not) in a variety
of situations - many involving law enforcement personnel.
In most cases, the safety is left off or the officer is trained to
know the disposition of the safety and act accordingly.
As for the Glock safety design, that is a relatively new
idea. And still makes the fundamental weak point the pull of a
trigger - whether intentional or not. Simple logic dictates a
properly employed safety catch would have prevented such a
shooting.
Reacting to your argument, I think you're on shaky ground comparing
the actions of and ramifications to a well-trained police officer
with a shooting of an innocent bystander at the hands of a
(possibly) poorly trained one.
The bottom line is that the person who waves a loaded firearm around with his finger on the trigger is the person who's responsible if something goes wrong.
I think the guy would probably not have shot himself if the
gun had one of those mechanical safeties
You're probably wrong. On most pistols with "active" safties
(meaning you have to flip a switch to go into fire mode), the
weapon must be in "fire" mode in order to clear the round from the
chamber. Since the fuckwit accidentally chambered a second round
instead of clearing the weapon, and because he intentionally pulled
the trigger, no weapon with an active safety would have prevented
the accident.
It is certainly fair of Glock to demand a sharing of the
responsibility with the shooter.
The guy broke the cardinal rule of gun safety, Glock should have no
responsibility. Hundreds of thousands of LEOs and private owners
carry Glocks everyday, and somehow they manage to not shoot
themselves or others accidentally.
Clarification: I am not a parent yet, but my wife is beginning to say it is time. I am glad we moved across the street from an elementary school because it turns out that we both like watching the children play. I have wanted a child for so long it is hard to even know if I really want one anymore. But I think I do. It felt nice to write that sig line even tho it was misleading.
The only way I could see holding Glock responsible is if their owner's manuals said something along the lines of "This is a great gun to take to school for show and tell." But it surely isn't their fault that their products are bought by the government and distributed to dumbass agents who think it's a good idea to wave a loaded gun around a classroom.
I own a Glock chambered for .40 bullets. I have never had a
negligent discharge, and I'm not even a cop. The fault for
discharging the weapon is solely the guy with his hand on the
pistol and his finger on the trigger.
Glock is no more liable for the guy shooting himself or anyone else
(school kids for example) than they are than a cutlery company
should be liable if he trips and accidentally gouges his eye out or
stabs someone else while carrying a butcher knife in the
kitchen.
Plus the whole specious argument from Jennifer that "you don't
bring a loaded gun into a room full of grade school students, and
Lee Paige would know this if he weren't a mentally underdeveloped
fuckmuffin."
While Lee Paige undoubtedly deserves the mentally underdeveloped
title, how else does one expect a cop to keep a school safe from a
Columbine-style scenarios than to bring a loaded firearm into a
school?
Sometimes even professionals/experts screw up, but that doesn't
mean that one individual's act of stupidity means that no one
should ever again try to demonstrate firearm safety to school
kids... Sheesh!
"The guy broke the cardinal rule of gun safety, Glock should
have no responsibility. Hundreds of thousands of LEOs and private
owners carry Glocks everyday, and somehow they manage to not shoot
themselves or others accidentally."
Yeah, but he doesn't have deep pockets and millions of dollars
worth of liquid assets. So obviously he's not responsible.
Only those capable of paying huge tort settlements are guilty.
While Lee Paige undoubtedly deserves the mentally
underdeveloped title, how else does one expect a cop to keep a
school safe from a Columbine-style scenarios than to bring a loaded
firearm into a school?
He wasn't there to prevent a Columbine, Ron; he was there to
disseminate anti-drug propaganda and tell kids that only
muscleheaded DEA agents like Paige can be trusted to safely handle
guns. There's no need to bring a loaded gun into a classroom of
unarmed kids to do that.
Glock pistol: $500
Amunition: $10
Pair of Reeboks: $85
Video of a government narc lecturing a classroom full of school
kids on gun safety shooting himself in the foot: Hilarious
Some things money can't buy, For misspending it in the most
wasteful, counterproductive, and outright dangerous manner
possible, there's the government.
Glock pistol: $500
Amunition: $10
Pair of Reeboks: $85
Video of a government narc lecturing a classroom full of school
kids on gun safety shooting himself in the foot: Hilarious
Some things money can't buy, For misspending it in the most
wasteful, counterproductive, and outright dangerous manner
possible, there's the government.
Hypothetically, I'm behind the "it's not the gun maker's
fault...it's the idiot with his finger on the trigger"
argument.
But I was making my statements about suing the gunmakers as a
parent. Everything changes when it's your kid. As a parent, trying
to secure care - possibly for a lifelime - for my child would
probably lead me (and others, I'm quite sure) in directions we
normally wouldn't consider. And yes, getting the gun maker with the
deep pockets to share some of the burden would probably one of
those directions.
Does that make me a hypocrite? Maybe. Indeed, probably. But I can
live with that.
madpad, I see what you're saying. You're not asking anybody to approve of anything, you're just saying what you would do if you were desperate.
The only way I could see holding Glock responsible is if
their owner's manuals said something along the lines of "This is a
great gun to take to school for show and tell." But it surely isn't
their fault that their products are bought by the government and
distributed to dumbass agents who think it's a good idea to wave a
loaded gun around a classroom.
I see: hold Glock responsible for especially responsible
distribution for safety catchless weapons, instead of unduly
interfering with the design. That theory would help Glock in this
case. On the other hand, it could come back to haunt in other cases
where the shooter wasn't an LEO.
While I wouldn't expect a safety catchless weapon manual to say
something like "make sure not to shoot yourself in the foot while
lecturing a classrom full of black children," the manual should
point out that the weapon is suitable only for LEO and/or military
field work, if its safetycatchless status so renders it. I don't
think there is a concensus among LEOs on whether a Glock is
appropriate for a children's classroom lecture at all, so that
would be an excellent point for Glock to clarify for all of
us.
If the manual doesn't encourage limiting the use of safetycatchless
weapons to combat / police shootouts, then: (1) it should; and (2)
Glock may be back on the hook, even under your responsible
distribution theory.
I think the guy would probably not have shot himself if the
gun had one of those mechanical safeties
You're probably wrong. On most pistols with "active" safties
(meaning you have to flip a switch to go into fire mode), the
weapon must be in "fire" mode in order to clear the round from the
chamber. Since the fuckwit accidentally chambered a second round
instead of clearing the weapon, and because he intentionally pulled
the trigger, no weapon with an active safety would have prevented
the accident.
It is certainly fair of Glock to demand a sharing of the
responsibility with the shooter.
The guy broke the cardinal rule of gun safety, Glock should have no
responsibility. Hundreds of thousands of LEOs and private owners
carry Glocks everyday, and somehow they manage to not shoot
themselves or others accidentally.
What about my Sig? Should I be barred from owning one? It doesn't have a button that will disable the trigger. It does have a decocker that will decock the hammer. But even if the hammer is decocked you can still fire it, you just need to pull somewhat harder on the trigger.
Yeah, but he doesn't have deep pockets and millions of
dollars worth of liquid assets. So obviously he's not
responsible.
In this scenario, one party makes a lot of money off of Glocks and
the other uses Glocks incidentally, but: (1) doesn't make a lot off
of Glocks per se; and (2) doesn't make that much period.
I would expect the party making all the money to think a lot more
carefully about safety catches and appropriate warnings for
safetycatchless guns than the motivational speaker who merely uses
one as a prop. No Glock couldn't have seen the specifics of this
accident. Yes, Glock could have foreseen that people will use
safetycatchless guns casually (eg, for hunting) unless instructed
not to in no uncertain terms. If Glock really wanted to avoid
liability, then they could have LEO departments sign off on the
warnings when they purchase a lot of guns. It is not unreasonable
to suppose that this also could have prevented the shooting we saw
on the tape.
I am just glad there was a video this time, because usually I can't
even get you guys to agree to a reasonable hypothetical when it
comes to gun issues.
What about my Sig? Should I be barred from owning one? It
doesn't have a button that will disable the trigger. It does have a
decocker that will decock the hammer. But even if the hammer is
decocked you can still fire it, you just need to pull somewhat
harder on the trigger.
I see no problem with this if Sigmaker Inc. is willing to
compensate everybody injured in your "negligent" shootings to the
extent they would have been prevented by a mechanical safetycatch.
Sigmaker should have built this liability into the purchase price
of Sigs. That way you the consumer could decide whether not having
a safetycatch was worth the premium price.
Of course this "insurance" scheme of tort liability ceases to work
if the manufacturers play too much hardball when paying out
"claims." This is why we have: (1) an additional margin of
(generally nonsensical) gov't gun regulation; and (2) huge
punitives in the slim proportion of cases that do make it to payout
day.
Dave, I'll note that you didn't respond to the scenario I posted
above.
Also I'll ask the following. In all caps:
WHAT PART OF KEEP YOUR GODDAMNED FINGER OFF OF THE FUCKING TRIGGER
DO YOU NOT UNDERSTAND?!
Glock pistols are designed with three internal safeties. Given a
minimum level of training and proficiency, handling a Glock pistol
is just as safe as handling a pistol with a manual safety.
I've shot Glock pistols, ranging from stock, out-of-the-box ones to
models that have been highly modified for competitive shooting and
have not had any problem.
For fuck's sake, I have seen grade school children capable of
following these obviously basic safety rules while shooting Glock
pistols.
Glock pistols dominate many forms of competitive shooting, and I
have never once witnessed a negligent discharge with one.
Only an ignoramus would think that learning a couple of basic
safety rules that include "Keep your finger off of the trigger
until you are on target and ready to fire" somehow constitutes
negligence on the part of the manufacturer.
And what about Smith and Wesson, Dave?
Revolvers have no manual safeties. They have never had manual
safeties. So should they be held responsible for not installing
them if someone has a negligent discharge with a revolver?
Or the SIG that thoreau was talking about?
"I see no problem with this if Sigmaker Inc. is willing to
compensate everybody injured in your "negligent" shootings to the
extent they would have been prevented by a mechanical
safetycatch."
The name of the company is SIG/SAUER, you shmuck.
Dave, without looking it up, can you, from memory, recite the four basic rules of gun safety?
Only an ignoramus would think that learning a couple of
basic safety rules that include "Keep your finger off of the
trigger until you are on target and ready to fire" somehow
constitutes negligence on the part of the manufacturer.
Because I am not arguing for negligence, I am arguing for strict
liability.
If Glock wants to sell safetycatchless guns to babies and
scoundrels, I don't care so long as Glock absorbs the economic
consequences of marketing in that way.
If Glock wanted to sell to a more restricted market, under more
restrictive terms, then they would likely decrease their liability
and could charge less for the gun.
Ultimately, I am not arguing that safety practices (eg, mechanisms,
manual warnings, sales channels, resale ractices) should be
determined be this way or that way. I am merely argiung that these
decisions should be closely coupled with the consequences. You want
to make an unsafe gun, fine: be prepared for lots of sales and lots
of liability. You want to make and sell guns in a more cautious
manner: tort law will reward you in the fullness of time, make sure
to pass those savings on to youtr responsible customers (they have
EARNED it).
What I am arguing against is two things. One is the unstated
assumption that manufactuer practices shouldn't be coupled to
consequences because there is always some (judgementproof) idiot in
the mix. Another is the cavalier attitude that leads people to say
that lack of a safetycatch is probabilistically irrelevant to the
tape we all watched.
I am also arguing that lapses in liability for injuries will lead
to more gov't regulation in the long run. I doubt that will play
with this crowd, but Bailey picked up that meme a couple a weeks
ago so maybe there is hope.
1) Dave W. refuses to acknowledge the points I've made, or
answer the questions I've posed. I can, at this point, only assume
that he is deliberately ignoring anything that makes him
uncomfortable.
2) Dave W. has not stated how or why he is even qualified to
comment on firearms.
Dave, don't you get it?
There is nothing inherently unsafe in the Glock design. If one
follows the same set of four rules that one follows for handling
any other firearm the Glock is not unsafe!
How is it that you can possibly continue to miss this point?
At this point I have to assume that you're simply being
deliberately obstinate.
For Lee to have injured himself in the way that he did, he had to
break at least two basic rules of safe gunhandling.
How is this possibly the fault of Glock?
It isn't. Nor should they bear the brunt of it.
And again, for the third time, I'll note that you have failed to
address the scenario I posted at 2:44pm.
mediageek
"Keep your booger hook off the bang switch!"
best laugh i had in weeks
"He wasn't there to prevent a Columbine, Ron; he was there to
disseminate anti-drug propaganda and tell kids that only
muscleheaded DEA agents like Paige can be trusted to safely handle
guns. There's no need to bring a loaded gun into a classroom of
unarmed kids to do that." - Jennifer
Jennifer, the cop who patrols the hallways of that school
undoubtedly carries a firearm. Your argument, on the face of it, is
that the cop who does so should never enter a classroom with a
loaded firearm. That's a ridiculous argument because people get
killed by nut-jobs in "gun-free" zones like schools, churches,
etc.
Making a location a "gun-free" zone just means that people who
wouldn't have committed a crime with a gun in that area are far
less able to stop a crime being committed with a gun in that zone.
In other words, putting an extra set of laws on specific locations
doesn't shift it into a parallel universe were guns and knives
don't exist.
The only thing that can protect people from harm and help them when
they have been harmed (and harm can come from anywhere - guns,
knives, wet floors, gas leaks, fires, blunt objects) are other
people.
My family is much safer around me armed than unarmed. Incredible as
it may sound, tho I'm carrying a loaded firearm I am no danger to
my family because I am meticulously safe - tho I carry a Glock with
its "controversial" safety mechanism! Why are they safer? Because
not only am I not going to harm them, I can ensure that they are
protected from someone who does desire to harm them.
If you don't belief in self-defense as a right, using a firearm or
any other tool, it seems to me that you probably don't believe in
any individual right at all. Without the right to self-defense, the
rest are just make-believe. I can't enjoy my 1st Amendment freedom
if I'm deader than JMJ's family on an ill-fated vacation to New
Orleans!
Rob, Jennifer has come out on the pro-gun/pro-self-defense side
of things on far more than one occassion.
Just an FYI.
Yes, thoreau, that's where my head is at.
As for mediageek's post's - although I do wish MG would lighten up
- it's clear that Paige deserves everythig he's getting...and
more.
He managed to
1. take a gun he thought was unloaded
2. into a school room full of kids
3. and despite the gun's 3-level safety system
4. and (assumedly) years of training
5. and (assumedly) years of experience
6. and AFTER checking to make sure the weapong was unloaded
7. managed to discharge it into his foot
8. while a video camera filmed the entire episode
9. all the while rambling like an idiot
Everything else aside, there is nothing that absolves this guy of
being a complete and total moron. Whatever you think of the DEA, it
is a more competent organization with this guy's career in the
toilet.
I want to point out that there is nothing unsafe about a glock. There is no reason why you should be more likely to shoot yourself with a glock then with any other weapon. The fact that it doesn't have the same kind of manuel safes that other weapons have, such as the three safes on a 1911 ACP, does not make it less safe. Ultimately, nothing will make a gun completely safe from idiots who point the damn things at themselves and pull the trigger.
Sorry, in my last post it should read "anyone using - guns,
knives, wet floors, gas leaks, fires, blunt objects"...
And Jennifer, it looks like I'm arguing with the wrong person,
because I think we are actually in agreement. Mostly because I
don't think Lee Paige should have had a badge, or a firearm he was
too stupid to handle safely. Hell, I even think that sending an
undercover DEA agent, even one smart enough to handle a weapon
safely (they DO exist, right?) to "disseminate anti-drug propaganda
and tell kids that only muscleheaded DEA agents like Paige can be
trusted to safely handle guns" is at best a "just plain dumb"/gross
misuse of gov't resources."
"There's no need to bring a loaded gun into a classroom of unarmed
kids to do that."
But there is if most of those kids can be expected to know more
about firearms than the DEA guy!
mediageek
"Keep your booger hook off the bang switch!"
best laugh i had in weeks
Glad you liked it. I can't take credit for it, and it's something
that's been floating around the web for about a year, but is still
something I find really amusing.
For Lee to have injured himself in the way that he did, he
had to break at least two basic rules of safe
gunhandling.
How is this possibly the fault of Glock?
Fault is a negligence concept. I am arguing for strict liability.
the manufacturer is never at "fault." There is never moral
approbation (right word?) or punitive damages for the manufactuere.
The manufactuer, under the strict liability regime, is simply
running an insurance scheme where it decides who can buy the
insurance (along with the gun). The insurer also gets to decide
what other measures they can take to try to limit payouts. Some
measures will be limited in effect because they can be ignored
(like safety manuals with rules for the consumer). Other measures
will have more teeth, but will be more restrictive (eg, limiting
sales to LEOs). There is no right or wrong way. there are just ways
that lea to more payouts and ways that lead to less payouts. The
manufactuer should have the appropriate incentives to tailor its
selling policies to its expected payouts.
To put it a completely different way:
I think SIG/Sawyer should be seen as something akin to your
automobile insurer. Yeah, your automobile insurer has sold to
plenty of idiots whose accidents who have caused plenty of valid
claims for personal injury. That doesn't make your automobile
insurer evil, but it also doesn't excuse them from paying out
claims. How much they pay in claims will have to do with the
quality of their idiotscreening (with an understanding that this
screening is never going to be perfect). SIGMUND/Sauer should be
incentivized to act in a similar way.
The Glock is indeed a safe design. It might not be everybody's
favorite design, but it is a perfectly safe design if handled in
the same manner as any other handgun. Same for the Sig.
The thing is, even if I had a gun with a manual safety I'd still
have to handle it according to same rules as any other gun. Why?
Because safeties are mechanical devices and mechanical devices can
fail, or be improperly used. It's said that the most common thing
said after an accident with a firearm is "I thought it was
unloaded!" The next most common response is probably "I could have
sworn that the safety was on!"
Bottom line, with or without a safety you have to handle the gun in
the same manner. So having a manual safety is really a matter of
preference.
And, as Guy has pointed out, in the incident in this video the
safety probably would have been off anyway.
"As for mediageek's post's - although I do wish MG would
lighten up - it's clear that Paige deserves everythig he's
getting...and more."
Yeah, sorry about that. I guess I got carried away with rubbing
Dave W's nose in that giant pile of wrong he left on the
carpet.
Oh, and Dave, I don't live in Texas, you twerp.
I know. I was quoting the Misfits song bullet, which seemed
appropriate because the lyrics ponder who was really responsible
for shooting a US president who got assasinated.
One band named themselves after this snippet, but I am not familiar
with their work.
Rob, as has been pointed out already, I'm pro-gun rights and anti-gun-free zones. My point was that there is no need for a DEA agent to be waving a loaded gun around a class full of kids while he's giving a safety lecture.
The thing is, even if I had a gun with a manual safety I'd
still have to handle it according to same rules as any other gun.
Why? Because safeties are mechanical devices and mechanical devices
can fail, or be improperly used. It's said that the most common
thing said after an accident with a firearm is "I thought it was
unloaded!" The next most common response is probably "I could have
sworn that the safety was on!"
This allows me to make another good point, which is that we really
don't know whether guns are safer, probabilistically, with or
without safety catches. Sometimes (as in the video) it clearly
would have been better if there had been asafetycatch and it had
been used. Other times, a safetycatch may give a false sense of
security and lead to a "negligent" shooting in the manner T.
suggests.
Under a strict liability scheme safetycatch designs and catchless
designs can compete in the marketplace without a lot of external
rules and regs that may not be reflective of actual risks. Under my
strict liability scheme, on the other hand, the competing designs
are answerable only to the liability that they respectively help
cause. If the catchless design is cheaper liabilitywise, then
manufactuers will see this when they study their liability
judgments and jigger their pricing to encourage catchless gums (a
good result under this hypothetical factset). on the other hand, if
the catches do prevent "negligent" shootings, then that would also
show up in a strict liability world bottom line, and the
manufacturers could jigger the pricing in the other
direction.
The point is: we only get these answers under a strict liability
regime. If liability is decoupled from the designers then they will
not study these actuarial issues and will just spin out whatever
fantasy scenario they feel like (eg, the cop in the tape is the
only cop that stupid). Adjustments never get made, or at least they
don't get made in response to the frequency of real injuries in the
real world. Causation, instead of being an important touchstone in
gunmaker pricing, becomes a-find-the-idiot-and-blame-him game that
y'alls are so enjoying the playing of here on this thd.
I say different. I say the idiots will always be with us and that
only properly incentivized gunmakers can set policies that
optimally balance gun access and also move the technology of gun
design forward.
And, as Guy has pointed out, in the incident in this video the
safety probably would have been off anyway.
The Glock never should have been in the classroom in the first
place. It was not a situation where a gun without a safetycatch was
required (assuming such a situation even ever truly exists).
"Under my strict liability regime, on the other hand" should be:
--Under this strict liability regime--.
That "on the other hand" was a typo and was misleading.
As a certified firearm instructor I have taught thousands of
students over the last 20 years.
Particularly in Hunter Education and Concealed Carry classes I use
a wide variety of firearms. When I pack those firearms to travel to
class I check each firearm to make sure it is unloaded.
Before I begin class I recheck each firearm to make sure
it is unloaded. Any firearm used in class is placed on a table with
the action open. Each time I pick up a firearm to demonstrate a
point I recheck that firearm to make sure it is unloaded. The
only ammunition used in any class is marked dummy
rounds.
As a concealed handgun licensee I teach most classes not on school
grounds while carrying my loaded concealed handgun, but it is
never part of the class and never comes out of
concealment.
I also teach active shooting classes to young people, where the
kids themselves learn to fire firearms and practice with live ammo.
It is quite possible for a trained instructor to accomplish that
safely. NRA, 4-H, Boy Scout, summer camp, and other civilian
instructors teach tens of thousands of such students annually
accident-free.
Last summer I ran three two-week camps with four sessions of 12 to
18 students per session. The students were 11 to 16 year old boys.
The range staff consisted of myself, one teenage trained assistant
instructor, and the teenage group leader. We used standard NRA
safety procedures and had no problems.
Surprised? Actually, the shooting sports, including hunting and
target shooting, are among the safest sports you can participate
in.
Finally, the "mechanical safety" issue is moot. This person
"unloaded" his Glock, then pulled the trigger. Since he intended to
pull the trigger, if there had been a safety, and if it had been
on, he would have switched it off to get the gun to go
"click."
COI statement: I carry a Glock in .45ACP.
"I say different. I say the idiots will always be with us
and that only properly incentivized gunmakers can set policies that
optimally balance gun access and also move the technology of gun
design forward."
So gun designers should be forced to design weapons for the lowest
common denominator? For only the most incompetent?
That's what that says to me.
And, once again, I'll note that you addressed none of my questions
from earlier. Shall I just continue beating you over the head?
"Under a strict liability scheme safetycatch designs and
catchless designs can compete in the marketplace without a lot of
external rules and regs that may not be reflective of actual
risks."
Gee...perhaps because so long as one follows the basic rules of gun
safety such "risks" are moot?
So, Dave, are you actually going to answer my questions?
This allows me to make another good point, which is that we
really don't know whether guns are safer, probabilistically, with
or without safety catches.
Not true. There are several dozen firearm designs which are
sufficiently popular to have a large experience base to draw from.
Some of them, for instance the Colt 1911 (three external safetys)
and the Smith & Wesson revolver (no external safety), have been
in continuous manufacture for circa 100 years. (Yeah. A
century.)
Many of these designs have no external safetys, many have one, many
have more than one. These safetys make the firearm easier to carry
in certain conditions, and lessen the liklihood that a firearm will
go off if you don't intend to pull the trigger. None of
them are designed to keep a shooter who wants to fire the firearm
from doing so.
Firearm experts worldwide agree that the only safety that makes a
difference is the one between the shooter's ears.
If more people ate corn syrup then gun violence would go down because people's fingers would be too fat to pull the triggers.
Finally, the "mechanical safety" issue is moot. This person
"unloaded" his Glock, then pulled the trigger. Since he intended to
pull the trigger, if there had been a safety, and if it had been
on, he would have switched it off to get the gun to go
"click."
Since you run your gun lectures so much differently than this guy
did, you seem like the person LEAST qualified to speculate about
what kinds of carelessness Glock should reasonably expect from
their customers.
How do you know it would have went down this way? It seems quite
possible to me that careless cop chose to do this demonstation
precidely because he did not have to fool with a safetycatch. Even
if he did have to so fool, that fooling would have given him an
extra five seconds to recall the 4 basic rules of gunsafety, and
that could have made a helpful difference here.
More helpfully the safety catch should have been designed so that
it had to be on when the gun was being unloaded, but off for
shooting. that way the pause to think about the 4 basic rules of
gunsafety occurs at the best possible moment. Most helpfully, the
safetycatch could be made to be as difficult as a childproof
cap.
Now one might object that to many homeowners and LEOs and hostages
will be shot to death while the good guys are working on their
childproof caps. The first response is that people who object along
these lines watch too much 24. The better response is that under
strict liability, manufacturers are responsible for both problems
caused by difficult catches and for problems caused by lack of
difficult catches. The market then determines how gun price should
be correlated with catch difficulty as an ultimate safety
matter.
If more people ate corn syrup then gun violence would go
down because people's fingers would be too fat to pull the
triggers.
Violent crime is dropping in parallel with the obesity epidemic.
That doesn't neccessarily imply causation, but it is a good
observation and basis for further social science research.
Leavitt says its abortion, but Jennifer says its the diabetes.
Gee...perhaps because so long as one follows the basic rules
of gun safety such "risks" are moot?
You tell'em, MG.
"Since you run your gun lectures so much differently than
this guy did, you seem like the person LEAST qualified to speculate
about what kinds of carelessness Glock should reasonably expect
from their customers."
Dave, you don't seem to grasp a very, very basic fact of handling
any sort of firearm.
There is no more room for carelessness with a gun than there is
with a car.
If anything, Glock should not expect a member of Federal Law
Enforcement, a man who is supposedly highly trained, to make such
an idiotic mistake.
But then again, I forgot, your batshit insane, and utterly
incapable of understanding how things work in the real world
without forcing your vision of everything through some distorted
lense of idiotic legal liabilities.
Bottom line is this: All gun safety rules apply to all firearms at
all times. If one does not follow those rules, and as a result has
a negligent discharge, then the only person who can be blamed is
the one holding the gun.
Dave, perhaps you'd care to explain how Cheney was following The
Four Rules yet still managed to shoot Whittington?
Admit it, you're wrong.
I've completely kicked your ass in this debate, and at this point
you have nothing left to do but continue to try to split semantic
hairs in a misguided and idiotic attempt to blame someone other
than the person who is 100% responsible.
Try to cast blame on others all you like, but even if you are right
from a legal standpoint (and you aren't, lawsuits just like the one
you've been proposing in this thread have been laughed out of
courtrooms for decades) it doesn't change the fact that you cannot
idiot proof a firearm to avoid tragedy.
Dave, you are, quite frankly, a moron.
I don't care if you do have a degree in law, and are a practicing
lawyer.
You are dumber than hammered dirt.
There is no more room for carelessness with a gun than there
is with a car.
And how do we sort out legal liability where cars are
concerned?
I've never seen anyone try to idiot proof a car to the extent
you want to idiot proof a gun, dummy.
Certainly not after a car accident in which it's patently obvious
that had the driver been following basic rules of traffic safety
that they accident would not have happened.
Hammered dirt, Dave.
Think about it.
Geeze. I guess I ought to sue the Dell Corporation for not
making a keyboard that prevents spelling errors.
How about it, Dave?
Obviously they should be at least partly liable, right? I mean, I
couldn't have made that misspelling if their keyboard had been
designed with an external safety switch to keep spelling mistakes
from happening.
"I think the guy would probably not have shot himself if the gun
had one of those mechanical safeties"
I agree; here is my interpretation of the video. The slide is
pulled placing the hammer at half pull. A Glock is designed for a
full first pull and lighter subsequent pulls; kind of a double
action, sort of. The agent pulled the trigger to release the half
pull like one might with a single action auto pistol. Had the
safety been one of those where it drops the hammer the accident may
never have happened. Probably not a good design for a man with such
a cavalier attitude about firearms.
I've never seen anyone try to idiot proof a car to the
extent you want to idiot proof a gun, dummy.
Yes, and I am asking you to describe the liability regime within
which these sensible car rules were developed. When someone is hurt
in a typical car accident (both drivers legal to drive, not trying
ram anyvbody, etc.), where does the money come from so that the car
accident victim can afford her medical supplies? How does that work
usually?
Last November, I attended a four day defensive handgun training
class at Frontsight, Nevada. There were about three hundred
students in attendance, all armed with a loaded handgun. It was
great fun and very educational as well. The only time I felt safer
was when I was in the army in the company of 150 guys carrying
machine guns.
One student shot himself in the leg and was flown by helicopter to
the trauma center in Las Vegas. He was treated and released, with
two neat holes in his right thigh (entry and exit), and a bruised
ego. If only Ray Nagin and JMJ had been there to disarm us, I am
sure this guy would not have been shot.
The guy who "accidentally" shot himself was shooting a Sig .40
caliber. I was shooting a Glock 22 (.40 caliber, same as the idiot
DEA agent). I did not shoot myself, ipso facto the Glock is safe
and the Sig is not.
Pigwiggle,
"The slide is pulled placing the hammer at half pull. A Glock is
designed for a full first pull and lighter subsequent pulls; kind
of a double action, sort of."
Uhhh... Sorry, but you are wrong. Glocks have no external hammer.
Every round has the same pull on the trigger. In my opinion, the
Glock is the most reliable, best designed semi-auto pistol in the
world. They are dirt simple, pretty accurate right out of the box,
and extremely reliable. The only problem I have ever seen with a
Glock is shooting it "limp wristed" will cause it to fail to eject
a spent round and jam.
I guess I ought to add that I own two Glocks: a G17 and G22. I have had the G17 for 15 years, and the G22 for about a year. Both are superb weapons, and extremely safe.
�Uhhh... Sorry, but you are wrong. Glocks have no external
hammer. Every round has the same pull on the trigger.�
I didn�t say it had an external hammer. Try this; see how reliable
your putative double action only glock is. Place a dead round
second or latter in your magazine. After the misfire just bump the
slide a bit (not a full pull) and refire. Youll get the point.
Pig,
We have a failure to communicate. I don't know what you are
suggesting I do. When you say "bump the slide a bit", do you mean
to grab it and slide it back, but not all the way back so as to
eject the dead round?
The Glock is either cocked, or not, there is no half cocked mode.
If it is cocked and there is a round in the chamber, it will fire
if you depress the bang switch with your booger hook.
Pig,
If you are saying that you don't need to rack the slide all the way
back to cock it, I agree. I just experimented with my g22. A full
motion slide to the rear is about 1 inch, but racking the slide
back as little as about 1/8 will cock the hammer.
I fail to see how any of this relatest to the idiot DEA agent's
misplaced booger hook though.
"A Glock is designed for a full first pull and lighter
subsequent pulls; kind of a double action, sort of. The agent
pulled the trigger to release the half pull like one might with a
single action auto pistol."
Maybe I am beating a dead horse here, but the Glock is not designed
to have a different first pull and lighter subsequent pulls. If the
agent pulled the trigger (he did, I saw the video) that will
release the hammer and make the Glock go bang, which is exactly
what happened. The Glock's design had nothing to do with that agent
shooting himself.
My original description was poor. The striker is set at half
cock by the first pull of the slide; the pull that chambers the
first round. All subsequent resetting of the striker at half cock
is accomplished through the recoil of the slide. Glock advertises
their gun as a double action only; it really isn�t.
So, if you clear the chamber with an empty magazine the striker is
set at half cock and can be restored to the resting position by
pulling the trigger. This is what I imagined the guy was trying to
accomplish when he shot his foot. Other truly double action auto
pistols have a decock lever, something that wouldn�t really work
with the Glock design. If you had such a lever, and used it after
loading the first round, you would need to �bump� the slide to
reset the striker at half cock.
I like how Glocks shoot, but the design isn�t the best. A common
reason primers become insensitive is contact with cleaning
solvents. Clean your gun, load it, let it sit for a year. Then,
when you need it most, you may find yourself �bumping� the slide
for a second go at a bad primer while trying to shoot an intruder.
But lots of folks like Glock; my father has one for his duty gun. A
revolver is more reliable though.
Dave is off base if he thinks strict liability avoids causation issues. Negligence and causation are separate issues. Strict liability avoids negligence issues, not cause issues. Did Glock cause the injury? Obviously not.
"Glock advertises their gun as a double action only; it
really isn�t."
Where? So far as I know, Glock has always advertised their guns as
using the "Safe Action" system. When you get right down to it, it
is neither DA or SA at any point in time. But that's entirely
beside the point of this discussion.
"A common reason primers become insensitive is contact with
cleaning solvents. Clean your gun, load it, let it sit for a year.
Then, when you need it most, you may find yourself �bumping� the
slide for a second go at a bad primer while trying to shoot an
intruder."
This makes no sense.
1) Back when I was poor and couldn't afford to regularly shoot up
my defensive ammo, I had rounds of ammunition in a handgun for more
than a year. When I finally got around to buying more of it, it all
fired just fine.
2) Yes, primers can be penetrated by lube, but only if you're
applying a horrendously excessive amount.
3) What do you mean "bumping the slide a second time?" I have never
seen this taught anywhere. Nearly every failure drill I've seen for
an autoloading handgun follows the principle of tap-rack-bang. Tap
the magazine to make sure it's seated properly, rack the slide to
eject the bad round and chamber the next one, pull the trigger to
fire the newly chambered round.
"Yes, and I am asking you to describe the liability regime
within which these sensible car rules were developed. When someone
is hurt in a typical car accident (both drivers legal to drive, not
trying ram anyvbody, etc.), where does the money come from so that
the car accident victim can afford her medical supplies? How does
that work usually?"
The insurance providers of the respective drivers.
"The first response is that people who object along these
lines watch too much 24."
Spoken like someone who has never been the victim of a violent
crime.
"The better response is that under strict liability,
manufacturers are responsible for both problems caused by difficult
catches and for problems caused by lack of difficult catches. The
market then determines how gun price should be correlated with
catch difficulty as an ultimate safety matter."
That's patently idiotic. The market has already spoken, and with
absolutely no need for input from you or your tile-crawling
brethren.
For those who wish to have an external, manual safety there are
many, many models of handgun that have them. For those who do not
wish to have a manual safety, their are many, many models of
handgun that do not.
There is absolutely no need for a bunch of clueless, snivelling,
holier-than-thou, suit-wearing shmucks like you, Dave, to dictate
to me what sort of firearms I should or should not be allowed to
own.
Incidentally, and as a point of interest, I do not own any Glock
pistols.
Consult the Book of Armaments!
(Sorry, just had to get a Monty Python reference in.)
Since you run your gun lectures so much differently than
this guy did, you seem like the person LEAST qualified to speculate
about what kinds of carelessness Glock should reasonably expect
from their customers.
What kind of carelessness should Glock, and us voters, expect from
Federal law enforcement officers? I certainly expect better gun
handling than this from civilian gun owners. And get it.
How do you know it would have went down this way? It seems
quite possible to me that careless cop chose to do this
demonstation precisely because he did not have to fool with a
safety catch.
He chose to do this demonstration because:
Even if he did have to so fool, that fooling would have given
him an extra five seconds to recall the 4 basic rules of gunsafety,
and that could have made a helpful difference here.
In the Texas CHL test students using firearms with safeties start
with the safety on and fire one shot in 2 seconds, two shots in 3
seconds, three shots in 4 or 6 seconds, etc. Flicking off a safety
takes approximately the same amount of tim as moving your trigger
finger from the frame to the trigger.
By the time this person pulled the trigger he had already violated
all three basic rules. His mind was fully occupied by what he was
saying and the impression he was trying to leave.
More helpfully the safety catch should have been designed so
that it had to be on when the gun was being unloaded, but off for
shooting.
When the gun is being unloaded properly the slide is open, enabling
the internal safety. The Glock already had the feature you
describe. Had he unloaded the firearm properly during step three he
would have looked in the chamber and down the magazine well, and
avoided the situation.
that way the pause to think about the 4 basic rules of
gunsafety occurs at the best possible moment.
The best possible moment to start thinking about
safety is before he picked up the gun.
Most helpfully, the safety catch could be made to be as
difficult as a childproof cap.
I disagree. If I'm shooting the gun, carrying it for self-defense,
or teaching with it such a safety would be to cumbersome. If I'm
not, then the gun should be properly stored with a lock, not a
catch.
Note that anti-gun legislation proposing such measures always have
an exception for law enforcement and military. Don't we want our
cops and soldiers to have safe guns? Of course. But LEO and
military firearms experts agree with civilian experts that such
devices do not make firearms safer. The only
experts who believe they do are the anti-gun experts who seldom go
to the range and have to fool with them.
Dave is off base if he thinks strict liability avoids
causation issues.
Fair enuf. I should have said that strict liability avoids intent
issues. It is the fact that the strictly liable party is jointly
and severally liable with the shooter (aka the idiot aka the Dick
Cheney) that reduces, but does not completely eliminate, causation
issues. More specifically, causation issues are simplified in that
causation does not need to be apprortioned between the idiot and
the gunmaker. They are both on the hook. If the gunmaker wants to
seek indemnity from the idiot then they should have that
right.
side note to MG: see how much this scheme makes gun ownership
similar to auto insurance. Similar in the sense that a third party
accident victim always has a good place to go to get money for her
wheelchair and other medical supplies. Similar in the sense that we
(by and large) let the automakers and insueres sort out what safety
features are good to include on cars and which are superfluous or
even downright harmful. Perhaps more importantly, the insurance
company acts as an idiot screener, deciding if one is insurable in
the first place and then making sure that insurance is lost if you
do too many no-no's in the car. While strict liability has many of
the features of insurance (eg, shifting social costs away from
innocent, injured third parties), it also avoids some of the
hassles such as the insurance company middleman and ongoing premium
payments.
Most helpfully, the safety catch could be made to be as
difficult as a childproof cap.
I disagree. If I'm shooting the gun, carrying it for
self-defense, or teaching with it such a safety would be to
cumbersome.
Of course my childproof cap safety would be cumbersome. That is the
point of it. Of course many people would lose their lives while
they were playing with the childproof when the home invader came
upon them. That is not hard to understand.
But the real question from a safety perspective is:
what will cause fewer injuries in total: my childproof cap design
or the Glock safetyless design? We do not have an answer to this
question right now. The way to answer this question is to stack up
all the dead bodies of people killed due to the childproof cap in
one pile and to stack the dead bodies of those accidentally shot
(in situations where a safety would probailistically have helped)
in another pile. The higher pile represents the more dangerous
design.
Of course, the point of this analysis isn't to take anything off
the market. Rather, we need to incentivize SIG/SAUER to do this
kind of actuarial analysis so that they know how much to charge for
each model such that future liabilities are reasonably covered. You
can still buy either model. It is just that you will pay somewhat
more for the one that leads to more deaths of more innocents.
Nobody can say today which will be cheaper. the point is that the
safer one will be cheaper, but you will retain your choice so long
as you are willing to pay for it.
No, I don't think this violates anybody's second amendment rights,
however interpreted, either, so the plan is bulletproof!
" So far as I know, Glock has always advertised their guns as
using the "Safe Action" system."
Well, this is how I have seen them described at the distributer;
DAO. Parusing Glock's site it's clear they avoid the point. I know
they are pitched as DAO to police departments as a way to limit
their liability.
"Back when I was poor and couldn't afford to regularly shoot up my
defensive ammo, I had rounds of ammunition in a handgun for more
than a year. When I finally got around to buying more of it, it all
fired just fine."
Good, keep buying that ammo, but it's a well demonstrated problem.
Your single experience is really just that; anecdote.
"What do you mean "bumping the slide a second time?" I have never
seen this taught anywhere."
As I explained, it returns the striker to the half cocked position.
And not bumping the slide for a second time, bumping the slide for
a second go at an insensitive primer. This is a problem of the
in-line ammo feed. Manufacturers are looking to solve the problem.
Taurus, for example, has designed an action that reverts to a true
double action after a misfire. You have the ability for a second go
at a putatively insensitive primer or you can take the time to
clear it and chamber a new round.
"When you get right down to it, it is neither DA or SA at any point
in time. But that's entirely beside the point of this
discussion."
Actually, that was my point. I described a scenario where the
agent, confused between the Glocks 'semi-DAO' action and that of a
DA/SA, tried to return the striker from the half cocked to the rest
postion by pulling the trigger. Which would have worked for an
empty gun.
Dave.
You are a moron.
That you can, with a presumably straight face, advocate making a
defensive arm so difficult to operate that it in effect becomes
utterly useless for its intended purpose is so utterly idiotic that
there's nothing I can possibly say to disabuse you of the
notion.
You have, quite frankly, gone spinning off into a parallel
dimension of Stupid so rock-headedly kooky that I am completely at
a loss as to how to respond to you.
Nothing I can say could possibly describe how much of a witless
godamned fucknut you are.
Even with the vast, far-reaching, and worldwide resource that is
the internet, I have been unable to find enough synonyms of the
word "idiot" to come anywhere close to describing the stupifyingly
thick-headed inanity of the affected, pseudo-legalistic yet utterly
daffy brain droolings that you have smeared from one side of this
blog debate to the other.
I am thoroughly flabbergasted that despite your utterly
mind-blowing level of nutty stupidity you are able to breath
without assistance, let alone operate a computer.
An entire Army of linguists and etymologies tasked with coming up
with enough descriptive words to describe your utterly
incomprehensible mental density would, even after years of research
into the history of human language and the development of new words
just to describe your own puerile brand of deranged
cretinism, come up completely short of their goal.
Dave, you are so fucking stupid that it makes my goddamned teeth
hurt.
"Actually, that was my point. I described a scenario where
the agent, confused between the Glocks 'semi-DAO' action and that
of a DA/SA, tried to return the striker from the half cocked to the
rest postion by pulling the trigger. Which would have worked for an
empty gun."
Which would have happened, regardless of the operating system of
the firearm, had he removed the magazine from the gun
first and then racked the slide to eject the round that
was in the chamber.
Jesus Christ, what is so fucking difficult about this?
Is this for real, someone did that? When did this happen and why
was I not informed?
Is anyone else reminded of a scene in Malibu's Most Wanted where
Jamie Kennedy shoots himself in the foot? It seems like there is
almost some kind of dual literal/figurative meaning here.
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