After having fired several rounds during the course of fire, the officer was in the process of holstering when the pistol discharged through the open portion of the bottom of the holster. The round entered the outside of the right upper calf and exited the outside of the lower calf and was stopped by the ground (grass/dirt surface). The round did not strike any bone or the ankle or foot. There was not excessive bleeding and it was later found that there was no serious nerve damage. The officer is expected to make a full recovery.
I remembering this happening to a guy in a minivan and shot himself in the hip and bled to death but he didn’t have a holster
Some parents say it is toy guns that make boys warlike. But give a boy a rubber duck and he will seize its neck like the butt of a pistol and shout "Bang!"......George Will
I am curious what kind of holster. This is the main reason I insist on using a holster that stays open at the mouth. I believe that it is possible for a gun to fire while reholstering by catching the trigger on clothing or the holster material. Having a "floppy" or flattened holster increases this chance, IMO. Of course it is very possible [and more probable] he had the ol' booger hook in the wrong place.
Last edited by WildBill on Thu Aug 09, 2012 3:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
There are a lot of negligent discharges that have been documented from reholstering (or trying to put the gun in your pants without a holster. Here is that event you are talking about http://sleepless.blogs.com/george/2011/ ... death.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
There are tons of others. Reholstering is the most dangerous thing that you can do as you have more opportunity to depress the trigger. When moving the gun forward it has more chances of catching on something than when drawing.
Keith
Texas LTC Instructor, Missouri CCW Instructor, NRA Certified Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun Instructor and RSO, NRA Life Member
I am curious what kind of holster. This is the main reason I insist on using a holster that stays open at the mouth. I believe that it is possible for a gun to fire while reholstering by catching the trigger on clothing or the holster material. Having a "floppy" or flattened holster increases this chance, IMO. Of course it is very possible he had the ol' booger hook in the wrong place.
In June 2012, a group of LEOs was participating in firearms training at the range with the department’s issued pistol and ammunition. The officer was using a .40 S&W caliber SIG P229 DAK. The ammunition was department-issued Federal Premium 180-grain HST. The holster utilized was a right-handed Blackhawk Serpa CQC concealment paddle-style. The officer was wearing a light-weight wet weather jacket due to rainy conditions on that day.
and the cord from his jacket got caught in the trigger guard
Some parents say it is toy guns that make boys warlike. But give a boy a rubber duck and he will seize its neck like the butt of a pistol and shout "Bang!"......George Will
I am curious what kind of holster. This is the main reason I insist on using a holster that stays open at the mouth. I believe that it is possible for a gun to fire while reholstering by catching the trigger on clothing or the holster material. Having a "floppy" or flattened holster increases this chance, IMO. Of course it is very possible he had the ol' booger hook in the wrong place.
I am curious what kind of holster. This is the main reason I insist on using a holster that stays open at the mouth. I believe that it is possible for a gun to fire while reholstering by catching the trigger on clothing or the holster material. Having a "floppy" or flattened holster increases this chance, IMO. Of course it is very possible he had the ol' booger hook in the wrong place.
Looks like a Blackhawk Sepra to me
I meant the holster in the OP.
In the OP, the photo shows a Serpa.
Keith
Texas LTC Instructor, Missouri CCW Instructor, NRA Certified Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun Instructor and RSO, NRA Life Member
I am curious what kind of holster. This is the main reason I insist on using a holster that stays open at the mouth. I believe that it is possible for a gun to fire while reholstering by catching the trigger on clothing or the holster material. Having a "floppy" or flattened holster increases this chance, IMO. Of course it is very possible he had the ol' booger hook in the wrong place.
I am curious what kind of holster. This is the main reason I insist on using a holster that stays open at the mouth. I believe that it is possible for a gun to fire while reholstering by catching the trigger on clothing or the holster material. Having a "floppy" or flattened holster increases this chance, IMO. Of course it is very possible he had the ol' booger hook in the wrong place.
From what I could tell. In every one of those stories the "victim" still had their finger in the trigger guard. WHY?
Negligence? Sometimes people get sloppy and forget their trigger discipline. Maybe that's why the article stresses people to slow down. After all, what's the hurry? It only takes one time and your life is changed permanently.
Some parents say it is toy guns that make boys warlike. But give a boy a rubber duck and he will seize its neck like the butt of a pistol and shout "Bang!"......George Will
I have always been told no one ever won a gun fight on how fast they could reholster - take your time, don't sweep your off hand and keep your finger off the trigger!
Blessed be the LORD, my rock, who trains my hands for war, and my fingers for battle; Psalm 144:1-2
CHL - 2010; NRA RSO - 2011, NRA Chief RSO - 2014
NRA Pistol Instructor -2013, NRA Refuse To Be A Victim Instructor - 2015
Lifetime NRA Member - 2013
I'll bet this guy is cutting all of the cords from all of his jackets.
http://www.GeeksFirearms.com NFA dealer.
$25 Transfers in the Sugar Land, Richmond/Rosenburg areas, every 25th transfer I process is free Active Military, Veterans, Law Enforcement, Fire, EMS receive $15 transfers. NRA Patron Member, NRA Certified Pistol Instructor, NRA Certified CRSO, Tx LTC Instructor