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VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Wed May 30, 2012 10:41 pm
by JJVP
The Roanoke County Police Department is checking their department-issued handguns after an officer's gun misfired Monday as he attempted to shoot a man wielding a shotgun, officials said.
An internal investigation showed a police armorer — a trained officer who services the department's weapons — failed to replace the handgun's firing pin spring during routine maintenance in 2010.
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Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Wed May 30, 2012 11:12 pm
by baldeagle
JJVP wrote:The Roanoke County Police Department is checking their department-issued handguns after an officer's gun misfired Monday as he attempted to shoot a man wielding a shotgun, officials said.
An internal investigation showed a police armorer — a trained officer who services the department's weapons — failed to replace the handgun's firing pin spring during routine maintenance in 2010.
Two years and he never shot his gun. Not even at the shooting range. No wonder percentage of hits by the police is so low.

I'll bet he checks it more often now.
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Wed May 30, 2012 11:22 pm
by Texas Dan Mosby
Fail to replace as in "replace with a new one in accordance with maintenance standards" or fail to replace as in "failed to put the spring back in the gun resulting in the user walking around with a gun with no FP spring....for two years."
Complacency....
Sometimes it can be painful. Sometimes lethal.
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Thu May 31, 2012 6:29 am
by Jumping Frog
Texas Dan Mosby wrote:Fail to replace as in "replace with a new one in accordance with maintenance standards" or fail to replace as in "failed to put the spring back in the gun resulting in the user walking around with a gun with no FP spring....for two years."
Yeah, I was wondering the same thing.
If it had been non-functional for two years, that just sends a chill down the back.
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Thu May 31, 2012 6:45 am
by C-dub
Not one of my guns has gone that long without being fired. Does anyone have one that has not been fired in over two years?
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Thu May 31, 2012 6:51 am
by Jumping Frog
C-dub wrote:Not one of my guns has gone that long without being fired. Does anyone have one that has not been fired in over two years?
I've got a couple of shotguns I haven't shot in at least a couple of years. My home defense shotgun has been, but not some of the others. I probably have some rifles that have been idle that long.
All my handguns have been shot. I'm predominantly a handgun shooter anyway.
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Thu May 31, 2012 7:29 am
by chasfm11
It sounds like there is a lot more wrong here. Don't most police departments require that their officers qualify with their service weapons at least once a year? Perhaps it is just a Texas thing or maybe a random department thing. But it sounds like a good thing to me.
I don't make a living with my guns and they ALL have been fired more often than that. How the heck can you expect to hit anything with it if it only spends time in a holster?
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Thu May 31, 2012 8:11 am
by Keith B
Per Andy's article above
Mason said the gun had fired correctly "on a number of occasions" at biannual qualifications at the county's firing range, and subsequently fired correctly during tests after the Monday incident.
So sounds like he failed to replace te firing pin spring with a new one, and the old one may be weak.
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Thu May 31, 2012 11:22 am
by surprise_i'm_armed
His gun didn't fire - but it was only when he was confronting a shotgun-wielding BG. Is that a bad time? :-)
SIA
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Thu May 31, 2012 11:49 am
by Dave2
I wonder if he had a BUG on him? Unless I missed it, the article didn't say.
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Thu May 31, 2012 12:22 pm
by sjfcontrol
surprise_i'm_armed wrote:His gun didn't fire - but it was only when he was confronting a shotgun-wielding BG. Is that a bad time? :-)
SIA
No, just sounds like Murphy's Law to me.
Actually, I guess it's MacGillicuddy's Corollary
If anything can go wrong, it will
Corollary: It can
Corollary: It should
MacGillicuddy's Corollary: At the most inopportune time
Extension: it will be all your fault, and everyone will know it.
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Mon Jun 04, 2012 4:04 am
by Bullwhip
big city major PD, probably use the same guns from the armory for annual shooting, so they don't "wear out" carry guns.
Sound stupid? I seen it before.
Re: VA - Police officer gun "malfunctions"
Posted: Mon Jun 04, 2012 7:51 am
by philip964
Well no one has mentioned how lucky the BG was. He apparently complied with the officers request, after the officer's gun misfired.
Maybe the BG found God after he heard the click, or maybe he was not a bad guy and was just drunk, slow and lucky.
While the BG lowered his shotgun, it went off striking the ground. Seems like someone was looking out for everyone.