According to a friend in the service the firearm was found to have an internal malfunction and the jarring of getting into the car caused it to discharge. Sounded similar to what Rich LPS mentioned above.
Any firearm can malfunction, some easier than others. Hammer fired guns I believe are more secure when hammer is down, even with a round in the chamber.
But the biggest issue I see is why go to the extreme policy to have a chambered round at all times ?
I bet a research on that will show almost zero cases where the life of the officer was at stake for 1 second delay after picking up the gun from the holster (the time it takes to chamber a round).
At the other end, the cases of injury because of a chambered round are so many![]()
The fact it happened when he was getting into a vehicle tells me the pistol was knocked about in some way and this caused the ND. Hard to say more without knowing if the gun was broken, the model of holster, or if the gun was fully seated in the holster at the time.
Any firearm can malfunction, some easier than others. Hammer fired guns I believe are more secure when hammer is down, even with a round in the chamber.
But the biggest issue I see is why go to the extreme policy to have a chambered round at all times ?
I bet a research on that will show almost zero cases where the life of the officer was at stake for 1 second delay after picking up the gun from the holster (the time it takes to chamber a round).
At the other end, the cases of injury because of a chambered round are so many![]()
It was a drop leg holster not sure of brand but likely Safariland.
Any firearm can malfunction, some easier than others. Hammer fired guns I believe are more secure when hammer is down, even with a round in the chamber.
But the biggest issue I see is why go to the extreme policy to have a chambered round at all times ?
I bet a research on that will show almost zero cases where the life of the officer was at stake for 1 second delay after picking up the gun from the holster (the time it takes to chamber a round).
At the other end, the cases of injury because of a chambered round are so many![]()
See Rich LPS post above - the Glock he refers to was not "knocked about" in anyway. It was in a thigh drop holster - as the officer got out of the veh, the holster twisted the pistol just enough that the firing pin was released due to the broken rails.
Sorry Glock lovers....(me included, I have one and love it)...history repeats it's self.
This happened in Calgary. Yes when the frame rails / inserts break and separate from the frame and the slide lifts off slightly the gun can fire....with a worn firing pin safety.
Rich
All the "armchair experts" who know exctly how police should carry guns, is why we have the Dunning-Kruger chart (google it).
All the "armchair experts" who know exctly how police should carry guns, is why we have the Dunning-Kruger chart (google it).
Wow! Pretty bold statement. I would like to see you comfortable putting your life on the line this way - when seconds count in your reaction time (and yes, you will always be REacting, not acting), you better hope that your motor skills function properly with an adrenaline dump to get your gun out, hope the mag is seated properly, rack the slide, get back on target and engage the threat (oh and no phase 1 stoppage either). If you can do all of that in 1 second, under pressure, whilst your every move is being filmed by the public, and you are constantly having to assess whether you need to disengage from this level of force, you are a better man than me.
In fact, in September 2016, we would have had a dead police officer in Calgary, if Calgary Police were stupid enough to follow your ridiculous suggestion of not having a round chambered. The officer in question was attacked by a machete wielding mad man, who hacked one shoulder joint and his other forearm, before the officer managed to somehow draw his pistol, fire 3 rounds and stop the threat. I suppose you would have been happy to explain to this officers widow that carrying an unloaded handgun was safer??? Since there was no way he would have been physically capable of racking the slide with the injuries he sustained, but was able to pull the trigger?? Try living in the real world before you so blithely give your opinion of what police should and should not do as a matter of "policy".
Oh sorry - I just realised this officers life (and the lives of officers being dragged by vehicles, and who have 1 free hand to draw and fire to save their lives) fall under your "almost zero" cases.



























