SAFETY WARNING! Worn Leather Holsters Can Cause Accidental Discharges!

Wendell

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Uber Super GunNutz
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by The ITS Crew on March 21, 2011
Editor-in-chief’s note: We’d like to thank the anonymous individual who came forward with this important information and allowed us to get it out to everyone here at ITS Tactical.

<http://www.itstactical.com/warcom/firearms/safety-warning-worn-leather-holsters-can-cause-accidental-discharges/>
SAFETY WARNING! Worn Leather Holsters Can Cause Accidental Discharges!

by The ITS Crew on March 21, 2011

Editor-in-chief’s note: We’d like to thank the anonymous individual who came forward with this important information and allowed us to get it out to everyone here at ITS Tactical.

“What the hell was that?!?” she said. It took me a half a second to realize that my gun had just gone off…on my hip…in its holster. My wife and I had just finished breakfast at our favorite café and got into the car.

Leather-Holster-AD-Main.jpg


Me being the passenger, I rotated my torso to the left to fasten my seatbelt like I always do. When I straightened again, my Glock 19 discharged, blowing a 9mm hole through my pants, underwear, the leather seat and bottom of the car’s door frame.

The bullet nicked my hip, but the wound is nothing a bandage couldn’t cover. So what went wrong? Guns never go “Bang” all by themselves.

After ensuring I wasn’t hemorrhaging profusely and didn’t have to make a dash for the hospital, I stayed seated in the car as my wife came around to my door and opened it. I undid my belt and slid the Galco JAK202 Slide Belt Holster, with the gun still in it, off my belt. Why it went off was immediately apparent.

The trusty, comfortable, leather holster I had been using for a year and two weeks had done what a baseball glove does after lots of use; It got soft. This particular holster carries the pistol outside the waistband, but inside the belt. The belt slides through slots in the outer side of the holster.

The problem stemmed from the leather on the inner side of the holster getting soft. A crease formed, which eventually was large enough to extend beyond the trigger. Manipulate the gun in just the wrong manner and this crease is no different than a finger on the trigger. Boom!

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I can’t say I didn’t know the crease had been formed in the holster. I trained myself to be sure that when holstering, to make sure the gun was fully in the holster, with the trigger protected. On this day, did I forget to do that when I holstered up? Did the leather finally get so soft that a combination of body movements and interference by the cushy leather seat move the Glock enough to create a situation where the trigger was engaged by the holster?

I don’t think we’ll ever know for sure, but I’ll humbly admit to the former as the likely culprit. However, if it was the latter, then those of you who use this type of holster need to be aware of its limitations and the possibility of experiencing what I did.

It might have been a very different story had the incident happened while we were dining. That bullet ricocheting off the concrete floor could have done untold damage and just as easily killed somebody. Fortunately nobody got hurt and damage to the car was minimal. It will be an interesting conversation with the insurance company to see if they’ll cover the repairs.

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Holstering your gun can be just as important as drawing it. Make sure you pay attention when doing so. If your leather is getting soft and worn, be sure that it won’t interfere with your trigger or just replace it.

The back of the slide and/or grip was being pushed downward into the leather holster…or the holster was being pushed upward with some force. My guess is the firearm was being pushed and the fold in the holster acted as a finger and depressed the Glock trigger safety.

This truly brings home the importance of taking care of your equipment and ensuring it’s in proper working order. Hopefully you can learn from my situation and prevent an accident like this from happening to you.



Editor-in-chief’s note: We’d like to thank the anonymous individual who came forward with this important information and allowed us to get it out to everyone here at ITS Tactical.

Please share this with everyone you know that carries in a leather holster!



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<http://www.itstactical.com/warcom/firearms/safety-warning-worn-leather-holsters-can-cause-accidental-discharges/>
 
Perfect example why SO/RO's should check for untucked shirts when starting shooters on the line. A shirt tail caught in the trigger area can cause an AD upon holstering a loaded "safe action" pistol.

Take Care

Bob
 
Perfect example why SO/RO's should check for untucked shirts when starting shooters on the line. A shirt tail caught in the trigger area can cause an AD upon holstering a loaded "safe action" pistol.

Take Care

Bob

Yep, and there's (almost) never a need to quick-holster a gun. Take your time, and be careful.

Great pics though, the guy's lucky it wasn't worse, and we're lucky because he shared this "gotcha". I think I'd be more kydex, if I carried, but leather is really popular.
 
Its not an AD its an ND. You are responsible for your equipment and therefore responsible for how it functions or not. The holster in the photos is a cheap piece of sh*t that does not have a reinforced mouth. Buy a quality holster, seek quality training, and always check your gear before use. This guy got exactly what he deserved.

TDC
 
Its not an AD its an ND. You are responsible for your equipment and therefore responsible for how it functions or not. The holster in the photos is a cheap piece of sh*t that does not have a reinforced mouth. Buy a quality holster, seek quality training, and always check your gear before use. This guy got exactly what he deserved.

TDC

What are you saying? Do you really believe anyone deserves an AD. What is your answer to the guys who seek out quality training, check their gear and still have an AD? Accidents do happen TDC, such incidents as outlined above only reinforce the need for constant vigilance and do help to draw all our attention to be exceedingly careful when handling our firearms. Murphy lives and you will learn that overtime.

Take Care

Bob
 
Yep, and there's (almost) never a need to quick-holster a gun. Take your time, and be careful.

Great pics though, the guy's lucky it wasn't worse, and we're lucky because he shared this "gotcha". I think I'd be more kydex, if I carried, but leather is really popular.

Exactly.

Take Care

Bob
 
What are you saying? Do you really believe anyone deserves an AD. What is your answer to the guys who seek out quality training, check their gear and still have an AD? Accidents do happen TDC, such incidents as outlined above only reinforce the need for constant vigilance and do help to draw all our attention to be exceedingly careful when handling our firearms. Murphy lives and you will learn that overtime.

Take Care

Bob

If you fail to inspect your gear, run quality gear, and/or seek training. You deserve the piss poor performance such as an ND.

TDC
 
Unless the gun breaks, it's an ND. This was operator failure. If your going to take the responsibility of carrying, you take the duty of care to maintain your gear as well. Glad no one was hurt, and at least the dummy pointed it out for others.
 
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