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the only thing that elevates the risk with Glocks and most other striker fired pistols is the fact that you have to pull the trigger to disassemble them. Since they are probably the most common semi-automatic pistol in use by police departments in the US, the odds are if there is a accidental/negligent discharge it will involve a Glock. The same kind of generalization would apply if it an accident involving a shotgun, most police departments field Remington 870s, or auto accidents involving the police a few years ago and guessing the car involves was a Ford Crown Victoria.FiremanBob wrote:There is nothing about Glocks that makes them inherently more dangerous, and certainly no "recipe" for negligent discharges. One NEVER puts one's finger inside the trigger guard until the mag is dropped, the slide has been locked open and the chamber checked for clear.
It is that simple.




It's so easy that it sounds suspicious when reported as a "cleaning accident"... As others have already stated.MarcSpaz wrote:I'm with you. Zero excusable reason for a negligent discharge. You point it in a safe direction, drop the mag, rack the slide, hold it open, make sure there is nothing but fresh air in the chamber. Only then, do you ride it forward, while still pointing in a safe direction without any parts of anyone's body in the way, then pull the trigger. Its really easy.
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In defense of the reporter, I would guess this is what Capt. Michael Ronan told the reporter and/or investigating offcer(s) and that information was communicated as the 'reason' for the incident.FiremanBob wrote:Another brain-dead "journalist" with a lefty agenda. Guns do not "go off".

