Consider this:
(Bozeman MT Daily Chronicle)
By KATHLEEN O'TOOLE Chronicle Staff Writer 11/05/2000 00:00:00 (Montana)
Remington rifle involved in growing number of accidents
One of those lawsuits ended in 1994 with Remington paying $17 million to a Texas man whose Remington Model 700 bolt-action rifle accidentally discharged and shot him in the foot.
And he has the muzzle pointed at foot because..........?
Barbara Barber, Gus Barber's mother, said Wednesday that was exactly what happened to her as she unloaded the gun. But this time the barrel of her gun was pointing at the open door of a horse trailer. The bullet went through the trailer's wall and hit her son in the abdomen as he stood on the other side. "My finger wasn't on the trigger," she said.
What was she thinking?........Well.....she wasn't!
The most recent was this past Friday, when a Bozeman hunter, Justin Sabol, was unloading his Remington Model 700 .22-250-caliber rifle when it discharged. The bullet first hit the floor of his truck, then ricocheted and hit Robert Nase, 53, of Belgrade, in the forearm, causing a minor injury.
A loaded gun in a vehicle?
In June 1993, 11-year-old Hank Blacksmith was at the home of his friend, Jesse Coonfare, in Billings. Coonfare got his father's Remington Model 600 Mohawk rifle, a gun that Remington had recalled in 1978.
The gun slipped from Coonfare's hands and accidentally discharged, shooting and killing Blacksmith. That case also settled out of court in 1996 and the terms of the settlement were also sealed and confidential.
Wait A Minute....Now were talking about a model other than the 700, why not bring up anecdotes about trigger problems from Remingtons blackpowder era also? Besides the FACT that Remington DID recall that model AND the incident happened years AFTER the recall.
Remington had 1979 tests that showed only 1 percent of the Model 700 guns could be "tricked" into a discharging inadvertently and argued that a recall "would have to gather 2 million guns just to find 20,000 that are susceptible to this condition," according to the subcommittee's minutes. But Attorney Richard C. Miller, a Missouri attorney who has represented more than 40 cases against Remington regarding accidental discharges of the Model 700, believes the real reasons Remington didn't order a recall because it would be too costly and hurt the company's future sales. "Every one can do it. There's not one out there that's safe," Miller said Friday.
A 700 Recall WAS done in Jan 79 to address the trigger lock issue....the above is NOT FACTUAL.
Miller explained there are two problems with the Model 700 rifle. The first is a problem where the internal components of the system don't always return the sear-block safety, which blocks the firing pin from reaching the primer. When that happens, the only thing keeping the gun from firing is the safety.
NO, it's caused by oil and dirt.
Looking back on 45 years of hunting, I've seen a few AD's ...even had one or two myself......and in every case, it was a matter of unloading when coming off a treestand when you are cold to the bone.....can't feel your fingers and toes....not to mention your thinking ain't exactly clear either.
You can bash Remington, but don't B**** when they are forced to move operations out of the Country due to these frivolous lawsuits, nor when the government mandates 10 # minimum, non=servicable triggers.
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