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I know you're trying to make a joke about NY gun laws...stroguy wrote:You're nuts. NY has stringent gun laws.
Interesting question.rx7fan wrote:I always wondered if this was less of a problem where it's legal and easy to buy firecrackers.
http://www.bobtuley.com/shooting_straight_up.htm" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;JOHNSON CITY, Tennessee (AP) -- A bullet fired in the air during a Ku Klux Klan initiation ceremony came down and struck a participant in the head, critically injuring him, authorities said.
Gregory Allen Freeman, 45, was charged with aggravated assault and reckless endangerment in the Saturday night incident that wounded Jeffery S. Murr, 24.
About 10 people, including two children, had gathered for the ceremony. The man who was being initiated was blindfolded, tied with a noose to a tree and shot with paintball guns as Freeman fired a pistol in the air to provide the sound of real gunfire, Sheriff Fred Phillips said.
A bullet struck Murr on the top of the head and exited at the bottom of his skull, authorities said.
Freeman fled the ceremony but was arrested near his home, authorities said. He was released on $7,500 bail.
There is evidence to the contrary.Griz44 wrote:Mythbusters episode 50. Bullets fired straight up into the air do not have enough force on falling to kill someone. If they are fired at an angle they will travel less distance and retain enough force to cause lethal injury, but no specific angle was given.
Here is what can happen when you fire a bullet "up in the air".Heartland Patriot wrote:I still keep seeing conflicting arguments on how much injury bullets fired "up into the air" can cause. Some folks are saying, "Duh, bullet falling out of the sky = hurt person on ground". Others are saying that the physics says differently unless the bullet is fired at a more "normal" angle. Anyone on here have a SIMPLE way of showing this. I'm okay with basic physics CONCEPTS and with basic math, but I've not taken any college level physics, so I don't know much beyond Force=Mass x Acceleration...that sort of thing.