The Wall wrote:Similar thing happened to an idiot that was pocket carrying without a holster. Trigger got caught up somehow and it went off. Minor injury to his leg, but had a nice hole in his car seat. Think there was a post on that one on this forum. A properly made to fit holster is a must. One that covers the trigger.
Close, but that's not what happened.
You can read the story here.
What actually happened was that the guy who shot the seat was using a holster, but the holster was all leather, and had gotten soft. The soft part of the leather creased just enough to enter the trigger guard. You can see the photos in the article.
From the story:
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!
This is not to suggest the guy was completely faultless. I still subscribe to the basic premise that there are no gun accidents, just bad gun handling. Said in another way, there is no such thing as an accidental discharge, rather the proper term should be negligent discharge (this is my own perspective, and others' perspectives may vary.)
In this case, however, the guy (a) did use a holster, (b) did, through some series of machinations of trying to holster while sitting in the car, have a discharge, and (c) owned up to it enough to share the lesson with the world so that we could learn from his mistake.
If we want to learn from the mistakes of ourselves and others, we need to correctly assess what really happened.I think it's a bit harsh calling him, "an idiot that was pocket carrying without a holster. Trigger got caught up somehow and it went off". After all, that 'idiot' may be a TexasCHLForum member - we don't know for sure.
No, it was not me.
No, really, it wasn't! But it's something I've worried about a lot, and posted here on the forum about. This type of ND was a major factor I used when selecting my EDC. I carry a SA/DA hammer fired pistol only now because it helps me avoid this problem. I can
wedge the webbing of my thumb in behind the hammer and get a
tactile response if the trigger begins to get pressed while I'm holstering.