Bud_Spencer
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2020
- Posts
- 10,720
Does anyone believe Baldwin's bullshit?
Anyone want to explain single-action revolvers to him?
Anyone want to explain single-action revolvers to him?
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How can a dog shoot a gun? There’s no possible way for a dog to release the safety and pull the trigger.
And yet…
https://www.clarionledger.com/story...ters-its-rare-but-happens-us-miss/2546121002/
Which is why any gun person will say to never point it at anyone and always assume it's loaded.There is a remote possibility that he is telling the truth. When you're dealing with either antique firearms, heavily worn firearms, or simply malfunctioning firearms, it is possible for a single-action weapon (or double-action set with the hammer cocked) to fire from simply being jostled or moved. I am sure the forensics firearms people will be checking/testing for that.
I have personal experience with one such gun (an old, cheap little semi-auto, a classic Saturday night special). The gun was being moved from one shelf to another and discharged (thankfully safely into the floor). The person who was moving the gun insisted she had not done anything other then pick it and set it down. We ended up taking the gun and then the lab put it onto one of those robot arm things that swing around. They simulated moving it from one place to another and sure enough, about 1 in 30 times it just...fired...even though the safety was engaged. I would not have believed it if I hadn't seen it. So, there is a remote possibility that he's telling the truth, which I am sure the lab will check out.
Most forensic labs are familiar with the claim of "the gun just went off" and so have whole batteries of tests just to analyze the probability of that happening.
How did the live ammunition get on the set? Those working on the set had the right to assume there was no live ammunition within miles of them.
There is a remote possibility that he is telling the truth. When you're dealing with either antique firearms, heavily worn firearms, or simply malfunctioning firearms, it is possible for a single-action weapon (or double-action set with the hammer cocked) to fire from simply being jostled or moved. I am sure the forensics firearms people will be checking/testing for that.
...
Its entirely plausible he didn't pull the trigger. If the hammer wasn't locked and he just released it then it would go off. If he wasn't, isn't a gun person its logical to think that he thought as everybody else who has posted here thinks. That pulling the trigger is a requisite
…
There is a remote possibility that he is telling the truth. When you're dealing with either antique firearms, heavily worn firearms, or simply malfunctioning firearms, it is possible for a single-action weapon (or double-action set with the hammer cocked) to fire from simply being jostled or moved. I am sure the forensics firearms people will be checking/testing for that.
I have personal experience with one such gun (an old, cheap little semi-auto, a classic Saturday night special). The gun was being moved from one shelf to another and discharged (thankfully safely into the floor). The person who was moving the gun insisted she had not done anything other then pick it and set it down. We ended up taking the gun and then the lab put it onto one of those robot arm things that swing around. They simulated moving it from one place to another and sure enough, about 1 in 30 times it just...fired...even though the safety was engaged. I would not have believed it if I hadn't seen it. So, there is a remote possibility that he's telling the truth, which I am sure the lab will check out.
Most forensic labs are familiar with the claim of "the gun just went off" and so have whole batteries of tests just to analyze the probability of that happening.
Its entirely plausible he didn't pull the trigger. If the hammer wasn't locked and he just released it then it would go off. If he wasn't, isn't a gun person its logical to think that he thought as everybody else who has posted here thinks. That pulling the trigger is a requisite.
How did the live ammunition get on the set? Those working on the set had the right to assume there was no live ammunition within miles of them.
You guys having had experience with guns and saying that it's rare, but not impossible ---
I'm starting to believe him.
His behavior would have been too inexplicably cretinoid otherwise
People aren't willing to consider it because he's such an awful person.
A wife beater and he, too exploited his almost minimum wage-earning stuff.
He should be charged, alongside the other directors, for recklessly endangering his crew by cutting corners.
Does anyone believe Baldwin's bullshit?
Anyone want to explain single-action revolvers to him?