funkfool
01-27-2011, 09:02
I was gonna put this in the CC area but thought it might serve us better here - where more of the unit's operators might see it and realize the physical mechanics of the AD/ND.
NY cop tries to turn on pistol-mounted flashlight, fatally shoots man (http://www.policeone.com/police-products/firearms/articles/3257260-NY-cop-tries-to-turn-on-pistol-mounted-flashlight-fatally-shoots-man/)
The family of that man, suspected drug dealer Michael Anthony Alcala, is suing for negligence
By Larry Celona and Dan Mangan
The New York Post
NEW YORK — The shooting of an innocent, unarmed elderly Bronx man by a cop who was trying to turn on a pistol-mounted flashlight is at least the second accidental police shooting in the United States involving that flashlight model.
But unlike Saturday's shooting of 76-year-old Jose Colon - who survived a cop's bullet to the stomach - an unarmed Texas man died Oct. 13 under what reportedly were strikingly similar circumstances involving the Surefire X300 flashlight.
The family of that man, suspected drug dealer Michael Anthony Alcala, is suing for negligence.
Derek McDonald, Surefire's vice president of marketing, insisted, "our product is safe, has been proven safe. Used in a safe manner, it doesn't lead to accidents. It prevents misidentification and saves police lives."
Colon was shot during a drug raid Saturday in his Soundview apartment when Officer Andrew McCormack tried to turn on the flashlight mounted under the barrel of his Glock 9mm pistol, and instead pulled the trigger, sources said.
Copyright 2011 N.Y.P. Holdings, Inc.
MOD's feel free to move at your discretion.
ff
NY cop tries to turn on pistol-mounted flashlight, fatally shoots man (http://www.policeone.com/police-products/firearms/articles/3257260-NY-cop-tries-to-turn-on-pistol-mounted-flashlight-fatally-shoots-man/)
The family of that man, suspected drug dealer Michael Anthony Alcala, is suing for negligence
By Larry Celona and Dan Mangan
The New York Post
NEW YORK — The shooting of an innocent, unarmed elderly Bronx man by a cop who was trying to turn on a pistol-mounted flashlight is at least the second accidental police shooting in the United States involving that flashlight model.
But unlike Saturday's shooting of 76-year-old Jose Colon - who survived a cop's bullet to the stomach - an unarmed Texas man died Oct. 13 under what reportedly were strikingly similar circumstances involving the Surefire X300 flashlight.
The family of that man, suspected drug dealer Michael Anthony Alcala, is suing for negligence.
Derek McDonald, Surefire's vice president of marketing, insisted, "our product is safe, has been proven safe. Used in a safe manner, it doesn't lead to accidents. It prevents misidentification and saves police lives."
Colon was shot during a drug raid Saturday in his Soundview apartment when Officer Andrew McCormack tried to turn on the flashlight mounted under the barrel of his Glock 9mm pistol, and instead pulled the trigger, sources said.
Copyright 2011 N.Y.P. Holdings, Inc.
MOD's feel free to move at your discretion.
ff