Quote from the article:
"What likely happened was a ‘bunching’ of the t-shirt that got into the trigger guard of the pistol, and pushed the nylon material inward."Does this sentence make sense? (If something got into the trigger guard, it wouldn't have pushed the nylon inward.)
"I've never felt comfortable about a gun whose only safety is the trigger."
Don't like revolvers?
Truthfully, reading the article and looking at the pictures, I'm not sure they are coming to the correct conclusions. Put it this way:
Look at this picture:
http://concealednation.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Image000054.jpgThe bullet obviously came out of the gun when the muzzle end of the gun was only halfway into the holster, yes? (Given where the destruction of the holster started.)
So it looks like the gun wasn't even in the holster (which is unsurprising, since this was a $5 nylon sausage sack) --- instead, the gun was already halfway out of the holster.
Whether that came about because of movement, a shirt tucked into the holster (a common problem with people who don't frickin' pay attention when holstering), or whatever, I don't know.
Even better---given the entry wound and direction, he was either carrying in the worst-managed almost-small-of-the-back carry mode I've ever seen for a right-handed person, or was left-handed and had pushed the gun completely behind him. Either way, considering what the belt hook is like on that holster, the holster itself was just about ready to come off the belt because that holster only does straight-up-and-down, and the entry/exit wounds show the gun was at an angle.
(It also shows clearly that muzzle exit gases at close range do a lot of damage.)
Here's my overall point: Most people who commit safety infractions don't know it, and when they do, won't admit it. The extended discussion on how the gun was checked and wouldn't go off by itself, the owner had been carrying for years, etc----I don't care. I don't find that convincing, and I flat-out don't trust what people say after they have shot themselves.
So: I don't know exactly what happened here. That being said:
- It looks to me like the holster wasn't actually securely on the belt at the time due to the angle of the shot.
- It looks to me like the holster placement itself on the body makes almost no sense for an experienced gun owner in terms of this holster type due to where the round hit.
- It looks to me like the gun was only about halfway into the holster at the time due to the damage to the holster.
Thus:
- If the gun was only halfway into the holster, the trigger guard was going to be accessible.
- If the holster was in a weird position and he was about to sit down, it would be pretty normal for many people to reach back and adjust it, especially it is was in the small-of-the-back like it seemed to have been.
If he had been "climbing around stuff and going through boxes" I can completely see him moving the holster around behind his body because having it on the side of his hip would have been in the way. But he wouldn't want to keep it there when sitting down back in the car.
If the gun had been in the holster, the idea that a tucked-in-shirt would have slowly managed to work its way down into the holster, enough so that over time it would bunch up in the trigger guard and eventually pull the trigger...is not convincing to me. And some other comment about "pushed the nylon material inward" doesn't make sense either if you have ever handled one of these nylon holsters.
Lastly:
"When I left, I walked outside and opened the car door. I went to go get in the car and just heard a loud bang,” Matt explained."
Look at these picture:
http://concealednation.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Image000064.jpgCloseup:
http://concealednation.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Image000074.jpgHe got shot through the LEFT buttock, downward and at an angle outward. So....if he was getting into his car, how did that shot hit the car in that place? Does he get into his car by turning sideways, leaning against the car between the front and rear doors, and then falling partially sideways into the car?
I don't know what happened here in this situation. That being said, a number of the things make no sense to me, and an explanation that makes
more sense to me than the one given (and that fits the facts better, IMO) is that he moved his holster to the small of his back to crawl around the storage area, when he got back to his car he started to adjust it back, the gun wasn't secure in the holster and he reflexively grabbed it and lit one off as he was standing there before getting into the car because it was in an awkward position and his trigger finger control was poor.
That may be completely wrong. But....it actually fits the pictures and comments better than "What likely happened was a ‘bunching’ of the t-shirt that got into the trigger guard of the pistol, and pushed the nylon material inward" which makes no sense.
Short form:
1) Use good holsters that fit your gun, and retain your gun.
2) Don't screw around with your gun.
3) Safety isn't something you do only sometimes. If you have poor muzzle control or poor trigger finger control, there will be consequences.
4) Don't shoot yourself.
Am I missing something, or misunderstanding the pictures?