Millions of Americans hunt, but it is fair to say none of them expect what happened to Justen Yerger of Monroe, Louisiana.
“My life changed forever that day,” he recalls in an interview broadcast on April 11 on Rock Center with Brian Williams.
Yerger
was 19 years old, fresh out of high school; the star kicker on his
football team, with dreams of playing in college. But all that was about
to change.
Yerger
had returned to his truck after dove hunting alone near his home. He
says he leaned his shotgun — a Remington Sportsman 12 — against the
wheel well, with the safety on. As he tossed his gear into the back, the
gun fell over and went off.
He
insists his hands were “nowhere near the trigger,” yet the gun fired
anyway. His understanding had always been that a gun is not supposed to
fire without the trigger being pulled.
“That’s what I’ve always known,” he says. “Especially when the safety is on.”
“Seemed like every time my heart would beat, it looked like a water sprinkler.”
A couple driving by saw Yerger and stopped to help. They rushed him to the emergency room at a nearby hospital.
“I was hit in my left leg - probably about three inches above my knee.” Yerger’s ordeal was just beginning.
He spent three months in the hospital. Ultimately, it would take 13 surgeries, 128 units of blood and hundreds of thousands of dollars in medical bills for him to walk again.
He does not believe anything he did that day was wrong.
“I leaned my gun up. Gun's on safety,” he recalls. “There's not a doubt in my mind that I did not do anything wrong that day.”
Yerger sued Remington and the case eventually settled out of court. The terms of the agreement are confidential.
Now
34 years old with a family of his own and still suffering the effects
of his injury, Yerger says his story is a cautionary tale for other gun
users.
“They need to know that it can happen to anybody, anywhere, any time. I'm proof of it.”
No
government agency can order a manufacturer to recall a defective gun.
In fact, Congress specifically barred the Consumer Product Safety
Commission from regulating firearms and ammunition, in keeping with the
Second Amendment guarantee of the right to keep and bear arms. That
means gun manufacturers police themselves.
But
critics say Remington is shirking its responsibility when it comes to
the firing mechanism used in some of the most popular long guns in
America, including the shotgun owned by Justen Yerger.
Tom
Butters, an engineer, marksman and a trained authority on firearms, has
been paid as an expert in more than 100 claims involving reported
malfunctions of Remington guns. He alleges Remington has been hiding a
dangerous secret about the firing mechanism, which is known as the
Common Fire Control or CFC. He says guns equipped with the CFC can go
off without pulling the trigger, even with the safety on. And he claims
the company has known about it for years.
“I would say it's been known to Remington ever since that first batch of guns went onto the market,” he told Rock Center.
That
was in 1948, and since then, Remington has installed the CFC in some 20
million of its guns, and at least 20 different models. They include the
870 shotgun, which is widely used by law enforcement, the 742
semi-automatic rifle, and the Sportsman 12 that Justen Yerger owned.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/47027695
"He says he leaned his shotgun — a Remington Sportsman 12 — against the wheel well, with the safety on. As he tossed his gear into the back, the gun fell over and went off.
ReplyDelete...
He does not believe anything he did that day was wrong. "
Really? Uhm, how about not leaning a loaded weapon diagonally? A loaded weapon should always be in one of 3 conditions: (1) Carried properly, (2) Stored properly, or (3) Laying *flat* on a sturdy surface from which it can't fall - and pointing away from people.
No, he's not a fault here, but he wasn't following 100% proper safety rules either.