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Safety Failure Leads To Disaster At Parma Range

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Comments

Melvin Fernandez says:

Just treat any weapon as loaded. I always remove my magazine and clear the chamber and leave it open before allowing someone to handle my weapon. If I'm handed a weapon I will always do the same. Remove the magazine and clear the chamber and return the weapon back in that configuration. Muzzle awareness always. Goodness, that should never have happened but that could have been much much worse.

Millenialstrivingfortheamericandream says:

What kind of range let's you take a loaded weapon outside of the active range lane room.

KevinMphotography says:

So many people using firearms with zero training…this is the result.

as ya says:

The gym would be a safer bet than the range for these people.

Orenthal Simpson says:

Must have been fmj to pass through her big ass

Informal Discussions Podcast says:

This serves as a reminder that you can’t count on a shot to the leg to incapacitate someone. Of course no one on this channel would think that, but you know who I’m talking about.

Daniel says:

It’s crazy how she get hit in the abdomen and it comes out the back of leg just amazing how the bullet travel very unpredictable

Bail Bondsman says:

What a Maroon

Chris & Derson says:

If she wasn't so damn big she wouldn't have gotten hit 💯

ctlfreak says:

She took that shot really well. Barely even fazed her

9995 says:

I was in the army for 30 years so have handled rifles, pistols and crew served weapons many, many times in training and on deployments where you have your personal weapon on you at all times. But ironically I have never done any firing of any weapon in my off time or since retiring (I was a combat arms guy but not a gun guy outside of work). Now that I have retired and purchased a Beretta and P365 for home protection, I am actually nervous about going to a civilian range to practice. I know it's weird but this video is an example of why — I dont know what to expect in terms of rules and SOPs and if they are much different from the army and would be so embarrassed if I screwed up. The army was very controlled about weapons instruction and handling and when my patrols came back in the gates we always cleared our weapons like a drill team we were so well practiced. Do you typically have to wear a holster at a civilian range or do you keep your pistol inside a box and only take it out once at the firing line?

Glenn LeDrew says:

Even the most conscientious of people can slip up, for a number of reasons. It would be to defy the nature of Man to expect that accidental shootings could ever be seriously mitigated by relying on unerring mindfulness.

Play with a deadly instrument, and some folk will be hurt or killed. It's inviolable statistics that ensure the harvest in blood will not be curtailed until the nation enters the 20th (yes, the 20th) century and gets sensible about overcoming its insane worship of the gun. When "God" and "guns" are frequently uttered in the same breath, you know the country of a nominal majority of Christians has lost its collective mind. I mean, what would Jesus, he of "turn the other cheek", have to say about guns? He was against merely raising your hand in anger; busting caps would have him appalled and apoplectic.

Any Christian who would bear arms for personal protection is a non-believing hypocrite. Followers of Christ don't get to jettison what they find inconvenient and still claim to be a follower of His.

Jack Smith says:

Grew up in a hunting/gun smith community and had many special mission unit guys from Army and Navy spend time at the house so Dad could "accurize" their weapons. Heard plenty of stories about AD's in the community. Don't look down too hard on this guy, it does happen to the tip of the spear guys, too.

MartyInLa says:

Does anybody else find it extremely strange that a guy is shot through his hand, a woman is through her ab and out her leg, and I don't see one drop of blood? How is this possible?

Today is Especially Delicious says:

And this is the reason you don't shoot indoor or near people you don't know!

This Epic Life says:

My grandfather (who raised me from infancy) owned a range, which was a few hundred feet from our home. Needless to say, he drilled gun-safety into my head from literally the time I was old enough to walk and talk. Maybe even crawl.
It absolutely blows my mind when I watch stuff like this. I have to remind myself that not everyone had that same sort of upbringing.
It's very unfortunate, because if the Leftists ever succeed in banning guns, it will largely because of the idiocy of people like this.

Rafael Lima says:

IQ tests and psychological evaluation should be mandatory to anyone who wants to have a weapon, it's easier to buy a firearm than to get a boat license.

Beamer B says:

This is why I really don't want to go to gun ranges. Too many accidents.

RSN 2600 says:

Wow not Parma Armory Damnn

2 1 says:

Never forget the first rule of gun safety kids. HAVE FUN!!!

Randall Stewart says:

Always,Always,Always,treat any firearm as if its loaded,whether you know it is or not,it could have been a lot worse,could have killed someone,I have accidently discharged them in the past also, but luckily no one else was around,glad they will recover,hope all involved got a good safety lesson out of that!

Zen InABox says:

Wow. My buddies and I pull mags and check for cleared weapons every time we touch them, before loading and firing downrange. It's like breathing. We've been called posers in the past for all the slide racking to check for clear chambers, but then again, none of us have extra holes in our hands either.

Allen Tolman says:

trailer park mating rituals
blame the fork and spoon
pretending empty hand skill

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