Posted on 10/16/2014 1:51:37 PM PDT by marktwain
On 26 July, 2014, 57-year-old Brian D. Murphy defended himself against a charging grizzly in Glacier National Park. The case is interesting for a number of reasons. Two months after the attack, Murphy was charged with discharging a firearm in Glacier Park, a misdemeanor that carries a $500 fine. On 9 October, a motion to dismiss the charge was put forward by the U.S. Attorney's Office after Murphy's attorney said that they would raise the defense of self-defense. Judge Keith Strong granted the motion last Thursday. From missoulian.com:
The U.S. Attorneys Office has dismissed the charge against 57-year-old Brian D. Murphy.DNA samples of blood and hair taken at the scene confirmed that the bear was a grizzly. Murphy had time to ready both defenses because he had seen the bear running toward other hikers. When he yelled to warn them, the bear turned and came straight at him.
The charge was dismissed with prejudice, meaning a final determination has been made based on the merits of the case. Murphy cannot be re-charged at a later date.
Murphys attorney, Jason T. Holden of Great Falls, called it a perfect scenario to have a case dismissed with prejudice.
The hiker, who was alone at the time, was not injured. He turned over the revolver to rangers, who reported it contained five unspent rounds and one spent casing.It appears that Murphy was defending others as well as himself. He quickly retreated back down the trail.
The bear fell back and was motionless, Holden said. Murphy withdrew and double-timed it out of there, taking the two hikers who were behind him with him. He stopped everyone else on the trail, too, told the first ranger he came to what had happened, and fully and voluntarily cooperated with rangers.The bear was apparently stunned, because it had left the area by the time rangers examined the scene.
I love my Colt Python Stainless 6”!
Are you Rick Grimes?!?
...Wasn't enough to do the job.
The bear was apparently stunned, because it had left the area by the time rangers examined the scene.
Stunned the bear, which later left the scene.
I thought he must have shot him straight on the nose, but then I read the part the bear being stunned and having left later. I wonder where he hit him?
The job was to stop the attack. It worked.
But, you see, according to Obala’s federal government bureaucrats, it is illegal to discharge a handgun in a federally-designated natural park area!
(It is, however, apparently legal for a person to be eaten alive by a bear inside a federally-designated natural park area. However, it would also be illegal for a fat person to provide more than the Michelle’s federally-designated maximum-allowed calories per day to that bear inside a federally-designated natural park area ....)
In 1980 I backpacked in Glacier for a week. At that time, one could apply for two-week gun permit to carry in the park. The application was filled out by hand, sent by postal service and arrived back in about a week, with approval. I have it around here somewhere...
I’m glad the gentleman was well-prepared. I’ve read a lot on bear spray, visited sites selling it and stores and used pepper spray once myself. It’s interesting that the spray was not enough against the bear.
This is an interesting story because it seems to say a gun or pepper spray by themselves was not enough.
I suspect two possibilities.
One, he hit the bear between the eyes, and the shot knocked the bear out without penetrating the skull. Bear skulls look a lot like a skid plate when viewed from the front.
Look at the bear skull at this link, and you can see that if the shot hit the bear between the eyes, but above the nose, the angle is very shallow.
http://gunwatch.blogspot.com/2013/10/maneater-of-boundary-waters-canoe-area.html
Two, the shot hit a glancing blow to the spine, which momentarily paralysed the bear.
Supposedly, when you hike, you should have bells or something and that keeps wildlife away. I think that does work. Does it work always? I don’t know.
The “studies” hyping bear spray have some problems:
http://gunwatch.blogspot.com/2014/10/wybear-spray-v-bullets-flaws-in-studies.html
It would be my luck that the bear liked spicy food.
John “Pondoro” Taylor designed a system of measuring big game rifles effectiveness based on a “Knock Out Value” of what it would take to incapacitate an animal such as an elephant.
Bullet weight in grains x bullet diameter (decimal inches) x velocity (FPS) / 7000 = KOV
That said, a KOV of 12 for a 158 grain bullet at 1400 FPS is pretty feeble for a grizzly.
This dude was lucky.
If youd like to be on or off this Outdoors/Rural/wildlife/hunting/hiking/backpacking/National Parks/animals list please FR mail me. And ping me is you see articles of interest.
Personally, I would have emptied my Python into the grizzly, reloaded and continued shooting with every round I had at my disposal. Of course I’d probably be making little rocks out of big rocks for doing so, but a grizzly bear is not an animal to trifle with.
I wonder if charges would have been brought if the hiker had shot the grizzly while it was attacking a bald eagle???
EODGUY
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