Posted on 05/22/2015 4:13:05 PM PDT by Swordmaker
Man survives shotgun attack after his iPhone takes brunt of blast
A man miraculously survived being shot near his home with a sawn-off shotgun when his iPhone took the brunt of the blast.
The victim's mobile phone took the majority of the blast from the shotgun. Credit: Cheshire Police
The 25-year-old victim sustained serious injuries to his abdomen but managed to get up and head back to his block of flats where emergency services were called.
Ryan Duggan, 19, has been found guilty of attempted murder at Chester Crown Court. He was also found guilty of possession of a firearm with intent to endanger life and is due to be sentenced on 10 July.
Ryan Duggan has been found guilty of attempted murder Credit: Cheshire Police
The incident took place when the victim approached a group of teenagers who had turned of the water supply to the block of flats where he lived.
During a confrontation, the teenager pulled out the shotgun and fired it at the victim.
The firearm was later recovered by police wrapped in clingfilm and concealed under a bush - with the spent cartridge still inside.
Detective Inspector Gary McIntyre from Cheshire Police said if the victim's phone had not been in his pocket "he would undoubtedly have died".
Duggans actions that night were extreme and shocking the victim went outside to speak to the group about the fact they had turned off the water supply resulting in the defendant shooting him with a powerful weapon.
Fortunately, the victims mobile phone took the brunt of the shot and, as a result of this, he survived. This is remarkable had that phone not been in his pocket at that time he would undoubtedly have died.
Whilst I hope that the conclusion of this case today brings about a degree of closure for the victim I am fully aware of the impact this case has had no him and the fact that the devastating injuries he sustained will affect him for the rest of his life.
Despite making good progress he still requires treatment for his injuries including further operations and rehabilitation. The nightmare is far from over. DET INSP GARY MCINTYRE FROM CHESHIRE POLICE
OK, let's do a test. You stand 15 feet (home defense range) from me in your winter coat and I'll shoot you with a 12 gauge using #6 shot.
In fact, you're more likely to get bouncers with bird shot and take out your own eyes.
I'll also be happy to help with the "bounce test" in a dry walled room. I'll shoot at the dry wall in your house with my 12 gauge. If I lose an eye I'll pay for the dry wall damage.
Make light of it all you want, it has happened. Use bird shot for birds.
I'll shoot at the dry wall in your house with my 12 gauge.
Have any radiators? How about window cranks? Nail or screw heads? How about nail plates(to protect pipes or wiring) in your dry wall? Small, light shot can and will bounce. Spend any time at a range, indoor or out, with someone shooting birdshot and you will get hit by bouncing shot eventually.
When the Atlanta Olympic bombing happened, there was a GBI agent who took a piece of shrapnel. He had his credentials in his back pocket, usually a leather wallet with badge and ID, and that prevented him from being wounded in the buttocks.
I have spent an enormous amount of time shooting birdshot. I hunt, shoot trap and reload as a hobby. I have never been hit by a birdshot ricochet. I have been "rained upon" by birdshot while duck hunting, but that's not a ricochet.
I'm not saying a birdshot ricochet is impossible, but it is not as likely as you imply. There are plenty of knowledgeable people who advocate birdshot for self defense because it is less likely to cause serious collateral damage.
All things considered, I think it is appropriate to make light of your assertions.
I shot skeet for a number of years, before moving on to sporting clays. Since a number of skeet targets are close incomers, ricochets do occur, although they are rare. I’ve been hit several times, once hard enough to break the skin.
That, though, was out of several 10’s of thousands of targets shot. You’re more likely to be clobbered by a piece of the bird.
I don’t see it happening in trap, as you’re never closer to the bird than 16 yards, and it’s outgoing.
This wanker ruined a nice Beretta.
Glad someone finally mentioned that. Who would do that to a perfectly good high-end over and under? I cringe.
I don’t think he’s the “original” owner.
Look, buddy, you hit someone with a 1-1.25 oz. load of lead shot in a column still possibly contained in the wad at a distance of 6 to 15 feet, the distance most home defense takes place, traveling at 1100 feet per second, it will penetrate and stop the target, delivering every foot pound of energy that column of shot is carrying. At that distance, the shot acts as a unitary mass.
#1 buck shot carries too much energy per pellet and can penetrate through the target and a couple walls and injure children in the other room. This has been studied in ballistic studies. . . And the load of birdshot at close range is extremely effective. At longer ranges, the buck shot is better.
Buck shot will bounce from radiators and metal window mullions too. It has also happened. I'd gladly trade an eye for my life or the life of a loved one. Your scenario is far less frequent than the wounding or killing of innocents on the other side of the intended target by bullets that have already passed through the intended bad guy. The idea is to deliver all the energy carried by the projectile, regardless of what it is to your intended target, delivering a stopping blow, and then not have it continue on through to an unintended one.
Have hacksaw, will wreck. . . Thinks he's a gunsmith. I cringed when I saw it.
I've seen a photo of a guy's back who was shot by a sawed-off shotgun using something less than 0 Buck. This survivor had a huge spread, and the pellets had raised about 22 big welts across his entire back.
You’re absolutely right, that is a very tight pattern....squib maybe?
Tactical loads, depending on whether they are buffered, will spread quickly or not.
When I was a kid, a quick thinking hunting partner saved me a face full when someone shooting a crippled duck skipped a load off the water and into our blind. He pulled me down just before the shot pattered off the back wall of the blind.
You can skip it off water, dirt, or pavement, but I have never had it bounce back at me.
I don't know, that's what I am thinking. either way, that load was still mostly in the wad when it struck... that means real close range. I don't care what kind of magic polycarbonate layered voodoo material it was, it wouldn't survive that blast unless something else was going on. That load was traveling very slow when it hit. Maybe it was someones custom "cut" shell or some other baloney and only a partial ignition due to moisture. Too bad we can't find out all the details, I'm pretty interested in knowing how this happened. I'm not doubting it really happened, but I do know this wasn't a normal shotgun shell.
I've got a lot of years experience with shot loads. I could see the material possibly surviving like this past 30-40ft or something, but there is no way to keep a pattern that tight at 30ft or beyond... even 30ft is a stretch of sci-fi thinking. Add to that the choke is gone off this shotgun, it's a lead vaporizer at this point.
And then there was Clark Kent's "lucky silver dollar":
Source: Adventures of Superman: Season 2 - Episode 5: "Shot in the Dark"
- Original Broadcast Date: October 12, 1953Excerpt:
Inside a locked safe, there was the picture of Superman changing into to Clark Kent. Now, thanks to heat vision, it is nothing but ashes. The Man of Steel has also refused to give into Burnside's threats. He has flown away before Jimmy Olsen arrives with Inspector Henderson and his men. Shortly afterwards, Clark Kent joins the group. Desperate, Burnside intends to prove that Clark and Superman are the same person before he is sent to prison for fraud and murder. Kent steps back while Burnside grabs a gun he had hidden. The weapon fires, but the bullet doesn't hurt Clark. The mild mannered reporter explains that a lucky silver dollar inside his jacket pocket had stopped the projectile. As Burt "The Tulip" Burnside is arrested, Henderson, Jimmy and the police officers all laugh at the notion that Kent is Superman. Clark doesn't find it amusing.
"Aw, don't worry, Mister Kent," Jimmy says. "We think you're all right just like you are."
"Thanks, Jimmy," Clark replies with a smile to the audience.
The photo shows a standard, unmodified iPhone 5C case. Shot shells are designed to handle moist and even wet conditions in a duck blind. Modern smokeless powders, unlike black powder, actually burn rapidly and impart the vast majority of their impetus in the first 12-18 inches of barrel length.
i’m somewhat familiar with shotshells. Although i never counted, I’ve probably reloaded in excess of 10,000 of them and shot at least as many in the past 40 years
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