Posted on 02/11/2020 7:59:34 AM PST by BenLurkin
Johnson was riding in the front passenger seat of an adult male friends car on February 1 with the drivers 8-year-old son and 10-year-old stepson riding in the back, police said. The driver got out of the car to use an ATM.
The 8-year-old accidentally discharged a loaded Daisy 800 BB/pellet rifle while attempting to move it and shot Johnson in the left eye, according to the police.
The teen was taken to a local hospital in critical condition and died from his injuries on February 4, police said.
(Excerpt) Read more at ktla.com ...
A high powered pump BB/pellet rifle.
That pellet gun is a multi pumper capable of 800 fps.
Treat every gun as if its loaded and never point it at anything you dont intend to destroy.
Rules taught with BB guns apply to real guns later in life (if you make it that far)
Remember this story the next time someone tells you a BB gun never killed anybody.
How very sad.
Yikes. Talk about “you’ll shoot your eye out” coming true. Who would think that a bb would do that much damage.
Why wasn’t the bb gun in the trunk? Seems safe gun handling was being observed.
What a way to go. And i am not being funny.
I some times think it is a little harder to make sense out of dying in some strange way than say, getting hit by a car?
[That pellet gun is a multi pumper capable of 800 fps.]
Recurve bow arrows can travel up to 225 feet per second (fps) or 150mph while compound bow arrows can travel up to 300fps (200mph). Longbow arrows travel slower due to the weight of the arrows. Even at 300fps, it takes around a second to reach a 90 metre target. You hear your release first followed by the thud of the arrow hitting the target a second later (you cant see it unless you use a telescopic sight). If you didnt hear the thud, youve missed the target!]
We need common sense BB Gun Control
‘Army Ranger Kills Terrorist With MRE Spoon’
Remember this story the next time someone tells you a spoon never killed anyone.
Sticks, stones, bb guns and spoons are all lethal.
I know you were being sarcastic.
What we really need is just common sense.
We used to wear out Crosman 760s by pumping them up way beyond the limit, and hunt squirrels.
When it stopped holding the pressure, just go buy another one.
We used to play war in the local woods. Anywhere from 12 to 20 of us kids all with various BB guns. Just wore an extra sweatshirt and limited pumps (those who had them) to 3 or 4. Had plenty of red marks, some minor blood shed. Only big incident I recall is one kid ambushed his brother on a trail. Dove out from behind a tree, rolled over into a kneeling position and shot him dead center in the forehead. We marveled at the shot and Richard had to have his Mom pop the BB out with a kitchen knife and he wore a bandaid to school for a few days. But since we were stupid kids, of course we were back at it again the following weekend.
I’ve shot these into power poles. They penetrated quite a bit. Of course these are soft wood, but far harder than human flesh. I’ve hunted a lot of small game in areas restricting firearms.
Spot on.
Bloomberg and other Leftists move to ban pellet guns in 3....2.....1......
Upon graduating from high school, my mother came up to me and said, “I am actually surprised that you lived long enough to graduate”.
Yes. Good point. This is what I taught my son when he was given a BB gun. But then again I told him to treat all guns as real guns (unless you could see the water inside them) until it could be shown otherwise. Respect for firearms should be a basic part of child rearing.
I’m thinking it was mainly the air discharged that caused the death. Injected air can be deadly if there are damaged blood vessels in the area. A bubble sucked into a vein is an embolism that will find its way to a critical organ in the body like the heart, lung, or brain.
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