Posted on 06/20/2002 11:07:13 AM PDT by Henrietta
NEWTON District Attorney David Flaherty Jr. says he wont take any action against Assistant District Attorney Jason Parker for accidentally firing his pistol in his office at the Catawba County Justice Center on Friday morning beyond making him pay for a broken window.
Parker, a candidate for district court judge, and Sean McGinnis, another assistant district attorney, were at the county firing range Friday morning brushing up on shooting skills, according to Flaherty. When they returned to Parkers office around 8 a.m., Parkers .380 semi-automatic accidentally discharged, according to Maj. Coy Reid of the Catawba County Sheriffs Office.
The bullet put a hole in a window overlooking the smoking area in front of the Justice Center. No one was injured.
I am disappointed in him (Parker), Flaherty said. He is a friend and a good district attorney. I know he reported it immediately to those who were supposed to be made aware of the incident.
Flaherty said he put a note in Parkers personnel file, but no charges would be filed.
The only thing I would consider charging Parker with is reckless endangerment, but the bullet traveled out the window, not into the building iteslf, said Flaherty. I will make him pay for the plate glass window, however.
Flaherty, district attorney for the 25th Prosecutorial District, said he got a phone call from Parker around 8:15 a.m. on Friday saying that he accidentally fired a pistol in the office that was once used by Flaherty.
Reid said the handgun had a mechanical malfunction with the ejector slide.
Sheriff David Huffman said Parker turned the handgun over to authorities and asked that it be destroyed by the State Bureau of Investigation.
I was on vacation when it happened, but I think that Parker was so shaken by the incident that he just wanted to get it out of his sight altogether, he said.
When someone asks to have a gun destroyed, the SBI checks the serial number to verify the history of the gun before destroying it.
Huffman said his department will also run a check on the weapon today.
Huffman said he assumed the pistol had been registered to Parker, but he was not sure.
North Carolina law does not require a handgun to be registered with the state, said Huffman. When you purchase a handgun, you must first fill out a permit to purchase, which asks for all the pertinent information, such as where you live, why you need the gun, etc. This is essentially the same information that registering a handgun would provide.
When asked about the legality of carrying a handgun into the courthouse, Flaherty said he saw no problem with it.
We are law enforcement officers, and there is no problem with my assistants or me carrying guns, said Flaherty. I carry one myself occasionally, although it is not concealed.
John Bason, public information officer for the state Attorney Generals Office, disagrees with Flahertys assessment of the law.
Bottom line is, district attorneys or their assistants are not law enforcement officers.
Therefore, they must abide by the same statutes that apply to anyone else who is not a sworn officer of the law, said Bason.
Huffman agreed.
I did not know that DAs were considered law enforcement officers. To be in law enforcement, you have to go to law enforcement school, even though I could swear you in right now.
Huffman said he has had several attorneys in the past request permission to bring a firearm into the courthouse for protection, but that the sheriffs office would assign an extra deputy instead.
Retired Superior Court Judge Oliver Noble said it was unwise and improper for Parker to bring a gun into the courthouse.
I have never seen him with a gun, said Noble. I dont know if thats against the law or not, and I have never seen anyone prosecuted for this. However, I have never heard of a law allowing a gun in a state office. If I were to guess, I would say there isnt.
As far as any charges that could have been filed, Huffman said that you have to look at each situation differently.
We treated this as if it was an accident, said Huffman. We dont condone bringing handguns into the courthouse by district attorneys. However, nobody was hurt, and the gun malfunctioned. You have to have some breathing room regarding the law. However, it is possible that I would go back and look at the situation further.
Reach Kim Gilliland at 322-4510, Ext. 249, or rgilliland@hickoryrecord.com.
;-)
(But I didn't get caught.)
"See the bullets. See the cylinder. See the trigger. Don't pull the trigger, no shootee. Pull the trigger, shootee."
I think so, too. By the time I have found which pocket it's in and got it untangled from the car keys and eyeglass toolkit, another second won't matter.
Yes I still like my .357 revolvers and other toys but that Witness is so easy to just slip into a pants pocket it is ideal. It is so good I put my Kimber back in the safe.
Stay well - Stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown
I had the same thought.
I picked up a Taurus ultralight 85 38sp with the concealed hammer at the last gun show.
I was getting increasingly uncomfortable toting my Glock 23 in the NC heat and humidity. For the summer, the 38sp with +p ammo, rides very easily in my Dockers pocket. I keep it in a Wild Bill horsehide pocket holster. Nothing else goes in that pocket, eliminating the problems with keys, etc.
When things cool off enough to start wearing the Glock again, I'll probably keep the 38 in my pocket as a NY reload. At 13.7 ounces, it's hardly noticeable.
I have no problem going between the Glock and the Taurus, since they operate the same way. Pull it, point it, pull the trigger.
IOW, if you cannot defend yourself one handed, you may not be able to defend yourself at all.
Further, if you leave a pistol loose in a pocket to get entangled with keys etc, you should seriously rethink your procedures.
The extractor removes the case from the chamber and the ejector removes it from the gun. The only thing I can think that he did was pull the slide back to empty the chamber and when the ejector failed, it sent the live round back into the chamber. That's the only way he could have had a faulty ejector cause the loaded chamber. In IDPA, I have seen too many shooters go throught the mechanical motions to clear, without physically looking in the chamber.
I thought Brady Bill clearance was not supposed to be used as a database for information on either the gun or the purchaser. Stupid me!!
Did not Ashcroft however imperfect he is, specifically ask the courts to enforce the letter of Brady Bill legislation which says this is only for purchase approval and not to create a database?
Amen brother!
I don't think your information regarding NRA instruction is entirely accurate. Monday night I attended a handgun proficiency course at the local shooting range. The instructor was NRA certified, and I asked him this very question. He gave me the same answer you just gave above. Perhaps he was only speaking for himself, but he didn't say that the NRA position was any different.
What's that from?
Ashcroft, when he became AG, set department policy to ensure that this data was retained for no more than 24 hours, which of course set the gungrabbers into a frenzy. God forbid the law should be obeyed when it doesn't further their Nazi agenda. Then when 9-11 occurred, you had the usual suspects, Schumer and Kennedy, demanding that these files be held longer for additional checks, etc., etc. The alarm bells that this set off were from the unspoken admission by this demand that these records were indeed being held for far longer than the legal period. Gee, I'm so surprised.
Ashcroft said no to this, and again the socialists and their leftmedia lackeys had a shitfit, to which Ashcroft said that if the law was changed to legally permit this, then he would do it. Lo and behold, Chuck and Ted had a bill pushed to the floor within days. Current status of that is unknown.
As a computer guy by profession, my not so humble opinion is this: Every damn check that has gone through NICS has been archived. It's too fast, easy and cheap to do. In fact, I would surmise that multiple copies exist spread across several locations. If I was Chucky or Ted, that's what I'd have my lackeys doing. Know thy enemy. So if you've ever been processed by NICS, you are most definitely on the (officially nonexistant) list. Got all that for your book, Trav? $;-)
That's the story to date, as far as I know.
Aye. After mucho practice, I can personally draw my semiauto from concealment and have two rounds COM in a 10 yard target in a little over a second. Some guys I shoot with are faster still.
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