ZeeOSix said: Who says these few Sigs that were reported to discharge didn't have some kind of manufacturing defect.
Doesn't matter- this case is in a court of law, not an internet blog so the rules of evidence apply. "Fishing" and wild claims will be disallowed regardless of whether they "happened" or not. The rare exceptions to the hearsay rule is almost always direct relevance so to meet that threshold those "claims' would have to have already been officially reported/ fully examined/ ruled upon by a trier of fact and in the record and even then found to have a legitimate defect that's relevant to this case. I did not see any docket numbers referencing these claims- did you?
My point is that if the investigation does indeed show evidence that the gun(s) involved have some kind of manufacturing defect, then it does matter because the manufacturer is still liable for selling a defective and unsafe firearm. Even if it's just a handful of guns.
ZeeOSix said: It's a man-made device, and there are some variances between them coming out of the factory - maybe more so if critical parts associated with the safety level of the system don't have stringent QA in the manufacturing process.
All true and normal for any manufactured device. I know SIG has all this in place because they couldn't be a USG vendor without it and would have to provide it as part of the bid package and proposals. I have yet to see any claim of a specific defect in the model proper or this specific weapon.
Just because a company has these required and applicable manufacturing processes and a QA program "in place" doesn't mean they follow them 100% unless there is some kind or independent monitoring body ensuring they do.
ZeeOSix said: Yes, the case is young ... so people saying it was his fault or a gun can never ever go off without pulling the trigger are making conclusions with zero proof.
True but lets balance the scales and formally state that the plaintiff has offered "zero proof" as to his claims as well ( and he carries the burden- not a good position to be in)
It's an initial lawsuit ... more evidence will have to be provided if the case goes to trial, which it probably will go to.
ZeeOSix said: The investigation of more than one similar discharged needs to be thoroughly investigated.
Why? This isn't any form of a class action. What possible bearing could some 30 odd other "alleged' accidental discharges possibly contribute to this specific case/weapon and incident to the exclusion of all others?
Why ... because if the discharges were caused by the same root cause then that needs to be investigated to prove or not. If there were 30 cases of similar discharges with the same exact gun, they should all be investigated to see if there is a common root cause associated with the firearm design/build quality. Or are they all random causes not associated with the firearm design/build. That's the focus of the lawsuit ... is the gun defective in some way that makes it unsafe.
ZeeOSix said: At this point, you have to take the cases of discharge seriously until proven one way or the other what the actual cause was.
Not in a court of law you don't. That's called prejudice. You aren't 'guilty until proven innocent" (yet anyway)
To clarify, when I said "you" I mean everyone involved in the lawsuit - it needs to be taken seriously until final resolution is determined from the lawsuit fallout. So you're saying nobody in a court of law takes any lawsuits seriously ... yeah, could be the way the court systems operate.
Seems some guys here think the guy is "guilty" of doing a Barry Fife and causing the gun to go off with zero evidence that was the case.
