Armed robbery in Ohio

otis24

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Following is a link to footage of an armed robbery in Ohio; mods please remove if not allowed. First, the reporter interviewing the shop owner calls it a shotgun. The robber used what clearly looks like a rifle. Secondly, it looks like the shop owner's pistol (Glock?) sticks open about a half inch after he fires the shot. Does it look that way to you?

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Look like a failure to feed as I could not see a case protruding from the ejection port. The slide looked to be to far to the rear for a stovepipe, so probably a failure to feed.
 
For all the comments I see from Glock people about how super reliable Glocks are, every day I see some video like this where the Glock has failures to feed. Many times it's a badge cam video. I'm not so sure the wonder Glocks are as reliable as stated.


I would definitely be looking into my weapon and/or ammo choices. I'm sure that this can happen with any pistol. It's like finding a snake in your house. If I found a snake in my house, I would be constantly on guard and wondering where the others are hiding. If I had a malfunction like this in an actual self-defense situation, I'm not sure I could carry with peace of mind afterwards (or at least for a very long time)!
 
At first the talking heads say "rifle" then later "shotgun". Maybe they picked that up from Mr. Patel who has a bit of an accent. I can't tell if he said "shotgun" or "short gun".
 
Watching the video it looks like he had his support hand right up behind the slide when he fired (and then quickly jerks it away as it gets smacked), causing the malfunction. I have little but respect for Glocks, but if you've got something where it shouldn't be you can absolutely induce a malfunction.

Crummy screenshot here.

jX5hkWe.jpg
 
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Watching the video it looks like he had his support hand right up behind the slide when he fired (and then quickly jerks it away as it gets smacked), causing the malfunction. I have little but respect for Glocks, but if you've got something where it shouldn't be you can absolutely induce a malfunction.

I've always found Glocks to super reliable. I agree that it looks like his left hand caused the malfunction.
 
Watching the video it looks like he had his support hand right up behind the slide when he fired (and then quickly jerks it away as it gets smacked), causing the malfunction. I have little but respect for Glocks, but if you've got something where it shouldn't be you can absolutely induce a malfunction.

Crummy screenshot here.

jX5hkWe.jpg

Most definitely looks like the support hand caused the malfunction. Thanks for pointing this out!
 
Another cause of malfunctions for Glocks, or any other semi-auto for that matter, is a bad magazine. Most of the Glock problems I've observed (not gun manipulation related) were caused by after market magazines or by out-of-spec ammo.
 
Another cause of malfunctions for Glocks, or any other semi-auto for that matter, is a bad magazine. Most of the Glock problems I've observed (not gun manipulation related) were caused by after market magazines or by out-of-spec ammo.

I teach firearms at a community college police academy. We can point out the firearms that will not make it the 800 rounds fired during the week. With Glocks it is almost always aftermarket parts. Magpul magazines generally do well, but aftermarket springs, back plates, slide stops, and such are the kiss of death.
 
Another cause of malfunctions for Glocks, or any other semi-auto for that matter, is a bad magazine. Most of the Glock problems I've observed (not gun manipulation related) were caused by after market magazines or by out-of-spec ammo.

For sure. I've also seen issues related to aftermarket fire control parts. Glocks tolerate change rather well, but the further you get from the originally manufactured configuration the more likely something weird will happen.

In this case though, it looks to be software vs hardware, and a great example at that. I'll preface this by saying I'm glad it all worked out the way it did. Mr. Patel is safe, his business proceeds remain with him, the suspect is in custody.

Mr. Patel got lucky. He drew on a person who had a shotgun pointed at him, who didn't fire. He drew, had his hands in the wrong place, and fired. That shot missed. His misplaced support hand caused his pistol to fail to return to battery. He then appears to attempt a followup shot or two (I may be wrong on that), and continues moving the pistol to cover the robber as the robber retreats. At no point does he attempt any remedial action to get the pistol running again (likely as simple as racking the slide). Thankfully the robber was less interested in winning than Mr. Patel was, and Mr. Patel gets to be a local news hero. I think we all have plenty of examples of stressful situations (I'm hoping most of ours aren't gun related) where we succeeded, and where we choked. In this case we get a good, teachable example of things that can go wrong in a defensive shooting.
 
Good example of why I carry a 642-1 . I could see myself doing that with an auto ....well, truth be told, I do carry a SA 380 in front pants pocket in warm weather, due to being lazy .....
 
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Or, yaknow, learn to use the pistol he has.
Now, that's a novel concept......but I don't want to rag on this poor guy too much.
I've been thru a couple defensive courses and been familiar with autos since mid seventies, and I don't know how I'd react under duress. I have a friend who is a retired cop and DEA agent who has been in five gun fights, and he said he was rattled every time. It's just that by training his reaction was second nature.
 
Now, that's a novel concept......but I don't want to rag on this poor guy too much.
I've been thru a couple defensive courses and been familiar with autos since mid seventies, and I don't know how I'd react under duress. I have a friend who is a retired cop and DEA agent who has been in five gun fights, and he said he was rattled every time. It's just that by training his reaction was second nature.

Rote training, repetition, over and over again until the muscles remember and you react without thinking beyond making sure you are in a fight.
 

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