Massad Ayoob
Member
- Joined
- Oct 10, 2006
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- 184
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As you noted, Sheriff, these cases tend to settle. The NYPD experience reflected what the rest of the country saw over the decades: fewer cases when the ammo used was a hollow point designed to expand and stay in the body.
Philadelphia and Los Angeles County have had them, and others, but you're asking about civilians. I was told of one by a lawyer in Indianapolis, in or near his city: citizen's .357 158 grain soft-nose went through bad guy, who survived, and into a third party behind him, who didn't. Charge was an unlawful homicide, probably manslaughter, never did learn how it turned out.
I haven't personally done any cases of overpenetration lawsuits with armed citizens, but the Texas lawyer who posted here earlier has, and he already told about it in this thread. His case also settled out of court. The pattern continues, a pattern not likely to generate appellate court decisions.
Cordially,
Mas
Philadelphia and Los Angeles County have had them, and others, but you're asking about civilians. I was told of one by a lawyer in Indianapolis, in or near his city: citizen's .357 158 grain soft-nose went through bad guy, who survived, and into a third party behind him, who didn't. Charge was an unlawful homicide, probably manslaughter, never did learn how it turned out.
I haven't personally done any cases of overpenetration lawsuits with armed citizens, but the Texas lawyer who posted here earlier has, and he already told about it in this thread. His case also settled out of court. The pattern continues, a pattern not likely to generate appellate court decisions.
Cordially,
Mas