Not to hijack the thread but I was not aware reloads had any legal issues. can someone explain?
Ah you posted as I typed the last response.
The legal issue is if you make your own rounds, an agressive lawyer for either the Prosecution and /or the inevitable civil suit to follow will say that you used 'special secret super-lethal bullets' that you cooked up in your basement, which shows that you 'clearly' were a homicidal head case.
The message the pros put out is that you should use factory ammo or ammo that your local police use, so as to avoid that line of questioning.Of course this advice doesn't help if you carry a different caliber than the police, or if you have a gun with a hard to find ammo type that isn't made at factories in great quantities.
Plus, as I stated in my last post....I cannot see a vicious attorney giving you a pass because you used the same round the cops did. They'll just as easily say you were an irresponsible fool because you choose to carry law enforcement rounds when you ARENT a sworn officer.
Either way, factory or reloaded odds are you're going to court.
I dont reload...not yet anyways.
If I had a choice, I would carry a reliable reload just the same as I would carry factory ammo.
While Massad Ayoob & others are trying to be helpfully candid in stating that for the newbies to guns its a bad idea to carry 'Eds Secret Magic Reload Bullets';
we informed gun owners all must remember that regardless of what ammo is in the barrel once the trigger is pulled we should expect 110% to face some sort of legal challenge from the felon or his family/relatives/baby mommas/ex-wives/girlfriends-or if youre really unfortunate, his connected lawyer friends or ACLU pals.
In case anyone thinks im playing armchair lawyer, let me post some examples here from the NRA defense fund website.
ARIZONA
Roger Barnett (Arizona). Counsel for Mr. Barnett informed in a letter of April 14, 2009, that this is an appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit from a civil trial where damages were awarded against Mr. Barnett.
He encountered 20 illegal aliens on his ranch crossing into Arizona from Mexico. He held them for the Border Patrol. The Border Patrol arrested them and took them back to Mexico. Activists on behalf of illegal aliens filed a civil lawsuit. The jury rejected most claims but found against Mr. Barnett for assault and for infliction of emotional distress. The U.S. District Court judge refused to give a selfdefense instruction and a limiting instruction on the infliction of emotional distress claim. The case is on appeal.
KENTUCKY
1Lt. Michael Behenna (Kentucky & Iraq). First Lieutenant Behenna was a platoon leader in Iraq with the 101st Airborne Division. On April 21, 2008, his platoon was hit by an explosion that killed two of his soldiers and seriously wounded two soldiers. He detained a suspected Al Qaeda member. During the interrogation the suspect threw a rock that missed 1st Lt. Behennas head and moved toward him. Fearing for his life, First Lieutenant Behenna fired twice and killed the suspect. In July 2008 he was charged with premeditated murder. The government claimed the suspect was executed and that the path of the bullets into the body did not support self-defense. The government claimed it had no exculpatory evidence. He was convicted of assault and unpremeditated murder. However, it was subsequently revealed that Dr. Herbert MacDonnell, a government witness, concluded that the path of the bullets was consistent with self-defense. However, motions for a new trial based on the exculpatory evidence were denied. First Lieutenant Behenna was initially sentenced on March 20, 2007, to 25 years. The sentence was subsequently reduced to 15 years. The case was appealed to the U.S. Army Court of Criminal Appeals. The main issue was that favorable exculpatory forensic evidence was withheld that collaborated his claim of self-defense. Nonetheless, the court affirmed the conviction on July 21, 2011. An appeal is planned to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.
The case that follows is intriguing, because in a reverse of the pattern he was first sued then lost his guns via administrative police action without a shot fired due to his neighbors 'feeling afraid'.
John DiPiero (Massachusetts). His license to carry a firearm and his firearm identification card were summarily suspended because the police chief deemed him to be an improper person. His firearms were taken from him. This unfavorable decision was based on a report that Mr. DiPiero acted in a confrontational manner with a neighbor and family members. The dispute arose over the ownership and tenancy of real property. The dispute over the property resulted in a civil court action. No criminal charges were filed. The complainants stated Mr. DiPiero owned firearms and they were afraid of him. An appeal from the revocation and seizure of firearms was filed in the district court. The court held that Mr. DiPiero failed to prove that the decision of the police chief was arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion. An appeal was filed in the superior court on March 24, 2011. Now that the Second Amendment is binding on the states, the right to keep and bear arms cannot be reduced to an administrative privilege that can be summarily suspended or revoked at any time based on the flimsiest of evidence.
The rest of the cases are found here:Civil Rights Legal Defense Fund - Current Litigation
Bottom line, carry whatever you feel will get the job done because either way odds are you'll be on the hook in civil court fighting for your life back post-shooting.I cant see a trial lawyer for a greedy ex wife or anti-gun organization giving you a pass because you used factory ammo.
I've seen that case. Reloads saved that dude from a murder conviction. None of that has ever added up to anything other than he popped his wife in the head and had clever lawyers.There aren't too many documented cases of attorney's attacking the use of handloads. But it is a possibility.
I don't use handloads and never will.
Here's one documented case.
Handloads for self-defense: the Daniel Bias case | American Handgunner | Find Articles
I carry a 45 auto ... if we look at most of the factory ammo for SD, its based upon ye olde WW1 and on 230G RN. while it functions well in the gun, I dont care for its function in front of the gun. I favor a 200G to 230G TC flat point, which seems a bit lacking in the market. thus, I carry both.
I have been shooting a .45 longer than most here have lived and I disagree with your assessment of available rounds or even the comparison between current and WWI ammo.
The rounds commerically available now is far and away above the ammo of yesteryear.
As to SD loads, have you tried any Guard Dog ammo in .45acp? It is vastly different in every way from any other, even if it is 165 gr moving at 1,140fps and will feed just as a JHP.
This entire decision revolves around the idea of how much fodder you want to give the prosecution.
If you use hand reloads with extra power and bullets with exploding tips and they are dipped in poison and each bullet is engraved with "Die you worthless scum bag, I've been waiting to waste you!", do you think the prosecution will bring that little tidbit up in court???
Of course they will, just as they will bring up any little detail they can come up with. Trigger jobs, night sights, grip tape, weapon light, they can and will use anything at their disposal to paint as ugly a picture of your premeditated position of being a wacko prepared killer.
Hey, it doesn't have to be true! This is a court trial. They just have to convince 12 soccer moms that you are less than a poor helpless victim.
That said, I trust my reloads more than factory ammo, and it sure shoots better than factory. In my rifles I can group 5 rounds inside a dime at 100 yards, factory is well over an inch. But I'm not producing 10,000 rounds a minute. I custom create 1 round every 2 minutes.
I carry factory ammo for self defense. It will do the job.
And a comment about carrying a 44 magnum for SD: What will you say when your round goes through the bad guy and kills a kid behind him? I know, it can happen with any round at all, but my defense for using a .40 is that it is the approved carry weapon for all the police departments in my area.
You can bet a prosecutor will produce reams of evidence that the FBI, CIA, Military, Sheriff, and local PD have all rejected the 44 magnum as being far too powerful and the risk of collateral damage far too high to be used as a carry weapon. You'll just add one more hurdle to freedom trying to explain why you need a bazooka when the police carry a different gun.
I carry my own reloads. I load them on a single stage press and double check every step. There is one really big advantage to reloading your self defense ammo. If you buy premium self defense ammo such as Cor-Bon you will usually pay about $25 per box of 20 rounds. At that price most shooters will not shoot very many rounds to test the ammo in their carry weapon. In fact I know several people who have not tested their carry ammo at all because it's too expensive. I have shot about 200 rounds of my defense reloads through each of my carry guns. I think it is very important to verify that your carry ammo functions 100%.