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Secret Service Agent Shoots Car
October 08, 2007 11:04 AM
The U.S. Secret Service is investigating why one of its agents shot his car last month during a United Nations visit by the Iranian premier.
Secret Service spokesman Eric Zahren confirmed that his agency's internal affairs unit has been asked to find out the details surrounding an agent's "accidental discharge" into the floorboard of his vehicle on Sept. 25 in Manhattan.
The spokesman would not confirm the type of gun used to shoot the automobile. The car was parked in a "staging area," Zahren said. He noted that there were no "principals" near the site of the shooting -- security-speak for the individuals under Secret Service protection.
THE BLOTTER RECOMMENDS
Zahren would not identify who the agent was assigned to protect, although two security officials familiar with the incident tell ABC News the agent was protecting Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
The accident is the second reported incident of its kind this year. In April, two Secret Service officers protecting the White House grounds went to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries after one of their weapons accidentally fired.
The president was away at the time, attending a ceremony for the victims of the Virginia Tech shooting massacre.
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October 8, 2007 | Permalink | User Comments (34)
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Stupid is as stupid does!
What was this guy doing?
Wow!!
I hope I never stand or sit next to "those" guys!!!
George
Posted by: George Vreeland Hill | Oct 8, 2007 7:15:34 PM
Accidental is accidental. Leave that agent alone.
Posted by: jade02008 | Oct 8, 2007 7:20:46 PM
Nice choice of wording: "...one of their weapons accidently fired.", gun control much? The weapon is at the mercy of the person at the trigger, just like a car to the driver, a baseball bat to the slugger. The gun did not do a damn thing.
Posted by: Marvel | Oct 8, 2007 7:20:57 PM
I got to witness an "accidental discharge" of a firearm last week.
I locked the slide back on this particular pistol, checked the magazine well and the chamber, and they were empty. I then handed it to the person in question, who inserted the magazine, released the slide and inexplicably pulled the trigger.
Fortunately no one was hurt. The muzzle was pointed toward a body of water at the time.
As it turns out, this pistol is of a type which requires pulling the trigger to decock it, and this apparently is what he was trying to do, having forgotten he had chambered a round.
In other words, he was careless. The gun is entirely innocent.
Posted by: Michael Hampton | Oct 9, 2007 12:55:36 AM
"If you ain't been throwed -
then you ain't rode."
Posted by: CM Smith | Oct 9, 2007 10:28:57 AM
Accidents do happen and firearms do go off accidentally. What kind of comment is this! "The spokesman would not confirm the type of gun used to shoot the automobile." Why do you have to put a picture of America's number on enemy at the top of the story?
Posted by: Ed | Oct 9, 2007 1:30:37 PM
Maybe the Secret Service agent was hearing voices: "Secret Service Agent-Pig, your mother doesn't like you."
Posted by: Evil | Oct 9, 2007 2:15:16 PM
Accidental Discharge? Just ask our Vice-President about that....
Posted by: Dooh | Oct 9, 2007 4:34:00 PM
Was it an American car or an illegal alien?
Posted by: Donnie Rio Grande City, TX | Oct 9, 2007 4:41:05 PM
Some secretive service person is in need of a TIME OUT...bad secretive service person bad...
Posted by: daddy | Oct 11, 2007 12:48:24 PM
Amen to those who say there is no such thing as an accidental discharge. I have been carrying a weapon for over 15 years and it was explained to me by a firearms instructor early on that it should be called a NEGLIGENT discharge. Everyone should be thankful that no one was hurt at the UN (unlike the earlier incident at the White House), and the agent in question should be disciplined and undergo mandatory retraining.
Posted by: Agent of a Different Service | Oct 17, 2007 8:47:34 AM
Everything should be negligent and not accidental? No more car accidents. The malfunctioning traffic light from a thunderstorm was negligent. My neighbor slipped on her stairs and fell. The spider she stepped on which made it slippery was negligent. I was at the firing range and my Glock misfired. The "instructor" came over picked the gun up and it fired before he barely touched it. Guess the magazine or slide was negligent. Get a life.
Posted by: your a dope | Oct 23, 2007 5:31:31 PM
For the record, guns CAN fire without touching the trigger, I've seen it more than once. It's very unlikely, but it is possible. The firing mechanism is spring loaded and held back by a "sear" which is usually activated by the trigger. There are well documented "AD's" 1. slipping sears, glocks are reported to have this happen while unattended, slam fires- the firing pin carries momentum forward and hits the primer under it's own momentum, cook off's - the chamber is so hot that next round auto loaded into it just overheats and fires without the primer being struck (more common in semi-auto rifles) and there are many more. There IS such a thing as an accidental discharge, which is why you always keep the barrel pointed away from people.
With that said, this is most likely the case of an agent chambering a round or holstering a pistol with his finger in the way. The Secret Service doesn't buy cheap firearms. Most are issued Sig P229 in caliber 357sig for personal protection detail. It's about a $900 handgun and extremely reliable. Slam fires, cook offs, and sear slipping are pretty much non-existant in those models, so it was likely operator error. And these Secret Service agents are the same ones that will protect WHOEVER is in the office of the President and Vice-President, they hold an alligence only to the office they protect, not the person in the office. They work for the Tresury department, not the administration or even the executive branch.
Posted by: Greg | May 20, 2008 11:06:29 PM
Actually they work for Homeland Security now..not treasury
Posted by: someone | Jun 7, 2008 11:21:52 PM
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