Bullet explodes inside woman’s purse, shoots her leg

eagleeyes

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Bullet explodes inside woman’s purse, shoots her leg


By Eric Pfeiffer
Reporter


A bullet mysteriously exploded inside a woman's purse (Dario Lopez-Mills/AP)
A Pennsylvania woman was shot in the leg while shopping at a local department store on Tuesday. But in a nearly unbelievable twist, no gun was involved. Apparently, the woman was carrying the bullet in her purse, when it mysteriously exploded.
"She did not have a gun in her purse or on her," Montoursville Deputy Police Chief Jason Bentley told the Williamsport Sun-Gazette. Bentley said the woman, whose name has not been released to the public, "was not aware" she was carrying two or three bullets inside her purse at the time of the accident.
The 56-year-old woman was taken to a local hospital and was eventually discharged. In fact, the woman initially declined medical treatment, only heading to the Williamsport Regional Medical Center after her son reportedly encouraged her to do so.
"Something must of hit the primer of one of the bullets," Bentley said. "The bullet stayed in the purse, but its casing put a hole in the purse and caused a minor leg wound."
Bullets exploding outside of a gun are a rare occurrence but are not entirely unprecedented. In March, a bullet being used as evidence in a court case exploded in a bag and shot 20 feet across a courtroom. No one was hurt in the incident. It was surmised that the bullet exploded after its tip bounced against another bullet tip in the same evidence bag, according to the Telegram & Gazette.
[Via The Consumerist]
 
Had a judge warn an attorney that if he waved the quote unquote unloaded gun at me again I would climb over the bannister and take it away from him. Judge exploded when attorney waved same gun at him. Bullets are designed to go bang in the proper setting.
 
Why is my first reaction to think that if they can't prove guns are dangerous, they will want to prove ammunition is dangerous. Old, unstable ammo that has been subjected to mishandling might be a cause, but I'd like to see a real investigation and forensic examination of the cartridge. This smells kind of funny.
 
Well fulminate of mercury is very mercurial.

Good thing this bullet was not loaded then.

You're showing your age. Fulminate of Mercury has not been used in primers for a long, long time.

"Something must of hit the primer of one of the bullets," Bentley said.......You can tell this reporter did not do well in English class. "must of"????? WTF

KK
 
I remember sometime back of a similar incident involving a double AA battery and some loose .22lr in a pocket.
 
"Something must of hit the primer of one of the bullets," Bentley said.......You can tell this reporter did not do well in English class. "must of"????? WTF

KK

The reporter was quoting the police chief. Apparently, the police chief failed english.
 
How many of you have dropped a round on the ground while at the range? I've done it plenty of times. A friend of mine dropped a round on gravel at the range and the cartridge landed primer side down and discharged. Funniest thing I had ever seen was he and three other guys jumping in the air. (before anyone asks, no, no one was injured)

Goes to show you, freaky things can happen.
 
I have to call ******** on this one. There is no verification listed, no name of the victim, no police report mentioned. Someone has 2or 3 loose bullets in their purse without being aware of them and these just happened to spontaneously blow up? The reporter says it is "nearly unbelievable" - I disagree. Without any substantiation I find it completely unbelievable. This sounds like just the kind of stories that the media likes to spread around as a way to justify infringing on gun rights. Since the "injury" was the result of a bullet casing, it would have to have a police report filed. I think a quick check of Montoursville police reports would quickly answer the question.
 
You're showing your age. Fulminate of Mercury has not been used in primers for a long, long time.

"Something must of hit the primer of one of the bullets," Bentley said.......You can tell this reporter did not do well in English class. "must of"????? WTF

KK
The reporter was quoting the Deputy Police Chief. "Must of" is used in various places around the country, though as often as not it ends up being "musta", which I am occasionally guilty of.
 

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