Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Gun maker’s exploding rifle leaves trail of injured hunters

- By Ryan J. Foley

IOWA CITY, IOWA » It was the opening day of deer hunting season, and Ronald Hansen says he loaded his rifle the same way he had countless times before, aimed at a target and fired a shot.

This time, the gun barrel exploded, knocking the farmer from Hampton, Iowa, backward, severely damaging his right hand and ear and burning his face.

Unknown to Hansen, the manufactur­er of the rifle that injured him in 2014 had received other complaints of explosions and injuries over the prior decade. Customers repeatedly reported that the barrel of the stainless steel 10 MLII muzzleload­er exploded, burst, split or cracked, according to thousands of court documents reviewed by The Associated Press.

Lawyers for the company, Westfield, Massachuse­tts-based Savage Arms, were expected to appear Wednesday in federal court in Iowa to defend against a lawsuit filed by Hansen. He is seeking damages for his injuries, alleging the company failed to warn customers about the defect.

It’s one of several lawsuits that have claimed the company recklessly kept the muzzleload­ers on the market even as they kept occasional­ly mangling hands, damaging hearing and burning faces. At least three have been settled on a confidenti­al basis since last year.

Martin Crimp, a Michigan State University metals expert who examined a 10ML-II that exploded and caused a hunter to lose multiple fingers in 2009, told the AP the barrel of that gun was “metallurgi­cally defective.”

An expert hired by Hansen’s lawyers came to a similar conclusion, saying the steel used to make the rifle was prone to catastroph­ic failure after repeat firings.

Anthony Pisciotti, an outside lawyer for Savage Arms, said he wasn’t authorized to comment. A spokesman for its parent company, Vista Outdoor, didn’t return messages.

Savage Arms, which discontinu­ed the gun in 2010 after thousands were on the market, has insisted it’s safe when used properly, has no defects and was designed in accordance with industry standards.

Savage Arms has argued that operator error is to blame for the explosions, saying users must have created too much pressure inside the barrel either by loading two bullets or using the wrong amount or type of gunpowder. It has issued a safety notice on its website warning owners to “carefully follow the safe loading procedures” in the product manual to avoid injuries.

Hansen’s case highlights how gun makers, unlike manufactur­ers of other consumer products, have the sole discretion to decide themselves whether to recall potentiall­y dangerous weapons. In 1976, Congress blocked the newly-created Consumer Product Safety Commission, which has broad authority to regulate everything from toasters to toys and BB guns, from restrictin­g the manufactur­e or sale of firearms.

“It’s an example of an industry that can essentiall­y do whatever they want and there’s no consequenc­es other than being held accountabl­e in a civil liability context,” said Kristen Rand, legislativ­e director of the Violence Policy Center in Washington D.C.

Other companies have faced allegation­s that they allowed unsafe guns to stay on the market. Remington agreed to replace triggers in its popular Model 700 rifles — only after several lawsuits claiming that they were prone to accidental­ly dischargin­g. Ruger was accused of marketing revolvers for decades that could fire when dropped.

Savage Arms recently agreed to settle a lawsuit filed by Trent Procter, who was on a hunting trip with friends in October 2009 when the 10 ML-II he’d owned for years “just blew apart” when he shot at a target.

Procter, 48, missed nine months of work from his job as a power company lineman as he endured surgeries on his left hand and rehabilita­tion. He had to move to a different job and still experience­s numbness due to nerve damage in his hand, where he’s missing parts of his thumb and middle finger.

Photos of Procter’s hand were shared on hunting websites after the explosion, and he said it was insulting that some suggested he and not a defective product was to blame.

“I’m surprised it was never recalled or a warning was put out that this was actually happening,” he said. “It’s quite scary when you think about it.”

Last year, the company also settled a case brought by Michigan hunter Rodney Palatka and his wife, who was pregnant with twins and suffered a miscarriag­e after witnessing her husband’s injuries.

James Putman of North Carolina alleges in a pending lawsuit that his Savage 10ML-II burst as he hunted last year in the George Washington National Forest, blasting his thumb off and forcing his early retirement as a firefighte­r.

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 ?? GORDON HARRIS — TRENT PROCTER VIA AP ?? This 2010 photo provided by Trent Procter shows Procter, of Swan River, Manitoba, during rehabilita­tion, months after his Savage Arms stainless steel 10ML-II muzzleload­er exploded and severely injured his left hand. Savage Arms recently agreed to pay a...
GORDON HARRIS — TRENT PROCTER VIA AP This 2010 photo provided by Trent Procter shows Procter, of Swan River, Manitoba, during rehabilita­tion, months after his Savage Arms stainless steel 10ML-II muzzleload­er exploded and severely injured his left hand. Savage Arms recently agreed to pay a...

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