I have owned two different Baby Eagles individually and I have many friends still using them and I am still waiting to see a BE which falls into POS cathegory. The only reason I do not still use them is the backstrap of my CZ offers me a firmer grip. All the BE pistols I have seen and used have been rock solid and reliable pistols.
Unfortunately, I can not say the same thing for the Beretta. They are almost the most handsome pistols ever designed, accurate and utterly reliable eating anything you feed unless one of their parts are broken. I achieved to brake one slide stop lever, two locking blocks of a BD date coded Inox 92F. After a carefull examination, we found that the locking recesses of the slide were not cut properly. There was a considerable amount of gap between the front surface of the locking block ears and the front surface of the recesses of the both sides. This artefact was causing inproper locking and producing much more rigorious forces to handle for the locking block ears. If you have a chance to compare this area with the original design, P38, examine the relation of the parts, you will observe much more definitely what I mean.
Local Beretta distributer ignored the artefact, and sued me abusing the pistol by using overpressure submachinegun ammunition. Consequently, I sold the pistol to a local shooting range with a considerable amount loss of money, since I did not want to risk anyone's life by selling a defective pistol to him.The local range also continued to experience locking block breakages. The total amount of locking block breakage is 5 times and slide stop lever breakage is 2 times in approximately 21K rounds, despite the recoil springs are being changed regularly in every approximate 2-3K rounds.
My personel experience with the 92 series caused me to loose my confidence with them as a self defence pistol. But I still do like the design. It has elegant lines, a joy to hold and to shoot. Maybe it was a seperate lemon that may come out from any manufacturer, but the issues I was experiencing were not sporadic ones limited to my pistol.
If the pistols you are considering will be range queens, go with the Inox 92FS definitely.
If you decide on the 92, I strongly advice you to check out the front locking surfaces of ears of the locking block, their proper fit to the slide locking recesses and the amount of the gap between them.
Best Regards.