Teen to buy out Gun Manufacturer

Status
Not open for further replies.

Jim730

Member
Joined
Jul 12, 2004
Messages
14
Location
NJ
Just found this one on Yahoo...thought you all might find it interesting, not sure if its been posted elsewhere...http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040809/ap_on_re_us/defective_handgun_1

SAN FRANCISCO - Sometimes Brandon Maxfield forgets. He will be cruising down the street with his best friend, talking about pro wrestling, music and girls, when it dawns on him with a familiar flash of embarassment that it's not his rainbow-spiked hair strangers are staring at.


AP Photo



"Then I'll be like, oh yeah, I'm in a wheelchair," said the Willits, Calif., teenager, who was paralyzed from the neck down after being shot by a babysitter a decade ago and gets around by manipulating mechanical sensors around his head.


Maxfield, 17, is in the final days of a tense, quixotic gambit to buy and dismantle the company that made the gun that left him a quadriplegic.


Last year the teen won a record $24 million judgment against Bryco Arms, its distribution arm and its owner. Bryco was forced into bankruptcy, and on Thursday, a federal judge in Florida will auction off 75,600 unassembled guns and other remaining assets.


Maxfield hopes to buy the inventory, melt it down and create a sculpture from the metal. It is tempting to see divine retribution in such a scheme, but the teen and his lawyer, Richard Ruggieri, insist revenge is not their motivation — they simply want to make sure no one else is hurt.


"It started with horror, the realization that — notwithstanding the fact that we had this unanimous finding of defect — there was nothing in the law to prevent them from putting these defective guns back on the market," said Ruggieri, who took on Maxfield's case in 2001 when no other lawyers would.


Ned Nashban, the lawyer representing Bryco owner Bruce Jennings in the bankruptcy, described Maxfield's acquisition attempt as a publicity stunt that only has delayed the gun maker's efforts to settle his debts.


"From our standpoint, it's not a moral question of keeping guns off the street or not," Nashban said. "Bankruptcy court is not the place to socially legislate. It's to create the most money to pay creditors."


Maxfield's life-changing injury happened when he was 7 and a 20-year-old family friend who was babysitting thought he heard a suspicious noise and grabbed a gun from a dresser drawer. The babysitter called Brandon's mother, who instructed him to immediately unload the .38-caliber pistol. While trying to do that, the babysitter accidentally pulled the trigger.


The bullet struck Brandon in the chin and went out through his neck, shattering his spine.


Since the accident, Maxfield has spent more than 500 days in the hospital and been treated for pneumonia 28 times. His spine is degenerating, and doctors say a metal rod must eventuallly be inserted in his neck to support it. But that will limit the mobility of his head, the only body part he can fully control.


"I always wanted to protect my kids and this is something you can't reverse and you can't erase," said Sue Stansberry, Maxfield's mother. "I wish now I had locked it up in a locked case. I didn't do that, and I will have to live with that for the rest of my life."


A jury in Oakland assigned more than half the blame for what happened to the boy's parents and the babysitter who fired the gun. But they said the gun maker also was liable because the pistol could only be unloaded when its trigger safety catch was switched off.


The jury awarded damages totaling $50.9 million — an amount calculated to compensate Maxfield for pain and suffering, future medical and educational expenses, lost earnings and diminished life expectancy.


The trust established to guard the funds has collected $8.75 million from an ex-wife of Jennings and from the insurance company of the firm that distributed the gun to the pawnshop where Maxfield's parents bought it.


Since neither the parents nor the babysitter have any money, the $24 million awarded from Jennings and his companies represent most of what Maxfield can expect to get.


But he has yet to collect any money from Jennings, who shuttered his Costa Mesa, Calif.-based factory and moved to Florida. Jennings laid off 25 employees and put his manufacturing business into bankruptcy.





So far, Maxfield and Bryco's former foreman, Paul Jimenez, are the only interested buyers in the bankruptcy auction.

The bidding will start at $175,000, the amount raised through a non-profit organization Ruggieri set up to take donations over the Internet, since the damages won from the accident cannot be used for that purpose under the terms of the trust.

Ruggieri maintains that Jimenez is only a front for the wealthy Jennings, who in a 1999 interview with Business Week magazine said that if his company were sued, he would "go away until the litigation passes by, then re-form and build guns to the new standard — if there is a new standard."

Maxfield, who is entering his senior year in high school and hopes to study marine biology or paleontology in college, said it frustrates and angers him that Jennings is, in his view, trying to pull a fast one.

"It was his idea to do this," Maxfield said, referring to Jennings' pre-trial testimony that he designed the gun to be unloaded in a firing position to solve a jamming problem. "He should take full responsibility."

Maxfield hasn't decided what the sculpture would be, and isn't sure what he'd do with the other equipment.

"I was thinking I could make wheelchairs for other kids or something like that," he said, "but we might just completely destroy it."

The fundraising and media attention has supplied Maxfield with a new sense of purpose — a chance to do something for others in a life that requires others to do practically everything for him.

Stansberry said she worries about how her son will handle the disappointment if he loses the auction.

"Every day that's all he talks about, getting these guns off the street so no other kids will be hurt," she said. "From a mom's perspective, I hope it really happens, because he has put his heart and soul in this."
 
But they said the gun maker also was liable because the pistol could only be unloaded when its trigger safety catch was switched off.
And apparently could only be unloaded while it was pointed at someone???
 
I didn't know there was a law that you have to be able to unload a gun with the safety on. The 1911 immediately comes to mind. You can't unload a chambered round with the safety on.... 90+ years later the design still works.
 
.38 calibers have mags?

Do they mean .380? .38 super?

I was hoping to win the lottery before the auction so I could buy the guns and give them away to poor people for free.

Some babysitter,eh? Why didn't they charge him with attempted murder?
and the parent too.
 
I was hoping to win the lottery before the auction so I could buy the guns and give them away to poor people for free.

What do you have against poor people?
 
"It was his idea to do this," Maxfield said,

Do what? Design the gun so that it fired when the trigger was pulled?


Look, kid, I'm sorry that you had the misfortune to be shot in the neck and paralyzed by a poor person. A truly just court would have compensated you by making him your bodyservant for life. But I feel even more sorry for the innocent companies that the tapioca-brained idiots on your jury allowed you to loot because not one of them had the faintest grasp of the concept of "responsibility."
 
It's the old blame the gun not the person routine. I'm so sick an tired of this BS. When are we ever going to hold PEOPLE accountable for their actions????
 
Maxfield's life-changing injury happened when he was 7 and a 20-year-old family friend who was babysitting thought he heard a suspicious noise and grabbed a gun from a dresser drawer. The babysitter called Brandon's mother, who instructed him to immediately unload the .38-caliber pistol. While trying to do that, the babysitter accidentally pulled the trigger.

A 20 year man should know enough to watch where he is pointing the gun. If he doesn't know anything about guns then he shouldn't be handling one. The mother should have told him to put the gun back, or better yet have it in a lock box.

-Bill
 
That will be one crappy statue. I cant imagine that the tools and dies in the Jennings plant are worth every much.
 
Since neither the parents nor the babysitter have any money, the $24 million awarded from Jennings and his companies represent most of what Maxfield can expect to get.

This is the statement that says it all in order for the attorney to get paid he had to go after Bryco. What's the point of getting a judgement against the babysitter he doesn't have any money.

Ukraine I had the exact same thought about the 1911 design and mine has never gone off when I unload it. Oh wait a minute thats because I keep my finger of the trigger!!!
 
But they said the gun maker also was liable because the pistol could only be unloaded when its trigger safety catch was switched off.

Hooray for stupid people.
 
Amazing. Well maybe not so, leaving it to the trial lawyers and
someone who has been wronged to go after the nearest source of money
to atone for the injustice in the babysitter shooting him.

Hey, we don't need no stinking personal accountability.


cheers, ab
 
He PULLED THE TRIGGER!!??? *** is he doing with his finger on the trigget while unloading the gun? I feel terrible for the kid, but it sounds like the only defect is the loose screw between the ears of the shooter.
 
He should melt down the babysitter instead.

Let's see. Pick up the loaded revolver, cock it, aim it at the kid, and "accidentally" pull the trigger and shoot the kid while trying to unload it. Why do I find that a tad unlikely. More likely--babsitter is a delinquent who is screwing around, aiming at the kid for kicks and "bang!"
 
no cosmo no!

Pick up the loaded revolver

the newspapers (which are allways correct) say he was attempting to take out the magazine on the .38 caliber pistol...

well maybe not the article at the begining of the thread but other newspapers have shown pics of semi auto .38 calibers...did jennings make a .38 super?

my friend has a jennings (yup he is poor) he manages not to shoot anyone when he unloads it-but just to be on the safe side-he doesn't point it at 7yr old children.
 
I went to see President Bush last week. My favorite line was when he said: We are moving away from a society where if it feels good, do it, and blame someone else;, to a society where the person will be resposible for their actions (or at least something incredibly similiar). If only this appied to everywhere :rolleyes:
 
Geez, Brandon, GET OFF GUNMAKERS' BACKS! The blame rests squarely with the babysitter, not with the parents for having a gun, not with the gun maker. I hate it when this crap shows up. :banghead: :fire: :barf:
 
THIS IS WHY WE NEED TORT REFORM!

In MOST states he would have gotton NOTHING. F'in Cali and there "pure" comparative negligence he gets 24mil.

You, me, and everyone else who buys a gun is paying that 24mil.

Just remember when you vote that Edwards is the poster child for this kind of crap and Kerry is funded by it.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top