The California DOJ has a list of guns that DON'T fire when dropped--at least the way they drop the guns. This is a requirement for sales in California.
Seems that these extoriionists would have us believe that barrel length and color of firearm are involved in the likelyhood that a dropped firearm would discharge as such diffrences among models with the same action require additional (expensive) testing.
I like to cook and I enjoy teaching young'uns to cook. One of the first things I show them is my left index finger, then I tell them "if you drop a knife, DON'T catch it".
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