Blue Lives Matter

Deputy Sues Gun Manufacturer Over Shattered Femur

A Loudoun County deputy said her SIG Sauer P320 discharged as she was removing her holster from her duty belt.

Loudoun County, VA – A Loudoun County sheriff’s deputy has filed a lawsuit against SIG Sauer alleging that her fully-holstered duty weapon discharged and sent a bullet into her leg.

The incident occurred on Feb. 7, when 37-year-old Loudoun County Deputy Marcie Vadnais went to the Northern Virginia Criminal Justice Academy to attend a general instructor course, the Loudoun Times-Mirror reported.

In accordance with academy policy, Deputy Vadnais began removing her firearm from her belt when she arrived.

According to the lawsuit, as she fed the belt through the holster’s first tooth, her SIG Sauer P320 somehow “fired one nine millimeter bullet, which hit her in the upper right thigh,” the Blast reported.

“At no time during this incident did she touch the trigger, which at all times was inside and covered by a SIG-manufactured holster,” the lawsuit read.

The round shattered the deputy’s femur “in several places” and caused “massive blood loss and other internal injuries,” according to the suit.

Deputy Vadnais, a 7-year veteran of the force, still has shrapnel and bone fragments embedded in her leg. A steel rod now holds her femur in place.

Due to the extent of her injuries, she will likely “have trouble ever running or walking normally again, and may not be able to return to her position as a result,” the lawsuit said.

The deputy said that SIG Sauer misled the public regarding the safety of the P320.

“We’ve designed safety elements into every necessary feature on this pistol,” the gun manufacturer said in an advertisement, according to the deputy’s suit. “From the trigger, to the striker and even the magazine, the P320 won’t fire unless you want it to.”

In April of 2016, the U.S. Army put the P320 through drop testing as part of a potential $580 million contract with SIG Sauer – but there was a problem, CNN reported.

“During drop testing in which an empty primed cartridge was inserted, the striker struck the primer causing a discharge,” the Department of Defense noted in a report, according to CNN.

In order to keep the deal, SIG Sauer fixed the problem by using “lightweight components in the trigger group mechanism,” the report said.

The upgrade was implemented by the time the military ran testing trials on the P320 in April of 2017, but the gun manufacturer continued to sell the pre-upgrade versions of the weapon to the general public for at least four months, according to CNN.

In August of 2017, the company offered to apply the fix for civilians, as well. By that time, over 500,000 pre-upgrade P320s had been sold to the general public.

The “voluntary upgrade” was “presented to the public as purely optional, not urgent, and not mandatory,” Deputy Vadnais’ lawsuit read, according to the Blast.

The program was touted as a means by which “to make existing commercial versions of the P320 ‘better’ by installing a much lighter trigger, and internal disconnect switch, and an improved sear to prevent accidental discharges,” the lawsuit said.

Deputy Vadnais wasn’t the only law enforcement officer who has experienced an unintended discharge of the P320, according to CNN.

In January of 2017, a SWAT team member in Connecticut said that a bullet hit him in the knee when he accidentally dropped his holstered weapon.

A holstered P320 went off when it was dropped inside a New Jersey police station in June of 2017, and another holstered gun discharged in Georgia when a police officer slipped and fell in October of 2017.

On March 29, a SWAT team member in Florida accidentally dropped his holstered weapon as he was leaving his home to respond to a possible hostage situation. The gun sent a bullet into his leg and shattered his tibia near his knee.

Deputy Vadnais is seeking to have SIG Sauer recall the weapon – a move she estimated would cost the gun manufacturer approximately $100 million, the Blast reported.

The deputy otherwise suggested that the company issue an “enhanced, unambiguous warning to all purchasers of the P320 stating that it can fire without a trigger pull in its existing condition.”

Deputy Vadnais is seeking $10 million in damages.

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Heezels
Heezels

I agree with HCD that her story isn’t bullshit. Apparently there was a lag time between which pre upgraded pistols were sold em masse. Yeah, the company needs to bite the bullet on this one. They’ve created a legitimate health hazard.

Hi_estComnDenomn
Hi_estComnDenomn

@AZBIGDOG Do you live in california?

I do, and its easy to buy a pistol. If it's hard for you, you might have a criminal background.

AZBIGDOG
AZBIGDOG

Sorry, but kalifa is a state that will not allow citizens to buy any firearm they don't like and have extensive lists of ones that are prohibited and ones you can buy. They require manufacturers to even perform safety tests over and beyond what they have done to begin with. I have heard some manufacturers have quit selling to dealers in kalifa due to having to redo every test plus with any modification of the original pistol. And to top it all off no one is allowed more that a 10 round magazine except LEOs. Seems a shame that as a citizen I would be less equal to a LEO when it comes to having to protect myself.

Britz
Britz

After doing a little research on the agency, this appears to be an agency issued weapon and the holster was the Sig holster issued with the p320.. paddle holster.

Britz
Britz

Has anyone done their research on this weapon. The DoD reported multiple malfunctions to Sig in 2017. The report sites 200 or more malfunctions with this weapon in 2016. Most malfunctions were corrected for the military version, but the faulty weapon was still sold to the public. The drop fire issue is the most well known issue simply because it was bright to light when a CT officer sued Sig when his fully holster weapon fell and shot him in the knee. That lawsuit is also what brought on the voluntary “upgrade.” The lawsuit was demanding a full on recall but Sig down played the issues and issued the “upgrade.”

“According to a study conducted in 2017 and released earlier this month, the Army’s new service pistol, a military variant of the Sig Sauer P320, has exhibited a number of persistent deficiencies and reliability issues through DoD testing, including but not limited to the drop test failures Sig has already announced voluntary recalls to correct.”

Just like any other company, they would rather deal with a suit than recall thousands of weapon and take the chance of losing the nearly 600 million dollar contract with the military. 10 million is a drop in the bucket compared to the military contracts they’ve gained.

No. 11-20
TarnishedCopper
TarnishedCopper

Sounds like Sig is "on the hook" for this one and several more. Imagine the logistics of recalling half a million pistols. Imagine the costs for transportation, having the parts made in that quantity, and the skilled labor necessary to install and test the upgraded pistols, plus the mere shipping, storage and cataloging of them. If officers who need those weapons daily have no other weapon what would they do in the meanwhile? An operation like this would probably take at least 6 months if not longer if the personnel and parts were available.....Turn-around-time would be excessive..

dsmarine
dsmarine

Sorry for the bad spelling in my previous post. I usually check before I post/ submit.

dsmarine
dsmarine

Dig should lose the suit AND forced to find every defective firearm and repair it free including ALL shipping costs!

LordSeamus
LordSeamus

SIG is going to loose big time here.

DocRyder
DocRyder

“At no time during this incident did she touch the trigger, which at all times was inside and covered by a SIG-manufactured holster,” Amazing what can be learned by reading something other than the title...