There is no other gun made by SIG that is presenting this issue.
There is no other gun by any other manufacturer “that is being reported” as presenting this issue.
According to SIG its ALWAYS operator error.
This statement by SIG Is just more
Blah blah blah.
My opinion.
So the common factor with all of these discharges are one brand of pistol model. You could say it is the holster, but of the flip side the holsters in question are so commonly used that other brands do not seem to have the same issues with discharges. So yes you can blame the holster but eventually....maybe Sig created the problem? They could have added a trigger safety like every other striker fired pistol has. The 320 is at the end of a day a single action and if you don't have a manual safety version you are riding a very fine line, that the trigger can be manipulated. The Doughnut Operator mentioned Sig could offer a safety bladed trigger "upgrade" even calling it a duty trigger.
How many of these discharges could have been avoided if there was a passive trigger safety? If even a few of them....Sig is liable. In my opinion those that are suing Sig are taking the wrong approach that the pistol can just go off. Nope the plaintiffs need to show that the pistol is working as intended, with a nice easy trigger pull that takes no effort, especially with the lack of an industry standard trigger safety. Sig created the problem. Combined with common established training standards that you Draw and reholster while not looking at your holster. You look at the target. You should practice enough that reholstering and indexing happens like second nature. If you look down at the holster that means the bad guy can do something while you are not watching.
On the flip side Glocks were the last pistol that had a reputation for discharging "all the time" while holstering. This was one of the reasons the Croatian designers added a Grip safety to the HS2000 and XD. Early adverting and training showed that as you re-holster you loosen you back grip disengaging the grip safety. You could shove the pistol even with an obstruction and the pistol would not discharge. But the addiction of both a trigger safety and a grip safety was and is apparently just too much for some.
In essence carrying an sig 320 with no manual safety is a kin to cocked, but with nothing locked. That's the way you sue Sig. And make them tell you why they chose to not include a passive safety, all the while promoting the fine trigger.
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