Lawyer refused to remove his concealed weapon while accompanying a family member into an MRI.
He was warned to remove any and all metal. He chose not to disclose that he was carrying the ferro-magnetic weapon.
No innocent people were injured.
He was killed.
Is there a hypothesis on what exactly happened (did the gun fire by the normal mechanism of the pin striking the cartridge or somehow else (e.g. due to sparking?)?)?
@robryk @CAnxiolytic
I don't believe it fired at all. I believe, based on the wording used in the article, that the bullet moved as fast as possible toward the giant magnet - which happened to be on the other side of said person's abdomen.
Having something tear through you, even if there is no gunpowder involved, is just as deadly.
But bullets are usually not ferromagnetic: they are usually made from lead (steel is (a) less dense (b) more expensive (c) harder).
Ah, right, you can jacket steel in something softer. Do you have some rough estimate of how large a fraction of armor piercing bullets contain steel?
@robryk @CAnxiolytic
Nope.