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on november 26:
Nov 26, 2014 11:55 By Nina Massey
Police say Christa Engles was killed in a "horrible, horrible accident" when the three-year-old found a loaded semi-automatic weapon in the house
A tragic young army mother was shot dead by her three-year-old son as she changed her 10-month-old daughters nappy.
The toddler is believed to have found a loaded semi-automatic handgun on a table and accidentally fired it at Christa Engles' head as she tended to his baby sister.
No one else was was home at the time.
it might be rare but children shooting adults because the gun was not safely put away does happens
and again here we have a family ruined and another child with a difficult future because a gun was left on the table
i am not going to go into the gun control and all that jazz issue but here we have to similar tragedies in which the adults did not secure those guns and were left within easy reach of children
my problem is that here we have two smart, gun educated (as the families said one was an army reservist and the other knew her away around guns)women who were shot not but those intruders there were arming themselves against but by their children.
do guns give a false sense of security, a "it won't happen to us" mentality?
i am on my ipad and have no idea how to post the link to the mirror.uk were i found that story
The 26-year-old U.S. Army Reserve specialist was found by the children's grandmother when she returned home to the bloody scene in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Engles was taken to hospital in a critical condition, but later died.
Nov 26, 2014 11:55 By Nina Massey
Police say Christa Engles was killed in a "horrible, horrible accident" when the three-year-old found a loaded semi-automatic weapon in the house
A tragic young army mother was shot dead by her three-year-old son as she changed her 10-month-old daughters nappy.
The toddler is believed to have found a loaded semi-automatic handgun on a table and accidentally fired it at Christa Engles' head as she tended to his baby sister.
No one else was was home at the time.
it might be rare but children shooting adults because the gun was not safely put away does happens
and again here we have a family ruined and another child with a difficult future because a gun was left on the table
i am not going to go into the gun control and all that jazz issue but here we have to similar tragedies in which the adults did not secure those guns and were left within easy reach of children
my problem is that here we have two smart, gun educated (as the families said one was an army reservist and the other knew her away around guns)women who were shot not but those intruders there were arming themselves against but by their children.
do guns give a false sense of security, a "it won't happen to us" mentality?
i am on my ipad and have no idea how to post the link to the mirror.uk were i found that story
The 26-year-old U.S. Army Reserve specialist was found by the children's grandmother when she returned home to the bloody scene in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Engles was taken to hospital in a critical condition, but later died.