Quoted:
Quoted: And even if the weapon is personally owned, in a most some cases, the factory action cannot be tampered with in any way. Most agencies want a heavier pull not a lighter one, and anything that makes the gun "easier" to fire may be seen as a liability issue.
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Thats how it should be quoted...
And you are saying that RRA is selling liability issues to local, state and federal agencies?...
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No I said nothing about RRA. If RRA supplies a two stage trigger from the factory, then it is a factory action. What I am saying, is most departments require a factory action to be left as is. That means that whatever came in the gun, stays in the gun, and no changes can be made. In our area that would even include putting a lighter connector in a Glock.
The liability issue would be one determined in court. If you shot someone with your rifle, and in anyway shape or form it could have been construed as a "bad shoot," then everything about that rifle would be called into question. And making the trigger easier to pull, could be an aggrivating factor, since most untrained people, (people who sit on a jury,) would not understand why you would want a gun that was "easier" to shoot. To them this could indicate that you wanted to shoot someone and I'm sure it would be misrepresented as a "hair trigger." (I've seen that happen with the lighter connetor in a Glock.)
Once again, the liability would be on the officer who made changes to a factory action, not a company who supplied the action.
I did not say that real cops don't use them. I answered the original question. I use a single stage, and so does everyone I know. Do real cops use other thngs? Yes. Do I? No.
Sorry for the confusion.