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Half Baked: Gun Placed in Oven Goes Off

Facebook Photo Chesterfield County Fire & EMS

While most gun owners would agree safely storing your firearm when not in use is part of being a responsible gun owner, there are readiness diehards in homes, hopefully without children, who insist on keeping guns in a drawer by their nightstand, under the sofa or even simply sitting on a coffee table should the Crips, Bloods or that Venezuelan gang wreaking havoc in Aurora, Colorado, should attempt a dynamic entry in their home while they’re in the middle of watching Sunday Night Football.

But one Chesterfield, Virginia, resident decided to keep their ready-to-rock semi-auto handgun close to what was likely one of their favorite rooms—the kitchen—when they stored it in an oven…and then forgot it was there and turned the oven on.

Chesterfield County Fire and EMS posted the following on Facebook:

While this is an extreme example, these pictures show why you should never store anything in your oven.

Last night, our firefighters responded to a call for a fire at a home in Chesterfield. The homeowner reported the oven had exploded. When firefighters opened the oven to investigate, they found a handgun inside. It turns out, someone turned the oven on with the gun inside, the weapon heated up, and five rounds went off. Thankfully, no one was hurt, but the situation could have turned out much differently.

When you place any item in the oven it is easy to forget it is there, which can lead to a fire or something worse when you turn it on. You should also make sure to properly store your firearms. Keep them somewhere secure, like a gun safe.

The firearm partially melted into the grate and live rounds exploded in the gun when the oven the gun was stored in was turned on. Facebook Photo Chesterfield County Fire & EMS

Of course, the rounds likely exploded from overheating inside the gun, as the semi-auto wouldn’t have cycled and technically “fired” the rounds through the barrel, short of the one round potentially in the chamber. But the situation was still dangerous enough.

Vada Tuttle commented on the post that the homeowner must’ve been looking to make “bang bang shrimp.” Well played Vada.

“Thankfully no one was hurt,” WMBF noted in their coverage of the incident.

“Please do not store guns or anything else in your oven,” Chesterfield Fire and EMS said in a social media post.

Thankfully, no one was hurt.

“Keep them somewhere secure, like a gun safe,” officials told the news channel.

Read the full article here

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