There's just lots and lots of misinformation here, especially from people being willfully ignorant. This isn't a competition trigger, it's a duty trigger in a striker fired pistol.
I didn't see anything like that in the video you didn't watch. Nobody is selling his configuration as an aftermarket trigger overtravel screw, especially when overtravel isn't the issue in play.
That only works IF the restraining order is entered into the system (same with domestic violence convictions).
Remember this? https://abcnews.go.com/US/air-force-failed-report-texas-suspects-convictions-fbi/story?id=50969640
Here's the instructions for the respective agency that must manually...
People can lie on the 4473, and not every protective order is entered in NICS. The FBI is only doing a NICS check + fingerprint ID verification - nothing more.
How are we sure he had been diagnosed with any mental issues before receiving a CWP, and how would we be sure that they were properly disclosed by the applicant?
Your refusal to watch it to determine what, if any information is actually in it vs. dismissing it out of hand as "click bait" tells me everything I need to know about your willingness to understand this problem. Of course nobody walks around with a screw in the gun... but nobody is banging...
How would a background check turn this up if not disclosed on an application? There's no "central registry" of medical records they could check (thankfully).
If only guns, large capacity magazines and murder were illegal in NYC, everyone would be safe.
Oh, wait... you mean criminals don't care about laws and laws only kept the non-criminals from maintaining their own defense?
Watching the video helps.
Basically, it's a situation where the trigger isn't fully resetting, e.g. there's wear, dirt, etc. that would allow the trigger forward, but about 1mm or so from "fully forward" and the sear will disengage without a complete trigger pull, only the 1mm or so.
We're definitely disagreeing on this. It's much less likely being moved and bumped lying in a holster on a table vs. being on a belt, carried, moved, etc. It's why so many of these are happening in-holster.
How would #1 and #1a be any different if the belt was worn? It's still in a holster, trigger protected, and it's being engaged in less movement. In other words, those don't change the safety of the gun being secured in a holster, worn or not.
Your point about the muzzle of the gun pointing in...