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The last recorded flash-bang injury was in December 2001, in a Buffalo, New York, FBI office, when one accidentally discharged and burned an agent on the hands and upper body.
New 'Smart' Flash-bang Makes First-ever Debut at SHOT Show Industry Day at the Range™ Jan. 18, 2019 Liberty Dynamic device designed to be safer, more accurate, than current stun grenades ...
The flash powder burns hotter than lava. Dukes suffered second-degree burns across her body. When later asked to describe the pain she felt that morning on a scale of one to 10, with 10 being the ...
"Conventional flash-bangs use about 17.5 grams of flash powder." Even though more material is used, the new grenade is safer because it doesn't pre-mix the powder with oxygen.
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