Arizona man hospitalized after shooting penis

Thank you for providing the link. I also read an article regarding this hot topic an hour ago before I saw this site. It was a bad idea for Joshua Seto, 27, to stuff his fiancée’s pink pistol to the waistband of his slacks for an excursion to Fry's Food Store. What is apparent is that a gun incident occurred, and a bullet took a piece out of his penis and left thigh, ABC15 reports. Article source: Man accidentally shoots own penis with pink pistol. Therefore, the penis shooting has prompted Arizona police to remind gun owners that holsters are a safe place to carry concealed handguns and not the waistbands.
 
Thank you for providing the link. I also read an article regarding this hot topic an hour ago before I saw this site. It was a bad idea for Joshua Seto, 27, to stuff his fiancée’s pink pistol to the waistband of his slacks for an excursion to Fry's Food Store. What is apparent is that a gun incident occurred, and a bullet took a piece out of his penis and left thigh, ABC15 reports. Article source: Man accidentally shoots own penis with pink pistol. Therefore, the penis shooting has prompted Arizona police to remind gun owners that holsters are a safe place to carry concealed handguns and not the waistbands.

:lol:

Who would need an official reminder? :lol:
 
Feel kinda silly usin' a More link for the rest of the story...
:eusa_eh:
Ky. jury rules against penis amputation patient
Aug 24,`11 -- A jury on Wednesday ruled against a Kentucky truck driver who sued his urologist claiming the doctor amputated part of his penis without his consent.
The six-man, six-woman jury deliberated briefly before coming back with the verdict in the lawsuit filed by 64-year-old Phillip Seaton, and his wife, Deborah, in Shelby County Circuit Court. The jury ruled unanimously against the claim that Dr. John Patterson of Frankfort had failed to exercise proper care. It ruled 10-2 against the claim that Seaton hadn't consented to the amputation. Jurors were told that Seaton had gone to Patterson seeking a circumcision in 2007, but the doctor decided to amputate part of the organ after he found potentially deadly cancer during surgery.

All jurors, including the forewoman, declined to comment as they filed out of the courthouse after the trial. Seaton, who with his wife of 35 years had been seeking more than $16 million in damages for "loss of service, love and affection," also declined to comment after the verdict. The Seatons' attorney, Kevin George, said in closing arguments, "Phillip has changed. He was mutilated. His manhood was taken." George said he planned to appeal the decision on the grounds that a doctor is allowed to change a consent for surgery only if there is a danger of imminent death.

"There was no emergency, no reason to do it," George said of the amputation. Patterson said after the verdict, "I think we're feeling pretty good." He declined to say more about the highly publicized case, calling one reporter who tried to question him "a member of the tabloid press." "We feel like justice was done," the doctor's attorney, Clay Robinson, said. "No doctor ever wins a malpractice action," Robinson said. "It's just a matter of how much you lose by."

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