I'm simply saying most people if asked would say they don't practice drawing nearly as much as they should. And, given that this holster is placed directly under the bottom of the bra and against the chest if a person is required to draw on a BG they may or may not pull straight down and out. Speculation...They may have the propensity as they grab the grip (and all they want to do is eliminate the threat in front of them as they're shaking in their boots) grab the grip and as they're attempting to remove it from under their shirt turn it (no matter how much) toward them to make it easier to remove it from it's holstered position and out from under their shirt as their arm starts pointing toward the assailant...flintknapper wrote:
I don't see that either mode of carry would have your weapon pointed at your chest (whether holstered or during the draw stroke). It would be possible to "cover" your weak-side arm if you didn't execute a proper draw.but they're usually not potentially pointing right at your chest... Unless your carrying a shoulder rig... Heck okay too many variants..
I'm thinking of this as one motion in a high stress situation when your training takes over and you react and not act...
In this type of circumstance you are going to revert to the lowest common denominator of your training and given a non safety mouse gun and you grab it as a reaction you "may" inadvertently sweep yourself. Again, in this type of situation it can happen with almost any holstered configuration...that is why it is imperative to practice practice practice your drawing technique. But, in my experience some ranges don't allow this type of shooting and a static paper target is only good for a static er...um... "target"...
JMHO 0.02