Thursday, July 10, 2014

Rise and fall of Second Chance vest Part 1

This story personally touched my life. I was employed by Second Chance Body Armor when the employees were sent home and SCBA was allowed to violate the Federal W.A.R.N. Act. We were not given 90 days pay or 90 days notice. 
Davis walks around Central Lake like he is some kind of small town hero, when in reality he destroyed countless lives.
The Detroit Free Press has amnesia regarding the two part series and I was able to find Part 1 on another forum. I will post Part 2 if and when I can locate them.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2005511210407

This Michigan man shot himself repeatedly to sell his soft body armor to police. But the vests proved flawed and two cops went down. Now the $50-million-a-year empire is in ruins. And his success story has some holes.

November 21, 2005

Email this Print this BY JOE SWICKARD and DAVID ZEMAN

FREE PRESS STAFF WRITERS




Richard Davis, founder of Second Chance Body Armor, would shoot himself to prove the vest's effectiveness. In this April 30, 1997, demonstration in Central Lake, he used a .44 Magnum with a 6-inch barrel. The hole in the shirt after Davis shot himself. Police were sold. "That demonstration reaped millions for him," said David Balash, a former police firearms expert. (1997 photo by LIZ RAFFAELE/Special to Free Press)





First of two parts

Inspiration came to Richard Davis, so the story goes, as doctors plucked a bullet from his temple and another from his buttocks.

Not quite the apple that bonked Isaac Newton. But those small slugs gave Davis, a struggling Detroit pizzeria owner who said he was wounded in a shootout with robbers, his Big Idea: soft body armor that cops could wear as easily as an undershirt.

From that 1969 gun battle, his official history continues, Davis parlayed a $70 roll of nylon and the straps from his car's seat belts into a $50-million-a-year business providing thousands of American cops, soldiers -- even President George W. Bush -- with light, bullet-resistant vests.

But now the high-flying college flunkout finds himself in bankruptcy, along with Second Chance Body Armor, the northern Michigan business he founded. The shooting of two police officers and the lawsuits that followed revealed that Second Chance kept selling vests despite mounting evidence of deadly flaws. The U.S. Justice Department has launched a criminal investigation.

And many cops who used and trusted Davis' vests feel betrayed.

"Being responsible for 28 guys on the team, it really hit me," said Lt. Tim Atkins of the Oakland County Sheriff's Office tactical unit. "If they had prior knowledge of the problems and didn't do anything, boy, you really hate to think that."

A Free Press investigation reveals a history of troubling incidents involving Davis, from the torching of his pizza stores in 1970 to his detention at Heathrow Airport in 1977 to a scheme to obstruct a police investigation in 1990.

The newspaper probe also raises questions about the episode that gave rise to Davis' fortune -- that gun battle on a warm summer night in Detroit.

Over more than three decades, Davis claims, his body armor saved nearly 1,000 police officers from serious injury or death. So it is no small irony that one of those who was saved helped bring down Second Chance.

Aaron Westrick, a straight-arrow ex-cop and the company's research chief, repeatedly implored Second Chance executives to recall problem vests.

"We were literally ... waiting for the next body to come in, in my opinion," Westrick testified in one deposition. "When I think back, it just makes me sick."

Westrick, whose life was saved by a Second Chance vest in 1982, was let go last year and has since sued the company under a federal whistle-blower law.

His testimony is crucial to suits by the U.S. government, seven states, scores of police departments and the families of the two officers who were shot through their vests. Second Chance -- and Toyobo, the Japanese manufacturer of the Zylon fabric used in the vests -- is accused of keeping more than 100,000 vests on the market despite tests showing Zylon weakened prematurely when exposed to heat, light or moisture.

Westrick also produced a cache of memos to support his testimony, including papers Second Chance executives allegedly ordered shredded.

Exhibit A, should any of the suits go to trial, is a Davis memo from 2002 in which he acridly challenges his company's executive board to warn customers about Zylon's weaknesses.

In the memo, Davis asks the board if it wishes to "continue operating as though nothing is wrong until one of our customers is killed or wounded" or someone else "exposes the Zylon problem."

The "downfall" to that strategy, he writes, is that "a law enforcement officer will be killed wearing one of our vests" and "we will be forced to make excuses as to why we didn't recognize and correct the problem. In the eyes of law enforcement we will either be stupid for not knowing, or greedy and uncaring for knowing and not doing anything about it."

Eleven months later, a police officer near San Diego died after a gunman's bullets penetrated his Zylon vest, and a second officer, near Pittsburgh, was permanently disabled when his vest failed.

In memos and deposition testimony, Davis comes across as aggressively demanding action, then routinely backing down. He struggles with his conscience, board members and Toyobo officials about what to do next. "I was trying to find out what, if anything, was wrong with Zylon, because people were betting their lives on this product, including me," Davis testified in one deposition.

Terry Johnson, the sheriff of Antrim County, where Second Chance is located, said he doesn't believe Davis would knowingly compromise officer safety. "Law enforcement is his heart and soul," Johnson said. "His whole life has been saving lives."

Davis, 62, his attorneys and other executives at Second Chance declined to answer questions for this report. The story of his rise and fall comes from thousands of pages of deposition transcripts, state and federal court papers, internal company documents and interviews with friends, former employees and lawyers involved in litigation with Davis and Second Chance.

Unsuccessful early, questioned later

Davis was a born gadgeteer with a weakness for fireworks. As a child, he was "all the time working on some new project," said Pat Crawford, his sister. His interests didn't pay immediate dividends.

After graduating from Detroit Henry Ford High School in 1961, Davis quickly bombed out of the University of Michigan. "I was required to withdraw for poor scholarship," he testified in a civil suit. "Didn't quite make it."

Davis floundered for years. He drove a taxi and toiled as a security guard, in a plastics factory and as a computer operator.

In the late 1960s, he opened pizza stores on 7 Mile in Detroit and on 11 Mile in Royal Oak. It was a tough go. Bills mounted and he scrambled to fill deliveries. As Davis tells the story that altered his life, he was delivering pizzas on Detroit's west side the night before the Apollo 11 moon launch -- July 15, 1969.

Three gunmen ambushed him in an alley. Davis was struck twice and returned fire, injuring two of the men.

Davis said he vowed then that no police officer should ever go unprotected. As he recovered "weeks later," the Second Chance Web site recounted, his pizza business burned.

It's a story Davis has told countless times.

But when asked for documents or other corroborating evidence, neither Davis nor his lawyer responded. Crawford, his sister, said her family has no records. Detroit police officials said they could find no report on a shootout, and a review of the Free Press and Detroit News editions of the time found no story. During the time when Davis said he was recovering from his wounds, he married bank teller Karen Troskey, court records show.

In a deposition years later, she said her husband came up with the idea for soft vests when he was a security guard and made no mention of a shootout. He "had a lot of time to sit around and think," she said, and "got the idea of having a vest that nobody could see."

Moreover, Davis' pizza stores weren't torched weeks after the alleged shootout, as Second Chance said. Court records show the stores burned the following January, nearly six months later.

And Davis was the lead suspect.

The pizza stores in Royal Oak and Detroit burned in the early morning of Jan. 6, 1970. Investigators found fireworks and containers with gasoline. The oven in the Royal Oak shop was stuffed with car tires, apparently intended to ruin the equipment.

Police learned that, six days earlier, Davis had taken out a $5,000 insurance policy on the contents of the Royal Oak shop and had fallen two months behind in bank payments. In Detroit, his landlord told police she had gone to court to evict Davis after two missed rent payments.

Davis, though, blamed a store manager he had fired days earlier for the blaze.

But the ex-manager said he'd been at home and passed a polygraph, satisfying police.

Davis was charged with arson, a felony. He eventually pleaded no contest to "disorderly conduct -- engaged in an illegal occupation," a misdemeanor, for the Royal Oak fire. He served a year of probation.

He was never charged in Detroit.

READ MORE:http://www.thehighroad.org/archive/index.php/t-167016.html

Is Richard Davis a criminal??

More comments here: http://gunhub.com/gun-talk/23867-richard-davis-criminal-2.html

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