Indiana child fires handgun found in sofa at Ikea
- Published
A six-year-old child in the US state of Indiana found a loaded handgun in a couch at Ikea and fired it, police say.
The weapon had fallen into cushions as a shopper sat down to test the sofa at the store in a suburb of the state capital, Indianapolis.
Nobody was hurt in Monday's incident and no arrests have been made. Ikea said it had expressed "sincerest apologies" to the child's family.
Police say the gun-owner did not notice he had dropped his firearm.
"He sat down and somehow or another it became dislodged from this body and when he got up he didn't realise that he was without it," Tom Weger of the Fishers Police Department told the Washington Post, external.
The owner continued shopping and only became aware he had lost his gun when he heard gunfire.
The child fired one shot into a sofa cushion after "just a few minutes" of playing with the weapon, Mr Weger added.
"As soon as he realised there was a commotion in the store, the gun-owner quickly identified himself.... and fully co-operated with the investigation," he continued.
In its statement, Ikea said the "safety and security of customers and co-workers is the top priority".
Ikea "has a no-weapon policy in our locations to prevent exactly these types of situations," their statement continued.
The Swedish furniture giant remained open after the incident, as police investigated.
Lawyer Guy Relford told local station WTTV News, external the gun-owner was unlikely to face any charges.
He said violating the company's no-weapon policy was not against the law.
"Being a knucklehead is not a crime in Indiana, or in most places," Mr Relford told the network.
- Published4 June 2018