February 11, 2009 8:42 PM

Spud Guns: Legal And Dangerous

By
Jaime Holguin
(CBS)  Just when 17-year-old Daniel Berry's life had found new light, he must find his way in the dark.

"It's not right, I'm not used to being blind," he says. "It's a whole new world for me and not one that I would've chosen."

Berry was shot in the face, looking down the barrel of a home-built contraption called a spud gun. When it fired a frog, it blinded him.

"If it would've been anything else it would've killed me," he says.

Spud guns fire potatos like light artillery. Some versions launch tennis balls.

A garage in Appleton, Wisconsin may be the center of the spud gun universe; that's where Joel Suprise has a booming business making spud guns of all sizes.

The guns are dangerous, can cause property damage and can cause severe bodily injury, he says.

"It's an item that's designed for fun and recreation but they need to be used safely," says Suprise.

The guns are made of plastic plumbing pipe and fueled by deodorant or hairspray fumes. A barbecue igniter is used for a trigger, and a potato, or anything that fits, goes down the barrel. It's a $60 weapon.

In the eyes of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, spud guns are not illegal. But across the country, some towns want them outlawed and police are confiscating spud guns regularly.

One gun was used in a North Carolina drive-by shooting. Another blinded an eye of a Pennsylvania house painter.

"They need to be used under adult supervision, the same with any type of gun," says Surprise.

On the Internet, they're a phenomenon, with nearly 9,000 spud gun hits. Web sites show people how to build or buy them cheap.

"I'm not the bad guy," says Suprise. "I'm just trying to live the American dream."

Berry had an American dream too.

"I wanted to finish up my college and go to the air force and be a pilot," he says.

Now, he struggles with a new life of talking calculators and the language of Braille.

But he wants his blindness to be his warning of what can happen when people play with any kind of gun.

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by richardfg7 October 31, 2011 8:33 PM EDT
That's a really sad story. I know a guy who lost 2 fingers grabing his fan belt.Should fan belts be outlawed? I own a spud gun & really enjoy playing w/it. You can't regulate everything that can be mis-used & hurt somebody anymore than you can regulate stupidity.Which is in fact the real problem here. Maybe guys that look down the barrels of loaded weapons just shouldn't fly multi-million dollar fighter jets anyway.
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by jeffmrod91 September 5, 2011 11:05 AM EDT
okay its people/kids like this that makes FUN illegal you shouldn't be looking down the barrel of any loaded gun at any given time or an unloaded gun for that matter i do feel bad he was blinded but it is his fault..he should know what he is messing with before using it i just made a potato gun and I'm checking if it is legal in Georiga to be safe this is a reason why i have to go through this trouble of looking because of dumb kids that look down the barrel of a loaded gun come on guys.. yes we should feel bad but only to a certain extent ITS HUS FAULT
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