CHICO UNIFORM
BODY ARMOR
| Point Blank | Coming soon PACA |
For Point Blank and U. S. Armor brands
contact our showroom for pricing information.
Phone 530 343-1616 or 530 343-9070 Fax 530 343-1716

Price: $55.99 Buy Now
Sizes: Regular 9 1/2" X 10 1/2"
Small 8 1/2" X 9 1/2" (Suggested for Female size vests)
Colors: Black - Lt. Blue - Tan - White - Navy
Note: We have not been offering the Second Chance product line of Body Armor for several years due to the below problem.
U.S. Government Sues Maker of Defective Police Body Armor
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. government on Friday sued the top American supplier of bullet-resistant police vests and the Japanese manufacturer of the vests' protective synthetic fiber, contending they conspired to hide evidence that the body armor could be defective.
Second Chance Body Armor Inc. of Michigan and Toyobo Co. knew that the vests' ability to stop bullets was overstated, but Second Chance sold them anyway to local, state and federal police, according to the lawsuit in U.S. District Court.
The government also alleged that the companies kept silent for nearly three years in the face of mounting evidence that the Zylon fabric degraded faster than they acknowledged when it was exposed to light, heat and humidity.
Only after a California, police officer was killed and a Pennsylvania officer was seriously wounded while wearing Second Chance vests made of Zylon in June 2003 did the company stop selling certain models and disclose safety problems, the lawsuit said.
Second Chance executives also ordered the destruction of internal memos, including one that urged the company to take corrective action and not wait until an officer was killed, the lawsuit said.
Second Chance and Toyobo blamed each other Friday for problems with the vests. ''Second Chance was the bad actor, not Toyobo,'' said Kent Jarrell, a spokesman for Toyobo.
Mary Ann Sabo, a Second Chance spokeswoman, said Second Chance has been working closely with the Justice Department and expects to be vindicated. Sabo said Toyobo ''is ultimately responsible for the problems with Zylon.''
Questions about the vests, initially praised for their strength and light weight, were first raised by a whistle-blower, Second Chance's former director of research and development.
Second Chance is facing more than a dozen suits by states, police agencies and individuals. Last week, the company acknowledged that the Zylon vests may not be safe and urged its customers to replace nearly 100,000 vests that had not previously been recalled.
A company lawyer has said Second Chance did not recall its remaining Zylon vests because the company did not have the money to replace them. The lawyer said it was possible the company could tap a federal body-armor fund to replace the vests.
The company, now going through reorganization in Federal Bankruptcy Court, earlier recalled more than 130,000 vests.
Second Chance also is suing Toyobo, which is a defendant in some of the other suits.
Toyobo has acknowledged that the fiber loses up to 20 percent of its durability within two years of manufacture. But the company has said Zylon works well in body armor that is properly constructed, and it contends it is not to blame for any problems with Second Chance vests.