In October 2004, in
Boston,
Massachusetts, US,
Victoria Snelgrove was struck in the eye by an FN 303 round fired by a member of the
Boston Police Department (BPD), leading to her death approximately 12 hours later. An
autopsy found that the pellet opened a three-quarter-inch (1.9 cm) hole in the bone behind the eye, broke into nine pieces, and damaged the right side of her brain. Subsequent tests by the BPD indicated that the FN 303's accuracy "decreased significantly" after about 300 firings. This is circumstantially corroborated by testimony of the officer who fired the weapon, stating that he was aiming at a rioter throwing bottles and did not know that a bystander had been hit. A $15 million
wrongful death lawsuit against the City of Boston and
FN Herstal was settled in July 2006. In 2007, the BPD destroyed their remaining FN 303s, stating they were more powerful and lethal than had been anticipated. During protests in front of the
Arcelor building in
Luxembourg city on 11 May 2009, the weapon was used for the first time by local police. An
RTL cameraman was hit in the hand, breaking one finger. On 2 June 2013, during
Gezi Park protests in
Ankara,
Turkey, a protester was wounded in the face by a "
plastic bullet", later attributed to police use of the FN 303. During
Independence Day demonstrations in Finland on 6 December 2015, police used FN 303 against counter-protesters, with one receiving eye injuries from projectile fragments. A 2019 study found that the performance of the FN 303 was significantly worse outside of a laboratory setting. Operational conditions were simulated by inducing physiological and psychological stress, and measuring salivary
cortisol; accuracy and reported ease of use were both lower than that of the control group. ==Users==