Liberty Response Assisted Rescue Knife - Black Blade Flag
9 sold in last 24 hours
This is the assisted opening knife that actually earns its flag. A matte black drop point snaps into play with a positive thumb-stud launch and solid liner lock. The distressed USA flag handle hides real rescue tools: seatbelt cutter, glass breaker, and a work-ready pocket clip. It’s patriotic, sure—but it’s also the knife you reach for when seconds matter and excuses don’t.
Liberty Response Assisted Rescue Knife - Built for Real Emergencies
The Liberty Response Assisted Rescue Knife - Black Blade Flag isn’t about loud marketing; it’s about having the right tool when everything goes wrong. Assisted opening, matte black drop point, distressed USA flag handle, plus a seatbelt cutter and glass breaker tucked into the spine. This is a patriotic rescue knife that actually works like one.
Assisted Opening Action You Can Trust Under Stress
This is not an automatic knife for sale, and it doesn’t pretend to be. It’s a spring-assisted folding knife built for one-handed deployment when you’re strapped by a seatbelt, wet, cold, or working around a wrecked vehicle. The thumb stud gives you a clear indexing point, and once you start the motion, the assisted mechanism takes over and snaps the blade open with authority.
That matters. In a real rescue, you don’t have two hands free, and you don’t have time for a lazy, gritty action. The pivot is tuned for a predictable, repeatable deployment, not a fidget toy flip. It opens fast, locks up solid, and is easy to close one-handed with the liner lock.
Thumb-Stud Deployment with Positive Spring Assist
The thumb stud is positioned for a natural push, not an awkward reach. You start the blade 20–30 degrees out of the handle, and the assist spring finishes the job. That means less fine-motor demand when your hands are shaking or gloved. It’s a deliberate, controlled opening, not a jumpy switchblade surprise.
Liner Lock Engagement You Don’t Have to Baby
The liner lock engages into the tang with a clean bite. No half-hearted contact, no mushy feel. You can spine-tap this blade without the lock collapsing, which is exactly what you want if you’re cutting seatbelt webbing at an awkward angle or bracing the knife to punch through a side window near the glass breaker.
Rescue-Driven Design: Cutter, Breaker, and Blade
Plenty of knives throw a glass breaker on the end and call it a rescue tool. This one earns the title. The Liberty Response brings three serious features together into a compact EDC package:
- Matte black drop point blade for controlled, predictable cuts
- Integrated seatbelt cutter for webbing and cord
- Dedicated glass breaker on the pommel for tempered auto glass
The blade’s plain edge and drop point geometry make sense here: you want a controllable tip, a steady belly for push cuts, and a profile that transitions cleanly from slicing fabric to controlled point work. No recurves to snag, no gimmicks.
Seatbelt Cutter That Actually Bites
The seatbelt cutter sits where it should: at the butt of the handle, with enough clearance to feed in webbing without fighting the scales. That hook geometry gives you a focused cutting point on the inside edge, letting you pull through belts, straps, and light cordage while keeping the main blade safely folded.
Glass Breaker Positioned for Real-World Use
The glass breaker is a hardened point at the end of the handle, aligned with the spine so you can drive it straight into tempered side windows. You’re not swinging wildly; you’re delivering a controlled, hammer-style strike with a grip you already know from opening the knife. That one detail—alignment with the spine—makes the difference between a cosmetic spike and a tool that will actually shatter glass.
Patriotic EDC That Still Carries Like a Work Knife
The Liberty Response may look like a display piece with its distressed USA flag scales, but it carries like the kind of knife that lives in a first responder’s pocket. The pocket clip is mounted for tip-down deep carry, keeping the knife anchored and accessible without advertising itself more than the flag already does.
Finger grooves along the handle give you a repeatable hand position every time you draw. The jimping on the thumb ramp lets you drive power through the cut without sliding forward, especially useful when you’re working from odd angles inside a vehicle or cutting away clothing and webbing.
Mechanism vs. Automatic: Why This Isn’t a Switchblade
If you’re shopping automatic knives for sale, you already know the legal and mechanical difference matters. This is a spring-assisted opening knife, not a true automatic knife, not an OTF, and not a classic switchblade under federal terminology.
- Assisted opening: You must start the blade manually using the thumb stud; the spring only completes the motion.
- Automatic knife / switchblade: A button, slide, or similar control fires the blade from a fully closed position without manual blade contact.
- OTF (out-the-front): A specific automatic style where the blade deploys linearly out of the handle’s front, single- or double-action.
This knife stays in the assisted opening category, which often sits in a more comfortable legal zone than full automatic or OTF switchblade designs, depending on your state. You get rapid deployment, but with the manual-initiation mechanism that many jurisdictions treat differently.
What Buyers Ask Before Purchasing an Automatic Knife
Are automatic knives legal?
In the U.S., federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) restricts the interstate commerce of automatic knives—those that open by a button, switch, or similar device. It doesn’t outright ban ownership, and it doesn’t treat assisted opening knives like this one as automatic, because you must start the blade manually with the thumb stud.
State and local laws are where things get serious. Some states allow automatic knives and switchblades with few limitations; others restrict carry (especially concealed carry) or ownership entirely. Assisted openers are legal in many more places than true automatic knives, but you still need to check your state and city regulations. Bottom line: know your local law before you buy, and never assume that “legal to sell online” means “legal to carry everywhere.”
What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?
Collectors use the terms precisely, and so should any serious dealer:
- Automatic knife / switchblade: The blade opens from fully closed with a button, lever, or sliding control. No manual contact with the blade is required. "Switchblade" is the common term; "automatic knife" is the enthusiast and legal term.
- OTF (out-the-front): A subtype of automatic where the blade travels straight out the end of the handle. Can be single-action (button deploy, manual retract) or double-action (button deploy and retract).
- Assisted opening (this knife): A folding knife where you start opening the blade via a stud, flipper tab, or similar, and a spring takes over to finish the deployment. Not classified as a switchblade under federal law.
The Liberty Response sits firmly in the assisted opening camp—fast in the hand, but mechanically distinct from the automatic knife for sale crowd.
What makes this automatic knife worth buying?
If you’re looking specifically to buy automatic knife models, this isn’t the one—mechanically, it’s an assisted opener. But judged on its own terms, it earns pocket time. You get a rescue-focused tool with real-world features: assisted deployment, liner lock security, a glass breaker aligned to the spine, and a seatbelt cutter that actually engages webbing cleanly.
Add the distressed USA flag handle, and it becomes more than another black blade folder. It’s a patriotic, functional rescue knife that can ride backup to your dedicated automatic or OTF, or serve as a primary EDC for buyers in restrictive jurisdictions where carrying a true switchblade isn’t worth the risk.
Carry It Like You Mean It
Whether you already have a double action automatic knife for sale bookmarked or you’re building out a rescue-focused rotation, the Liberty Response Assisted Rescue Knife - Black Blade Flag earns its space. It’s not pretending to be an OTF or a switchblade; it’s an honest, fast assisted opener with real rescue chops and a flag that actually stands for something.
If you carry knives because equipment matters—and you choose tools that can pull real weight when things go sideways—this is the kind of EDC rescue piece you clip in and forget, until the moment you’re very glad it’s there.
| Blade Color | Black |
| Blade Finish | Matte |
| Blade Style | Drop Point |
| Blade Edge | Plain |
| Handle Finish | Matte |
| Theme | USA Flag |
| Pocket Clip | Yes |
| Deployment Method | Thumb stud |
| Lock Type | Liner lock |