Ballistics testing
On 11/7/17 5:10 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 11/7/2017 1:57 PM, Bill wrote:
wrote:
On Tue, 7 Nov 2017 12:38:18 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:
Watching a press conference by law enforcement officials investigating
the Texas church shootings.
They just said that a number of expended rounds have been recovered
that
will be sent somewhere that maintains a ballistics database to see if
the rifle used had been previously used in any other shootings or
crimes.
So, contrary to some of the discussions we've had here in the past, it
seems there *is* a data base maintained of the unique markings on the
rounds fired from a particular firearm.
My only question about this is how "unique" they actually are and how
consistent they stay over the life of the barrel.
If you understand anything about bore erosion, you have to question
the ID of a bullet from a new barrel compared to one 1000 rounds down
the road.
I am seeing a lot of discussion these days about the flaws in the
"science" of forensics.
I would alsoÂ* like to see someone comparing the bullets fired from 2
barrels made consecutively with the same rifling tools. Either the
"science" of striations is flawed or the "science" of tool forensics
is flawed.
I would agree that comparing bullets fired from a particular gun
fairly close together in the life of the barrel might be significant
but most of the "uniqueness" would be from the usage, not the
machining. It is valuable when they find a gun that was tested shortly
after the murder but comparing a bullet from the new gun to one from
1000 rounds later is more troubling.
I think they are comparing casings, not bullets.
They are.Â* The first report was "spent rounds"Â* but was corrected later
to casings.Â*Â* Harry's comment makes sense.Â* They are comparing the
casing to others found at crime scenes, not from the manufacturer.
Until recently, if you bought a new firearm in Maryland, the shipping or
product box had to include from the manufacturer a spent shell casing in
an envelope that was sent to the Maryland State Police. The rumor is the
Staties here have many 55-gallon barrels full of spent shell casings
from the sale of tens of thousands of new firearms over the years.
Apparently no one ever bothered to compare those casings with the
casings found at crime scenes. In any event, the state of Maryland has
stopped collecting the shell casings.
It's really a corollary of the 10-round magazine limitation. You can't
buy larger mags in Maryland, but you can drive over to Virginia or any
other state where higher cap mags are legal, buy as many as you want,
drive back into Maryland and use them legally.
I would like to see a ban on the sale and possession of bump stocks.
They serve no useful purpose for hunting or for self defense or for
competition.
|