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On Tue, 07 Nov 2017 13:13:40 -0500, John H
wrote: I'm thinking a 'ballistics database' as used above might be a database of casings or bullets that have been recovered from a crime scene. .... and tested and cataloged and entered into the database in some searchable form. My bet, not that many. I know on TV they are always saying "that bullet matches an open murder from 10 years ago" but it sounds like TV bull**** to me because that same show has some geek comparing the bullets under a microscope. How cumbersome would it be to physically compare 11,000 bullets a year, to maybe a few hundred thousand from past years, just from murders? I understand computers could narrow the search but the minute differences still require actually looking and using more than a bit of opinion, the main flaw pointed out when they talk about the problem with forensics. The classic case is a guy in the US who was positively identified as a murderer in Europe from fingerprints, confirmed by the FBI, Interpol and local "experts" and it turned out he was never even in Europe. |
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