Chapter 15 – Firearms, Toolmarks, & Impressions
Firearms
- ______is vital to solve a crime that uses a gun.
- In 2004, there were ______homicides in the US
Firearms: A Quick History
- Almost every gun is based on the same simple concept: You apply explosive ______behind a ______to launch it down ______
- The earliest & simplest application of this idea is the ______
- The 1st handheld guns were essentially mini-cannons; you loaded some gunpowder & a steel ball & lit a fuse
- War typically resulted in the need for improved weapons technology.
- In the late 1800’s, the revolver quickly became popular due to its size & quick loading.
•It only had to be reloaded every ______shots instead of after each shot.
- Handguns reigned supreme for the past 200 years & to this day, remain the most popular & readily available firearm.
Types of Firearms
- Handguns (pistols)
–Revolver
–Semiautomatic
- Rifles
- Shotguns
- Air or BB guns
Ammunition Components
Bullets
•Made of ______, sometimes jacketed with ______
•Bullet size—diameter (caliber or gauge)
•Shapes
Firearms Identification
- Often confused with the term ballistics
- Ballistics is the study of ______
•Inside the firearm
•After it leaves the firearm
•When it impacts the target
- Identification of Firearms is based upon this basic idea: A ______marks a ______& imparts/transfers its ______
______to that object.
Forensic Firearms Expert
- Did a suspect use this gun to kill that person?
- Did these bullets come from that gun?
- Was it really self-defense?
- Is this a case of suicide, or is foul play involved?
- Bullet Comparison
- Weapons Function
–Is it safe? Has it been modified?
- Serial Number Restoration
- Gunpowder Residue Detection
–on clothes, hands, & wounds
- Muzzle-to-Target Distances
Pulling the Trigger
- Pulling the trigger releases the ______
- The firing pin strikes the ______
- The primer ignites the ______
- The powder generates gas that ______forward through the ______ejects the spent ______.
Bullet Caliber
- Caliber: ______
- Caliber is recorded in
–hundredths of an inch (.22 & .38)
–millimeters (9mm)
Bullet Anatomy
Cartridge Parts & How it works
Bullet Comparisons
- Each gun leaves distinct markings on a bullet passing through it.
- A gun barrel is made from a solid bar of steel that has been drilled/hallowed out.
- The drill leaves microscopic marks on the barrel’s inner surface.
- Gun manufacturers also add spiral ______to the barrel. This is known as ______
- Lands: ______
- As a spinning bullet passes through the barrel, it is marked by these grooves.
Rifling
- The grooved spirals inside the barrel of a gun that produce ______and ______on a bullet
- Lands & grooves are ______
Striae
- ______on a fired bullet,
- like a ______
- Can serve as ______
- Matching bullets or bullet to a firearm
Class Characteristics
- Class Characteristics: Once a manufacturer chooses a rifling process, for a particular class of weapon, they keep it consistent.
- Lands & Grooves are the same for a model.
–.32 caliber Smith & Wesson has ______lands & grooves twisting to the ______
–.32 caliber Colt has ______lands & grooves twisting to the ______
- Class characteristics can eliminate certain makes but are not enough to ID a particular gun.
Individual Characteristics
- Imperfections in the manufacturing process make each barrel ______
- Rifled barrels, even if made in succession ______have identical striation (scratch-like marks).
Bullet Comparisons
- To match bullets to a gun, ______
______ - GoddardComparisonMicroscopes
–Examined bullets side-by-side (______).
Cartridge Case
- Usually ______
- Class evidence
–Manufacturer
–Shape
–Caliber
–Composition
Cartridge Markings
- All moving components contact the cartridge rather than the bullet can leave useful impressions on ______.
- Cartridge Case Individual Characteristics:
–Breech face marks
–Firing pin impressions
–Chamber marks
–Extractor marks
–Ejector marks
Breech Marks
- When a cartridge is fired, the ______forces the ______down the barrel and the shell casing is ______against the breech.
- This leaves impressions unique to the individual gun’s ______on the shell casing.
Firing Pin Marks
- In order to fire the cartridge, the ______must first be ignited. To accomplish this a ______strikes the ______of the cartridge.
- This will in turn leave a distinct impression that is unique to the firing pin of that particular gun.
Chamber Marks
Extracting Pin & Ejector Marks
- The ______and ______throw the spent shell casing from the chamber of the gun.
- These leave marks on the ______that are unique to those parts on that particular firearm.
Other Factors
- Perfect matches sometimes difficult b/c:
–Presence ______
–Recovered bullets too mutilated or distorted on impact
- A spent bullet’s ______can sometimes determine the gun make.
- Microgrooves: 8-24 grooves; it’s not as common
- General Rifling Characteristics File
–FBI database of known land/groove width for all weapons.
Shotguns
- ______
–Projectile NOT marked as it passes through
- Fire small ______or ______contained within a shell.
- Characterized by:
–______of the shot
–______of the wad
–Gauge: ______
- Identification can still be made by comparison of ______markings on shotgun shell.
Firearms Evidence
Individual:
- ______
- ______
- ______
- ______
- ______
- ______
Class:
- ______
- ______
- ______
- ______
- ______
- ______
- Head stamp
Gunshot Residue (GSR)
- When a weapon is fired:
-______blow back toward the shooter.
-Combustion products (mostly NO2-), unburned propellant, and particles of lead follow the bullet, spreading out with distance.
- GSR Sources:
-______
-______
- Gunpowder Chemistry
-Major detectable elements are: ______
-Virtually all cartridge cases are made of brass (copper & zinc); also detectable.
Griess Test
- Tests for the presence of ______(partially burned or unburned gunpowder)
- ______
- Must produce a pattern for a distance determination
Results of GSR Hand Test
- Negative results may be caused by:
–______
–Shooter may have been ______
–______
- A rifle or shotgun may not deposit GSR on hands
–GSR on the hand of a suicide victim, proving he was ______when it was fired.
- With a contact or very close range gunshot wound, it is possible to have blood spatter as well as GSR on the hand of the person firing the weapon.
Contact Gunshot wound
- This is a contact gunshot entrance wound.
- Since the barrel contacts the skin, the gases released by the fired round go into the ______& cause the ______
Abrasion Ring
- An ______, formed when the force of the ______entering below the skin blow the skin surface back against the ______of the gun, is seen here in this contact range gunshot wound to the right temple.
- The abrasion ring, and a very clear muzzle imprint, are seen in this contact range gunshot wound.
Entrance/Exit Wounds
- ______vary considerably in size and shape because the bullet can be ______in its transit through the body.
- There may be no exit wound at all if the bullet's energy is ______by the tissues. Some bullets (such a a ______) are designed to ______so that all their energy will be converted to ______and not ______
- This is a contact range gunshot entrance wound with grey-black discoloration from the burned powder.
- ______is seen in this intermediate range gunshot wound. The actual entrance site is somewhat ______, because the bullet ______
- The surface of the skull demonstrates the ______in this contact range ______, as well as ______. The direction of fire was thus toward the back of this picture.
SERIAL NUMBER RESTORATION
- When a ______is stamped into a gun, the metal underneath the number is ______
- If the number is filed-off, the ______
- By using an acid solution the metal can be slowly eaten away.
–In this process the ______will be eaten away first and the number may reappear.
FIREARMS EVIDENCE COLLECTION
- Make sure it is ______
- DO NOT put a pencil into a barrel
- REVOLVERS
–______
- AUTOMATICS
–______
–______
- Place ID tag on trigger guard
- AMMUNITION
–Write on base or nose
–Package in ______or ______
–Wrap in ______
- CLOTHING
–______
–______
–Package separately in ______
- Establish CHAIN OF CUSTODY
Toolmarks
- Tools often used in burglaries may leave a mark.
- Class characteristics: ______
- Individual characteristics: ______
TOOL MARK IMPRESSIONS
- Impressions
- Cuts
- Gouges
- Abrasions
TOOL MARK IMPRESSIONS COLLECTION
- ______
- ______
- DO NOT ATTEMPT TO FIT THE TOOL INTO THE TOOL MARK
Matching Toolmarks
•Photography & casting are important to match tool with mark
Impressions
- Shoeprints
–Class characteristics— ______
–Individual characteristics— ______
______
–Captured by oblique-angle photography or chemical enhancement
–______
–lifting.
- Tire marks
–Treated much the same as shoeprints
–Class characteristics involve______
–______cause defects that can lead to individualization.
–______is a database containing data on more than 5,000 vehicle tires and tread patterns.
- Bite marks
–Result from ______or ______, common in domestic violence
–Individual evidence, if enough impressions
–Bite marks were the prime evidence in the conviction of serial killer Ted Bundy.
- Serial Numbers/Restoration of serial numbers
–Items of value may have ID numbers stamped into them.
–______is usually used to obliterate identification numbers.
–To restore ID numbers on metal, ______is employed.