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Chapter 17 Firearms

Chapter 17 Firearms. Firearms (not ballistics –study of projectiles). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIayrDbVdJ0 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cgn1nhUEgo8 Inside the Oakland Crime lab- ballistics Britain’s CSI School- ballistics. JFK Assasination (3 min in- also power point- lindbeck.

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Chapter 17 Firearms

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  1. Chapter 17Firearms

  2. Firearms (not ballistics –study of projectiles)

  3. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XIayrDbVdJ0 • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cgn1nhUEgo8 • Inside the Oakland Crime lab- ballistics • Britain’s CSI School- ballistics

  4. JFK Assasination (3 min in- also power point- lindbeck Cold case JFK Nova

  5. Bullet Comparison • Firearms Identification: • people identify whether a bullet/cartridge was fired by a weapon • Identifier has knowledge of types of weapons, serial # restoration, gunpowder detection, distance determination • Firearms Identification System (IBIS) • Ballistic Identification system (same)

  6. Grooves: • Cuts or low lying portions between lands in the barrel of the gun • Rifling: • Spiral grooves that are formed in the bore of the barrel to impact a spin to the projectile • Bore: • Interior of fire arm barrel

  7. Lands: • The raised portion between grooves • Caliber: • Diameter of the bore (distance between opposite lands) measured in 100th of an inch or mm (Typical: .22,.32,.38,.45 or 9mm)

  8. .22 .32 .38 .45 9mm

  9. Rifling Process • Broach cutter (series of concentric rings, each bigger than the next) • button process(steel plug w/ grooves forced through barrel, no cutting) • mandrel rifling (rod of steel is inserved into oversized barrel which is compressed)

  10. No two rifled barrels, even those manufactured in succession, will have identical striation markings • Riflings (pitch and twist), lands and caliber are class characteristics while striations are individual to a barrel. These characteristics are impressed onto bullets • Examine test and evidence bullets w/ a comparison microscope

  11. Shotguns • Most have smooth barrels w/ diameter in gauge (Note: can have rifled shotgun barrels) • Higher the gauge the smaller the diameter

  12. Note: FBI maintains General Rifling Characteristics File ( data on known weapons)

  13. Cartridge Cases • Breechblock: rear part of firearm barrel • Extractor: mechanism in a firearm by which a cartridge of a fired case is withdrawn from the chamber • Ejector: mechanism in a firearm that throws the cartridge or fired case from the firearm

  14. The act of pulling a trigger serves to release the weapon’s firing pin, causing it to strike the primer, which in turn ignites the powder. The expanding gases generated by the burning gunpowder propel the bullet forward through the barrel, simultaneously pushing the spent cartridge with equal force against the breechblock. The shell is impressed with markings by its contact with the metal surfaces of the weapons firing and loading mechanisms

  15. Firing a gun

  16. Breechblock • The breechblock has striations from the machining process that individualize its surface

  17. Breech face marks • The cartridge head is seated against the breechblock of the weapon. • When the bullet is fired, the cartridge case is shoved back into the breechblock with the same amount of force. This imprints the striations of the breechblock onto the cartridge casing.

  18. Ejector Marks • Imparted to the cartridge case when it is ejected out of the weapon.

  19. Extractor marks • Imparted onto the cartridge case when the case is extracted from the barrel.

  20. Cartridge case is impressed w/ markings by contact w/ the firing pins and loading mechanism (individual char.) Firing Pin Breechblock

  21. Firing pin, breechblock, extractor and ejector marks may also be impressed onto shotgun shells • Cases give distinctive points of comparison for individualization (get random striations markings, imperfections, surface markings)

  22. Class Number, width,depth of lands and grooves (on a bullet the lands will be an indentation the grooves a raised portion) twist Individual Striae impressed by barrel Striae due to wear and use Striae due to neglect and abuse Bullet Characteristics

  23. Class Trademarks (manufacturer’s name, head stamp) Shape (rimmed, rimless, straight) Caliber composition Individual Firing pin impressions Breech face marks Ejector marks Extractor marks Cartridge Case Characteristics

  24. Forensic Chemistry Lab (starts with striations, ends with serial id)

  25. Automated Firearm Search Systems • Allows FBI to store bullet and cartridge surface characteristics • Allows a network of jurisdictions to share info

  26. DRUGFIRE: FBI system emphasizing unique markings on cases (esp. guns w/ gang or drug background) • IBIS: Integrated Ballistic ID system • Digital microscopic images of identifying features on expended bullets & cartridge cases • Software used: Bulletproof & Brasscatcher

  27. Gunpowder residue • Firing distances are approximated by the study of spread and density of gunshot residue (GSR) • Chemicals Left Behind: • Unburned & partially burned particles of gunpowder and smoke (get deposited on hands, clothes) • Vaporous lead • Ammunition is a blend of lead, BaNO3, antimony sulfide

  28. Distances • Contact (gun touching victim) • Heavy concentration of GSR, scorch marks, fiber melt, blow back produces a stellate (star tear pattern)

  29. 12-18 inches • A halo of GSR, scattered specks of unburned and partially burned powder

  30. > 3 feet • No GSR • bullet wipe-visual indication hole; dark ring of carbon, dirt, lubricant, primer that wipes from bullet surface

  31. Bullet wipe

  32. Shotgun • Measure spread of discharge shot • Approx. 1 in. per yard

  33. Studying Gunpowder on Clothing • Examine microscopically • If lack of color contrast or blood is present – use infrared photography • Chemical Test (for nitrates) • Gneiss- develops pattern • Sodium Rhodizonate w/ acid • GSR

  34. Blood GSR Blood GSR –w/ IR Stripped Clothing

  35. Gneiss Test Sodium Rhodizonate

  36. Studying Gunpowder on Hands, body • Old Test- dermal nitrate (lack of specificity- tests (+) w/ other substances

  37. Now- detect barium & antimony • Measure amts. on persons hand • Swab hand w/ 5% soln of nitric acid w/in 6 hours of firing, then analyze w/: • Neutron activation analysis • Flameless atomic absorption • Scanning electron microscope

  38. Serial Number Restoration • Serial #’s are found on engine blocks, firearms, other manufactured items • Criminalist is called in when # is obliterated • Stamping of serial # causes a permanent strain which extends into the metal surface (beneath the original #’s) • Chemical treatment w/ etching agents makes obliterated #’s appear • Etching agents dissolve faster in strained areas-but if obliteration is below zone of strain-NO HELP

  39. Wind shield Distance along path of bullet to window, 23.9” Path of bullet x y 60 feet Horizon Distance along horizon to window, 23.5” Trajectory • Two reference points are needed to define the trajectory. • Investigators can figure the shooter discharged the firearm somewhere along that line.

  40. Trajectory • Reference points can be bullet holes in objects or victims. • An entry point and exit point on a victim can be used. • Gunshot residue or spent cartridge casings can be less specific reference points. • Investigators can use lasers to trace a straight-line path to help determine the position of the shooter.

  41. Trajectory Determining the Location of the Shooter Using the illustration on Slide 11 and adding that the shot came from a nearby building, these conclusions can be made: • Since the building is about 60 feet away, the shooter was about 11 feet above the bullet hole in the seat, which was 4 feet above the ground. • This height of about 15 feet off the ground puts the shooter on the second floor in that building.

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