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Ballistics and Explosives

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Title: Ballistics and Explosives


1
Ballistics and Explosives
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3
Ballistics
  • The science of the motion of projectiles, such
    as bullets from a gun. It is divided into three
    branches
  • interior ballistics,
  • exterior ballistics,
  • and terminal ballistics.

4
3 Types of ballistics
  • Interior ballistics studies the projectile in the
    gun while exterior ballistics studies the
    projectile in and through the air. Finally
    terminal ballistics is the study of penetration
    of solids by the projectile million (Silvia,
    1999. p. 69-70).

5
History of ballistics
  • Charles Waite considered father of forensic
    ballistics
  • Opened private lab in New York City named The
    Bureau of Forensic Ballistics in 1927.
  • Phillip Gravelle and John Fischer were his
    partners along with Dr. Calvin Goddard .

6
Calvin Goddard
  • In the late 1920s, the work of Calvin Goddard
    brought the FBI (formally named in 1932) even
    more fully into the application of science to
    detective work.  Goddard, a pioneer in forensic
    ballistics, was instrumental in the opening of
    the Scientific Crime Detection Laboratory, then
    affiliated with Northwestern University, in
    Chicago.  The Bureau learned much from Goddards
    lab and it supported many of the efforts made by
    this organization over the next several years.

7
Bullets recovered from the bodies
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Goddard and his comparison microscope
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Modern Comparison Microscope
10
The Bullet.
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Common types of rounds
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Proper Technique
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38 Caliber and 44 Caliber
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How a bullet is fired
  • The bullet casing or shell is also marked or
    striated when it cycles through a gun.
  • A firing pin striking the primer leaves a
    specific mark in the back of the shell
  • Commonly, a semi- automatic or automatic firearm
    will eject the casing on its own immediately
    after being fired
  • The mechanism that ejects the casings will also
    create its own striations on the shell.

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The Barrel rifling
17
Rifling and Striations
  • Many modern guns have rifling in their barrels
  • The rifling adds spin to a bullet, causing it to
    travel straight.
  • Because the bullet fits the barrel exactly, the
    rifling of the barrel leaves marks, or striations
    on the bullet.
  • Since each gun is different, the marks a
    particular gun makes on a bullet shot through its
    barrel is unique, like a fingerprint.

18
Striations
  • Every gun leaves striations on every bullet and
    casing that travels through it.
  • These striations are unique to each gun, no two
    are exactly alike.
  • These striations are like fingerprints that can
    be compared and traced
  • Obviously this is very helpful in identifying
    what weapon was used in a particular crime

19
Lands and Grooves
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Comparison scope of lands and grooves match up.
22
What must be collected
  • Of course evidence must first be collected from
    the scene.
  • Shell casings may be found on the ground near
    where the shooter was standing
  • Bullets may be found lodged in surrounding items
    such as trees, walls, the ground, or they may be
    found still lodged in the victim.
  • If possible the gun may even be uncovered at the
    scene.

23
Compare their evidence
  • The evidence must now be compared to other
    evidence.
  • Bullets and casings can be compared to bullets
    and casings from other crimes or crime scenes
    using most often a microscope.
  • If a weapon is found or seized, scientists can
    test fire the weapon and compare these new
    bullets and shells with bullets and shells from
    the original crime.

24
Firing pin marks
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Comparison micrograph of firing pin marks
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Firing pin drag marks
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Extractor marks
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Ejector
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Exhibit 1 (cartridge case) could neither be
identified nor eliminated as having been fired by
Exhibit 2 (firearm).
  • The above conclusion is reached if the cartridge
    case lacks sufficient action marks to be
    identified as having been fired by the questioned
    firearm or the firearm in question fails to
    produce reproducible individual characteristics
    on standards. 

30
Exhibit 1 (cartridge case) could neither be
identified nor eliminated as having been fired by
Exhibit 2 (firearm).
  • All general class characteristics such as caliber
    and firing pin shape would have to agree.  The
    image below shows a comparison between two
    cartridge cases that lack any individual
    characteristics but have a similar general
    appearance.

31
Watertank
32
Water tanks preserve the bullet
  • In order to observe the striations in the
    bullets, scientists fire bullets into a tank of
    water.
  • The water helps preserve the striations left on
    the bullet from the gun used.
  • The scientist can then look at the bullet under a
    microscope and compare the striations to other
    bullets that have been used in a crime.

33
Balistics Gelatin
  • used by the shooting industry to simulate soft
    body tissue, Ballistic Gelatin provides an
    alternative to live animal or cadaver testing. 

34
Exhibit 1 (cartridge case) was not fired by
Exhibit 2 (firearm).
  • This conclusion can sometimes be reached when the
    submitted cartridge case exhibits very good
    individual characteristics that are very
    dissimilar to those produced on standards. 
  • However, consideration must be given to the
    possibility that the firearm in question could
    have changed significantly. 
  • If all dissimilarities can be accounted for, a
    negative conclusion will be reached.  The
    comparison image below shows two cartridge cases
    that exhibit noticeably different breech marks
    and firing pin impressions.

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Striae
37
The survey says
  • Based on the results of these tests, scientists
    can now prove or disprove weather or not two
    bullets were fired from the same gun, or weather
    or not a gun fired a certain bullet.
  • This crucial evidence can often make or break a
    case in court, so long as it is presented in the
    right manner

38
Possible Problems of Ballistics
  • Shotguns and revolvers
  • Bullet expansion and deformation
  • No two bullets are EVER the same
  • Barrels, along with the whole firearm can be
    altered, switched, or destroyed.

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Striations
40
Striations Lands and Grooves
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Types of bullets
  • A full metal jacket bullet is a bullet encased in
    a copper alloy.
  • A hollow point bullet is a bullet that has a
    hollowed out shape in its tip.
  • A frangible bullet is designed to disintegrate
    into tiny particles upon impact to minimize their
    penetration.
  • A rubber bullet and plastic bullet are designed
    to be non-lethal, and are used in situations such
    as riot control.

45
Civil war bullets
  • Round projectiles not accurate past a short
    distance. Gasses blowing by the round sice it was
    not a snug fit. To remedy this a cloth was added
    around the round to make up any gap that existed.

46
Links
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vtTHo0K2Sc0g
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vQ7w4M-LNXuQfeature
    endscreen
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v_eUlpPY96Ok
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v65cNVA_OCtE

47
Cavitation
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Shotgun Slug vs. Shot
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Bullet in body X-Ray
50
Summary of wound types
51
General Features of Entrance Wounds
  • A dirt ring around the wound caused by the bullet
    'cleaning' itself off on the skin as it passes
    through fibers may be found in the wound from
    clothing covering the wound a smaller defect than
    the diameter of the bullet due to elastic recoil
    of the skin.
  • Powder blackening may indicate direction of fire
    (ex. a circular zone of blackening from a shot
    fired at right angles to the skin surface,
    compared to an oblique zone from an oblique shot
    etc) stippling/ tattooing of the skin charring of
    the skin entry wounds caused by shots fired at a
    distance.
  • Entrance wounds into skull bone typically
    produces beveling, or coning, of the bone at the
    surface away from the weapon on the inner table.
    In thin areas such as the temple, this may not be
    observed. Sternum, iliac crest, scapula, or rib
    may show similar features. 

52
General Features of Entrance Wounds
  • Tangential entrance wounds into bone may produce
    "keyhole" defects with entrance and exit
    side-by-side, so that the arrangement of beveling
    can be used to determine the direction of fire. 
  • Use of silencers (or "muzzle brakes" to deflect
    gas and recoil) may produce atypical entrance
    wounds. A silencer is a device, often homemade,
    fitting over the muzzle that attempts to reduce
    noise by baffling the rapid escape of gases.
    Entrance wounds may appear atypical at close
    range.

53
General Features of Exit Wounds
  • A larger wound than the entrance wound, due to
    the bullet tumbling in it's passage through the
    body, and bony fragments being forced out through
    the skin can be of any size or shape, but are
    usually irregular (slit-like or square). May be
    similar to the entrance wound in size if the
    bullet was fired from a high velocity rifle shot
    at long distance (ex. a military rifle) a
    'shored' exit wound occurs where the wound edges
    are abraded against an overlying object pressed
    firmly against the skin, as the skin is pushed
    out from the body by the bullet. The features
    were directly proportional to the KE of the
    projectile and the rigidity of the shoring
    material.
  •  

54
X-ray of .38 to skull
55
X-Ray of shotgun pellets to abdomen
56
CT of head showing boney fragments pushed in to
brain area
57
9mm semi automatic
58
Revolver
59
Firearm Anatomy
60
Firearm Anatomy
61
Semi-auto rifle
62
Handgun vs. rifle bullet
63
Bullets after striking a target
64
Handgun Caliber
  • Caliber is used to describe the size of a rifle
    or handgun bore and the size of cartridges
    designed for different bores. Caliber is usually
    measured as the diameter of the bore from land to
    opposite land and is expressed in hundredths of
    an inch, thousandths of an inch, or millimeters.
    For example, a .270-caliber rifle bore measures
    270/1000ths of an inch in diameter between the
    lands and has a larger bore diameter than a
    .223-caliber rifle. However, there is no standard
    set for designating caliber. In some cases, the
    caliber is given as the diameter of the bullet,
    which is the distance between the grooves.
    Caliber designations sometimes have a second
    number that has nothing to do with the diameter.
    For example, the popular .30-30 is a .30-caliber
    cartridge, but the second number is a holdover
    from the days when the cartridge took 30 grains
    of powder. The "06" in .30-06 refers to the year
    (1906) it became the official ammunition of the
    U.S. military. Circles show bore sizes of common
    cartridges. Having the same bore size does not
    mean different cartridges are interchangeable.

65
Handgun Caliber
  • Every rifle or handgun is designed for a specific
    cartridge. The ammunition must match the data
    stamp on the firearm. For example, there are
    several .30-caliber firearms that use the same
    bullet size but are designed for different
    cartridges (the .30-30, .30-06, .308, and the
    .300 Savage). If you cannot find the caliber
    stamped on the firearm, take it to a qualified
    gunsmith.

66
Handgun Caliber picture
67
Shotgun Gauge
  • Shotgun gauges are determined by the number of
    lead balls of a given diameter required to make
    one pound of that size ball. Thus 10 balls of 10
    gauge diameter are required to make one pound of
    such balls, or 20 balls of 20 gauge diameter are
    required to make one pound, and so forth.

68
Gauge sizing
69
Shotgun Parts
70
Choke types To control spread and impact point of
shot
71
Shot Shell
72
Miscellaneous Ammo
  • Breaching rounds - Shotguns are commonly used in
    the military to "unlock" doors when troops don't
    know what lies on the other side. Because
    traditional ammo tends to ricochet and may end up
    hitting the shooter or someone inside the room,
    breakable "breaching rounds" are often used.
    These shells contain a metallic powder that
    disperses on contact.
  • Bean bags - Bean bags are used as shotgun ammo in
    crowd control situations, as in most cases they
    stun the victim but do not inflict lasting
    damage.
  • CS gas grenades - Combat shotguns can be used to
    disperse tear gas and similar chemicals.
  • Rock salt - Rock salt is a popular home defense
    ammunition because it reportedly causes severe
    pain but usually no permanent damage.

73
Alternative shotgun shells
74
Shotgun Shot (pellet) sizing
75
Shotgun Gauge Comparison Video
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vBXz_Aftj8rEfeature
    related
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