photo courtesy of www.thecrimemuseum.org |
You’re familiar with the concept of fingerprinting, but have
you ever heard of ballistic fingerprinting? With all of the crime dramas on
television, maybe you recognize the term. For those of you who don’t know “ballistic
fingerprinting” is using a variety of forensic techniques to match a bullet to
the gun with which it was fired. Fingerprinting is based on the principle that
all firearms have variations due to marks left by the machining process.
Because the variations aren’t completely polished out, they leave impressions
on the bullet.
Calvin Goddard, a physician and ex-army officer, is Army Ordnance titled “Forensic
Ballistics” in which he described the use of the comparison microscope.
However, more than 100 years prior to his article, a killer was brought to justice
in England when the markings on a bullet taken from the victim were matched
with a bullet mold belonging to the suspect. (Back then you made your own
ammunition).
credited
with creation of the term. In 1925, he wrote an article for photo courtesy of www.wikipedia.org |
Goddard went on to form Bureau of Forensic Ballistics, an independent criminological laboratory,
because few law enforcement agencies had the capabilities of providing this
service.
There are three characteristics used during the
identification process. The first is the easiest and most apparent. It is
referred to as the “gross difference.” For example, a 10 mm bullet could not
have been fired from a 9 mm barrel.
The second classification is striation, the fine grooves
etched into the bullet from the spirals of the
photo courtesy of www.thehighroad.com |
Breech markings are the third classification. This refers to
the marks on the cartridge case which are often easier to identify than
bullets. The concepts here are that the parts of the weapon that produce the
marks on the case are less subject to long-term wear, and that bullets are
often severely deformed on impact, destroying much of the markings they
acquire.
Goddard’s techniques were used to solve many high profile
cases including the Sacco and Vanzetti payroll robbery case during which a
paymaster and the guard were killed. A century later these techniques are still
used, however, many are performed by computers instead of humans.
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