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I agree with @Rov_Scam below. You find this guy and he's only his own ID, no manifesto, no gun, no silencer, he can just brazen it out. Even if he'd kept the gun (and different ammo) he might have gotten away with the murder (the ballistics wouldn't match without the silencer, I don't think), but the silencer and IDs point right to it and the manifesto seals the deal.
"Ballistics" means how fast the bullet is moving, in what direction. Most silencers have negligible effects on ballistics; they change point-of-impact and can increase velocity slightly due to freebore boost, but nothing that would be forensically relevant. What would really get him would be the rifling pattern on the fired bullets, which would match the barrel of his gun and which the suppressor has no effect on.
Otherwise, much agreed. ditching the gun seems like such an obviously good idea that I can't understand his not doing it.
I've read that rifling pattern analysis is voodoo akin to polygraph tests. Here's a substack about that: https://radleybalko.substack.com/p/devil-in-the-grooves-the-case-against
motherFUCKER. I've written a number of times about how forensic science isn't actually science, about how bite-mark analysis, burn pattern analysis, criminal profiling and lie detectors are all examples of pseudoscience, but I thought stuff like rifling pattern analysis would have been "one of the good ones".
However much I hate our knowledge production apparatus, it never seems to be enough.
[EDIT] - ...In fairness, though, the police can say "we caught him with a gun that matches the make and caliber used by the assassin". They just can't say "we caught him with the specific weapon used in the assassination." He's still much better not being in possession of the gun at all.
As someone who has experience in a lab, it drives me up the wall when I hear a prosecution lawyer say the chances of a DNA-related false positive being one in billion; the chance of a lab error or human bad actor being in the chain of custody are both far higher than that. This actually happened a few years ago, a lab manager went to prison for making up test results.
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I always thought matching the gun was about the mark of the firing pin, not the rifling. But it’s not mentioned in the article or the case. Does that still hold up? @NickRiviera, any idea?
I'm sure that if firing pins had a unique identifying pattern on the strike surface, you could probably make something like this work. However I don't think firing pins are really different enough from each other to stake a death-penalty case prosecution on it, I think the best you'd be able to do is rule out suspects as opposed to making a definitive match. However I don't know anything, all I know is that nobody in life seems to be as competent as they want us to believe they are. Seal Team 6 couldn't even attack Osama Bin Laden without crashing their top-secret stealth helicopter, then they couldn't stop Russian/Chinese spies from documenting the crash site before they got it covered with a tarp. If that's the performance you get out of the cream-of-the-crop, then I don't know what to believe anymore. (Not even aliens seem all that competent, crashing their saucers everywhere like a bunch of rookies)
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A case fired from a semi-auto is going to have a firing pin strike, extractor/ejector strikes, and possibly extraction markings on the case wall. The article gives a series of images of firing pin strikes, with the implication being that these are unreliable as well. My guess is that if rifling isn't a reliable "fingerprint", then firing pin and extractor/ejector markings aren't going to be either. If the components are in good condition, they're within a very small tolerance range across all copies of the model, and random variations of impact angle, strength, fouling, etc etc are going to swamp any signal derived from one copy to another.
This should be a stupidly easy thing to test as well. Fire off ten rounds each from ten different handguns. Provide a toolmark analyst all hundred cases, numbered randomly, and have him sort out which ones came from the same gun. My assumption has always been that someone actually did this in the past; if they have, I'd be interested in seeing the data.
Would these handguns be different, but identical examples of the same model (e.g. 10 Glock 19s), or completely different models altogether, united only by chambering? Or both?
I was assuming ten Glock 19s, but it would be interesting to see how far out you could push it. The toolmark analyst claim is that these marks can identify specific weapons, not just a class of weapons.
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I would guess he had some perfect plan for how to destroy the gun without a trace that required him to be in a certain place.
That seems like a plausible motivation, but goddamn is it stupid. Disassemble the pistol, douse the pieces in gasoline and burn them. Take a bus somewhere near the coast, walk to the beach and chuck it into the ocean. Either of those would be more than sufficient.
I've been tossing around the idea that you can probably use a consumer drone to drop a murder weapon in a lake without much hassle at all.
He was in rural Pennsylvania. One hard overhand toss would put it in in a forest thick enough that they can't even find prosecutors.
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Easier to use a boat, and less likely to attract attention.
Disagreed, in that you have to procure the boat and physically steer it out there yourself, which leaves a trail of evidence on its own.
They could in theory narrow the search down to that particular lake, at least.
Whole point of a Drone is minimal forensic trail.
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