From:   SSAA, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Maryland 1st To Adopt Bullet ID System
Associated Press
Last Updated: Sept. 29, 2000 at 11:35:14 p.m.

ANNAPOLIS, Md. - Beginning on Sunday, with every new
handgun sold in Maryland, the manufacturer will have
to give state police a spent shell casing carrying the
weapon's ballistic fingerprint.

Under the law - the first of its kind in the nation -
the unique markings on the casing will then be entered
into a database. When detectives find a bullet casing at
a crime scene, they can go to the computer and instantly
identify the gun it came from.

``Countless hours of investigative work can now be
eliminated from the process of identifying the crime gun
and who may have been in possession of it,'' State Police
Superintendent David Mitchell said.

A similar New York state law takes effect March 1.

Five months after the Maryland law was signed, questions
remain about its effectiveness.

There are no criminal penalties for noncompliance by
manufacturers, and state police have told dealers they can
continue selling guns even if manufacturers do not pack
shell casings with the weapons.

State Police spokesman Maj. Greg Shipley said manufacturers
have been told it is their responsibility to make sure guns
sold in Maryland are accompanied by a casing.

Gun owner Jim Purtillo of Silver Spring questioned the value
of the law.  ``It's about making it harder for people to buy
guns,'' he said. ``Bad guys typically don't leave shell
casings from a revolver at a crime scene.''

The National Rifle Association did not return several calls
for comment.

Maryland gun dealers have worried that manufacturers or
distributors may stop shipping guns into the state. But at
least two major manufacturers are making efforts to comply:
Smith & Wesson, the nation's largest maker of handguns, and
Beretta USA.

Beretta USA said it will pack shell casings with handguns
it knows will be sold in Maryland, but warned that its
distributors are scattered throughout the country and guns
sent elsewhere could wind up back here.

``If we get an order from Florida, we don't have any way
of knowing that gun is going to Maryland. It will not
include the shell casing,'' Beretta spokesman Jeff Reh said.

Neither company could say whether its gun prices will
increase as a result.

Sanford Abrams, vice president of the Maryland Licensed
Gun Dealers Association, said the ballistics fingerprints
may have little legal value because a shell casing will
travel through so many hands from the manufacturer to
state police.

``The chain of custody stinks,'' he said.

Abrams also questioned whether ballistic fingerprints
will have any ractical value because the markings left
on shell casings by firing pins change after repeated
firings.

The requirement is part of sweeping new gun legislation
in Maryland.Sunday also is the effective date for laws
prohibiting handguns from being sold without an external
trigger lock and barring anyone under 30 with a juvenile
record for violent crimes from buying a handgun.

Beginning in 2002, Maryland residents also will have to
complete a state-approved gun safety course before buying
a weapon, and the following year, all handguns sold will
have to be equipped with built-in locks.
--
Simpler yet, just change the firing pin and extractor
on your new pistol.  Northern Ireland has had a system
like this for many years, it has never solved a single
crime - because criminals don't use legally held guns.

Even if the gun was at some point legally held, the casing
only identifies at most the first legal owner, not the
thief who stole the gun.  Most guns used in crime by the
first legal owner will be crimes of passion and the like,
in which case you don't need ballistic evidence of
this type.

Steve.


Cybershooters website: http://www.cybershooters.org

List admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___________________________________________________________
T O P I C A  The Email You Want. http://www.topica.com/t/16
Newsletters, Tips and Discussions on Your Favorite Topics

Reply via email to