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    One of John Lott's points in the following article is that even
theoretically ballistic fingerprinting can only work to the extent that
it is mated to a system of gun registration which reveals the name of
whoever possessed the "fingerprinted" gun. But registration systems,
though hideously expensive, have never worked well enough to be useful
in solving crimes.
    Having spent 30+ years in looking for instances I am familiar with
just one instance in which registration was used to "solve" a crime.
That was the Robert Kennedy assassination case in which authorities
were able to use the gun's serial number to trace how the gun had
gotten from the original  registered owner to the assassin Sirhan
Sirhan  through some intervening purchasers.
    And what evidentiary purpose did that serve? None! For the
authorities got the serial number by taking it off of the gun. And they
got the gun from Hall of Fame defensive lineman Roosevelt Grier who had
wrestled it away from Sirhan Sirhan in the view of numerous witnesses. .
    Indeed the gun's registration has not been enough even to convince
the numerous conspiracy nuts who think Sirhan was innocent, serving as
a patsy for the actual killers. These were (depending on which
conspiracy crackpot you talk to) the Mafia, the U.S. Army, the CIA,
Wall Street, the Jew Bankers, or  assorted other betes noir whom
crackpots blame for the deaths of RFK and  JFK., the Enron Scandal and
innumerable other disasters. (It is only because modern conspiracy
crackpots are too historically ignorant to know that William McKinley
and James Garfield were assassinated that they don't throw in those
deaths as more disasters wrought by the same betes noir. By the same
token in the 1920s the revived KKK asserted that the Catholic Church
had assassinated Lincoln, Garfield, McKinley and even President Harding
who actually died of a heart attack but the KKK claimed had been
secretly assassinated.)

http://johnrlott.tripod.com/op-eds/NROBallisticFingerPrintingM.html

February 04, 2005, 7:51 a.m.
Ballistic Fingerprinting's a Dud
Another failed gun-control strategy.

By John R. Lott Jr.

Ballistic fingerprinting was all the rage just a couple of years ago.
Maryland and New York were leading the way where a computer database
would record the markings made on the bullets from all new guns. The
days of criminals using guns were numbered.

  Yet, a recent report by the Maryland State Police's forensic-
sciences
division shows that the systems in both states have been expensive
failures. New York is spending $4 million per year. Maryland has spent
a total of $2.6 million, about $60 per gun sold. But in the over four
years that the systems have been in effect neither has solved a single
crime. To put it bluntly, the program "does not aid in the mission
statement of the Department of State Police."

  The systems have drained so many resources from other police
activities that ballistic fingerprinting could end up actually
increasing crime. In New York, how many crimes could 50 additional
police officers help solve?

  The police explain the program's inability to reduce crime because
criminals have simply not been using the guns that have been entered
into the database. In some cases the claim is that the wrong data has
been entered into the computers.

  The physics of ballistic fingerprinting are straightforward enough.
When a bullet travels through the barrel of a gun, the friction creates
markings on the bullet. If the gun is new, imperfections in the way the
barrel is drilled can produce different markings on the bullet; such
imperfections are most noticeable in inexpensive guns. In older guns,
the bullet's friction through the barrel can cause more noticeable wear
marks that help differentiate between guns. Many other factors
influence the particular markings left on the bullets - for instance,
how often the gun is cleaned and what brand of cartridge is used.

  Precisely because friction causes wear, a gun's ballistic
fingerprint
changes over time - making it drastically different from such
forensic
evidence as human fingerprints or DNA. The recording of a child's
fingerprints or DNA still allows for identification much later in life;
the same is not true of the bullet markings. A ballistic fingerprint is
less like a human fingerprint than it is like the tread on a car tire.

  Brand-new tires are essentially identical, so new-tire tracks at
crime
scenes leave investigators with pretty limited information. Unless
there happens to be a particular imperfection, only the brand and model
of the tire can be identified. Imprints on bullets are similar. When a
bullet is fired from a new gun, investigators can typically identify
only the type of ammunition and the type of gun. Over time, though,
friction causes the tread on tires to wear. It would be easy to take
the tire tracks left at a crime scene and match them with a suspected
criminal's car; but the more the car is driven after the crime, the
harder it is to match the tire tracks left at the scene to the tires
when they are eventually found. Similarly, the greatest friction on a
gun occurs when the gun is first fired - and that dramatically
reduces
the usefulness of recording the gun's ballistic fingerprint when it is
purchased.

  Moreover, ballistic fingerprinting can be thwarted by replacing the
gun's barrel - just as criminals can foil tire matching by simply
replacing their tires. In general, the markings on bullets can be
altered even more quickly and easily than the tread marks on tires:
Scratching part of the inside of a barrel with a nail file would alter
the bullet's path down the barrel and thus change the markings. So
would putting toothpaste on a bullet before firing it.

  Ballistic fingerprinting faces other difficulties. For example, even
if the gun was not used much between the time the ballistic fingerprint
was originally recorded and the time the crime occurred, police still
have to be able to trace the gun from the original owner to the
criminal - but only 12 percent of guns used in crimes are obtained by
the criminal through retail stores or pawn shops. The rest are
virtually impossible to trace.

  A recent study by the State of California points to further
practical
difficulties with ballistic fingerprinting. The study tested 790
pistols firing a total of 2,000 rounds. When the cartridges used with a
particular gun came from the same manufacturer, computer matching
failed 38 percent of the time. When the cartridges came from different
manufacturers, the failure rate rose to 62 percent. And this study does
not even begin to address problems caused by wear, so the real-world
failure rate can be expected to be much higher. The California report
warned that "firearms that generate markings on cartridge casings can
change with use and can also be readily altered by the users." Further,
it warned that the problems of matching would soar dramatically if more
guns were included in the sample. The study's verdict:
"Computer-matching systems do not provide conclusive
results...potential candidates [for a match must] be manually
reviewed."

  While registering guns by their ballistic fingerprints is a
relatively
new concept, we have had plenty of experience using gun registration in
general, and it has come up woefully short. A few years ago, I
testified before the Hawaii state legislature on a bill to change
registration requirements. Hawaii has had both registration and
licensing of guns for several decades.

  In theory, if a gun is left at the crime scene, licensing and
registration will allow the gun to be traced back to its owner. Police
have probably spent hundreds of thousands of man-hours administering
these laws in Hawaii. But despite this massive effort, there has not
been a single case in which police claimed that licensing and
registration have been instrumental in identifying a criminal.

  The reason is simple. First, criminals very rarely leave their guns
at
a crime scene, and when they do, it is because the criminals have been
killed or seriously wounded. Second - and more important for
ballistic
fingerprinting - would-be criminals also virtually never get licenses
or register their weapons. The guns that are recovered at the scene are
not registered.

  Good intentions don't necessarily make good laws. What counts is
whether the laws actually work, and end up saving lives. On that
measure, ballistic fingerprinting is just another failure in a long
line of gun-control measures.

- John Lott, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise
Institute,
is the author of The Bias Against Guns and More Guns, Less Crime.






-- The Second Amendment Police Department www.2ampd.net


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