1. Handcrafted firearm suicide: About the unusual use of a mole gun.
- Author
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Delbreil, A., Boyer, A.L., Bonnin, S., Sapanet, M., and Voyer, M.
- Subjects
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SUICIDE , *GUNSHOT wounds , *FIREARMS , *AUTOPSY , *TOXICITY testing , *HANDICRAFT , *COMPUTED tomography - Abstract
• A mole gun can be diverted from its classic use to become a homemade firearm. • The use of this homemade firearm has caused serious intracorporeal injuries. • The ballistic analysis of homemade firearms is essential for understanding the facts. The body of a man was found in a workshop at the back of his home, a metal pipe embedded in his chest. In the immediate vicinity of the body, among various tools, was a machine containing a holster hit of lead shot evoking a mole-trap-type "taupe gun" (mole gun). The findings at the scene and the presence of a metal tube, sinkers, and a flock in the chest are in favour of the use of a homemade firearm. The autopsy and CT scan revealed atypical ballistic thoracic trauma responsible for a dilaceration of both the heart and thoracic aorta that caused the death. The autopsy also found a contused wound at the back of the skull without intracranial lesion, which may be due to the fall of the victim after the thoracic trauma. There is no other traumatic lesion and in particular no lesion of seizure, constraint, or defense. Toxicological analyses revealed the presence of alcoholic impregnation at the time of death. These findings, confronted with the expertise of a balistician, made it possible to understand how the victim used a mole gun to cause these lesions. A metal tube was used as a cannon to aim more surely at the heart but also as a means of triggering the propulsion mechanism of the trap without having to stretch out the arm. The tube, thinner than the barrel, had disengaged from its tip to be embedded with the lead shot in the chest of the victim. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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