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Evaluation of the backspatter generation and wound profiles of an anatomically correct skull model for molecular ballistics.

Authors :
Euteneuer, Jan
Gosch, Annica
Cachée, Philipp
Courts, Cornelius
Source :
International Journal of Legal Medicine; Nov2019, Vol. 133 Issue 6, p1839-1850, 12p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Molecular ballistics connects the molecular genetic analysis of biological traces with the wounding events and complex forensic traces investigated in terminal ballistics. Backspatter, which originates from a projectile hitting a biological target when blood and/or tissue is propelled back into the direction of the gun, is of particular interest; those traces can consolidate and persist on the outer and inner surfaces of firearms and serve as evidence in criminal investigations. Herein, we are the first to present an anatomically correct head model for molecular ballistic research based on a polyurethane skull replica enclosing tissue-simulating sponge material that is doped with "triple-contrast" mixture (EDTA-blood, acrylic paint, and an x-ray contrast agent). Ten percent ballistic gelatin was used as brain simulant. We conducted contact and intermediate-range shots with a Glock 19 pistol (9 mm Luger), a pump-action shotgun (12/70 slugs), and blank cartridge handguns. Each shot was documented by a high-speed camera at 35,000 fps. Apart from the blank cartridge guns, all gunshots penetrated the skull model and created backspatter, which was recovered from the distal part of the barrels and analyzed. The pistol contact shots and one of three shotgun shots yielded full STR profiles. While the shotgun slugs destroyed the skulls, the remaining models could be used for radiological and optical fracture and wound channel evaluation. Known backspatter mechanisms and their respective timing could be confirmed visually by video analysis. Our complete model setup proved to be well applicable to molecular ballistic research as well as wound channel and fracture pattern investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09379827
Volume :
133
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
International Journal of Legal Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139275495
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00414-019-02120-2