I guess if the rifling in the barrel was all jagged and deformed the bullet, they'd know it was a Taurus or a rossi.Just watched new season premiere of "Ray Donovan", and it reminded me of something, because it happened on the show.
Can the police recover a bullet, and tell what type of gun it was fired out of?
This recovered bullet was supposedly fired out of a Taurus.
I've seen it done on several shows.
lolI guess if the rifling in the barrel was all jagged and deformed the bullet, they'd know it was a Taurus or a rossi.
This....A Glock has a different type of rifling than a S&W. There may be other distinctive characteristics in other brands. So the answer to your question is...maybe.
A Glock has a different type of rifling than a S&W. There may be other distinctive characteristics in other brands. So the answer to your question is...maybe.
See post #8 here:
Yeah, but all that stuff was real when I did it.If I recall, you have some experience in some of the black magic they call ‘forensics’.
LMAOI guess if the rifling in the barrel was all jagged and deformed the bullet, they'd know it was a Taurus or a rossi.
Wonder how much nooky Rays gonna get this season?"Ray Donovan"
That means you're too educated to be a juror. Both sides would reject you.Not much else I'd give credence to if I was a juror.
You can link directly to a particular post like this.
The only reason I can think of is if it matches ballistics to a gun they already have ballistics records for. Isn't that how they determine if the same gun was used in multiple crimes? Not sure.
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Do you believe everything else you see on TV? Next your going to tell me all the shit they say on the news is true too. The barrel doesn't tattoo that info on the bullet, so I just don't see how that could be possible.This is done, but not what I'm referring to.
They are finding a bullet, examining it, then determining what brand (and sometimes specific model) gun fired it.