Introduction & Ballistics - Bullet Basics Bonanza
- Ballistics: Projectile motion study.
- Internal: Within firearm (propulsion).
- External: Flight to target (trajectory, spin).
- Terminal (Wound): Target interaction, energy transfer.
- Firearms:
- Smoothbore (Shotgun): Multiple pellets (shot).
- Rifled (Rifle, Pistol): Single bullet; lands & grooves impart spin.
- Ammunition:
- Bullet (projectile)
- Cartridge case
- Propellant (gunpowder)
- Primer (ignition)
- Bullet Types:
- Lead (L): Soft, deforms.
- Jacketed: Lead core, metal jacket.
- Full Metal Jacket (FMJ): Non-expanding.
- Soft Point (JSP): Controlled expansion.
- Hollow Point (JHP): Max expansion.
- Key Factors:
- Calibre: Barrel/bullet diameter.
- Velocity: Major wounding factor ($KE = 1/2 mv^2$).

⭐ Rifling marks (from lands & grooves) on a bullet are unique to a firearm barrel, vital for identification.
Wound Features - Impact Insights
- General Characteristics:
- Shape: Round/oval (perpendicular impact), Elliptical (angled impact).
- Size: Often smaller than bullet diameter due to skin elasticity.
- Key Entry Wound Features:
- Abrasion Collar: Rubbing of bullet against skin.
- Grease/Dirt Collar: Lubricant/dirt wiped from bullet.
- Inverted Edges.
- Exit Wound Features:
- Typically larger, irregular, everted edges.
- No abrasion collar, soot, or tattooing.
- May show fat herniation.

⭐ Bone Impact: Entry wounds show internal beveling; exit wounds show external beveling (Puppe's Rule for skull), though modern 3D imaging confirms trajectory analysis in complex cases with potential exceptions.

- Factors Influencing:
- Bullet type (e.g., hollow-point causes larger wounds).
- Tissue elasticity (e.g., bone vs. soft tissue).
- Range of fire, intermediate targets, clothing significantly alter characteristics.
- Advanced imaging techniques (CT scans, 3D reconstruction) enhance wound trajectory assessment.
Specific Weapon Wounds - Gunshot Gallery
- Shotgun Wounds:
- Contact: Muzzle imprint, charring, soot/powder in wound.
- Close Range (<2m): Single defect, scalloped edges, wads/pellets inside.
- Intermediate Range (2-4m): Central hole + satellite pellets.
- Distant Range (>4m): Pellet dispersion; pattern estimates range. Choke affects spread.
- Rifle Wounds (High Velocity):
- Entry: Small, round/oval, abrasion collar, grease collar.
- Exit: Larger, irregular, everted; often stellate over bone.
- Key feature: Significant temporary cavitation causing extensive internal damage.
- Keyhole defect: Tangential impact.
- Handgun Wounds (Lower Velocity):
- Entry: Similar to rifle, often smaller. Abrasion/grease collar present.
- Exit: If present, larger than entry; may be absent.
- Less internal damage than rifles.
⭐ "Tattooing" (powder stippling) around an entry wound indicates a close-range shot (typically within 60 cm), but not contact.
Medico-legal Aspects - Forensic Firepower Facts
- Weapon Identification: Link weapon to crime via class & individual characteristics on bullets/cartridges.
- Striations (rifling), firing pin marks, breech face marks, extractor/ejector marks.
- Range of Fire Estimation: Critical for event reconstruction.
- Contact, close range (determined by GSR patterns and wound characteristics), intermediate, distant.
- Manner of Death Determination: Suicidal, Homicidal, or Accidental under BNS provisions.
- Consider wound location, number, range, presence of suicide note.
- Evidence Integrity: Strict chain of custody per BNSS procedures for clothing, wads, bullets, GSR kits.
⭐ Tandem bullets (piggyback bullets): one bullet lodges in barrel, next one pushes it out; both may strike target.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Entry wounds: smaller, abrasion collar, inverted edges. Exit wounds: larger, everted edges.
- Contact wounds: muzzle imprint, soot in wound, cherry-red muscle (COHb).
- Close range (e.g., <30cm): soot deposition, hair singeing, tattooing.
- Intermediate range (e.g., <2m): tattooing/stippling (powder burns) is characteristic.
- Distant range: only bullet hole with surrounding abrasion collar.
- Bone bevelling: internal for entry wounds, external for exit wounds.
- Shotgun choke dictates pellet spread; wad injuries possible at close range_
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