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Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

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Page 1: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Sławomir Majdanik

Firearm injuries

Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy

of Medicine of Szczecin

Page 2: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Definition

many kinds of weapons may cause firearm injury:

shotguns /used by hunters/ handguns (pistols or revolvers)rifleshome - made guns / `country guns`/air riflessports guns

Page 3: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Definition

Rarely firearm injuries are caused using other kinds of objects:

projectiles and their fragments (artillery shells, mortars) captive - bolt guns industrial stud-guns alarm guns /tracer shells/

Page 4: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gun

muzzle

barrel

trigger

gunlock

cock

Page 5: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Cartridge

Projectile

Gunpowder

Cartridge case

Primer

Page 6: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Shotgun ammunition

WadGunpowder and shot

Cardboard or plastic cylinder

Metal base including primer

Page 7: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Calibre

7.62 mm and 9 mm are most frequent calibres in Poland.

barrel (cross section)

calibre

Page 8: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Basic factors affect nature of a gunshot wound

type of weapon missile velocity nature of projectile

range of dischargeangle of discharge

Page 9: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Why firearms injuries are often fatal ?

Because of significant kinetic energy of the bullet.

Vo = 200-1000 m/s (even more !)

Ek = m V2

2

Page 10: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot injuries

I. Gunshot injury penetrate through the head (or leg, arm, neck, trunk ...)

a/ entrance wound

b/ canal of the shot

c/ exit wound

Page 11: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot injuries

II. “blind” shots - bullet is lodged in the victim`s body

a/ entrance wound

b/ canal of the shot

c/ bullet in the body

Page 12: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

“Migrating bullet”

bullet when lodged in the vessel may move /up or down the blood flow/ in the victim`s body

Page 13: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

“Migrating bullet”

bullet when lodged in a cavity may move /following the gravitation force/ in the victim`s body

Page 14: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot injuries

III. Diagonal gunshot injury /wound or abrasion/

Page 15: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot injuries

IV. Ricochet (bullet changes trajectory)Nevertheless non typical serious injuries may occur lower velocity of the bullet

Page 16: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunpowder comes out the muzzle in two forms:

Completely burned gunpowder, called “soot” or “fouling”, can be washed off the skin.

Particles of burned and unburned powder can become embedded in the skin or bounce off and abrade the skin. The marks on the skin are called “tattooing” or “stippling”.

Page 17: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Analysis of the gunpowder traces

A. microscope determination (including electron microscopy)

B. chemical determination1. Wellenstein-Kober reaction (green-blue tint)2. “parch” reaction /in high temp./3. Griess&Illosvay reaction (pink tint)

Page 18: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Entrance wound (right angle)

Central defect

Soiled area(lubricant & soot& metal fragments)

Rim of abrasion [width=1-3mm](effect of the shock wave)

Stippling/tattooing& soot/fouling area (burned gunpowder and gunpowder particles)

Shot direction

Page 19: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Entrance wound (acute angle)

Shot direction

Page 20: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Canal of the wound

Fragments of clothingFragments of bullet/shotFragments of bone /other tissue/

Page 21: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Exit wound

Central defect

soiled area (none)rim of abrasion (none)gunpowder and its traces (none)

Page 22: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot (tight contact and loose contact)

barrel

tight contact

skinmuzzle

loose contact

Page 23: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot (tight contact)

all gunpowder residueon the edges or inside a wound

there may be searing or burning of wound margins

barrel

victim

Page 24: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot (tight contact)

reddeningof surrounding margins may

occur due to CO gas produced by burning powder (Paltauf sign)

barrel

victim

Page 25: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot (tight contact)

muzzle impression(muzzle mark on skin)

barrel

victim

Page 26: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot (tight contact)

There is often tearing of the skin around the entrance wound (specially in head

wounds) because of pressurebuild-up and blow-back of the

skin toward the muzzle

barrel

victim

Page 27: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot (loose contact)

muzzle impression ( - )

gunpowder may escape from the barrel and

be deposited around the edges of a wound

barrel

victim

Page 28: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot (close range)

fouling and stippling are present

barrel

victim

Page 29: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot (intermediate range)

fouling ( - )

stippling is present

barrel

victim

< 1 m

Page 30: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Gunshot (distant range)

fouling ( - )

stippling ( - )

victim

> 1 m

Page 31: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Shotgun wound /caused by shot/

or contact wounds

“rat hole” wound (from 30cm to 1 metre)

Page 32: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Shotgun wound /caused by shot/

Satellite pellet holes (appearing at the

distance of over 1 metre)

Spread of shot increases, central hole diminishes

Uniform spread with no central hole (appearing atthe distance of over 10 metres)

Page 33: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Scene

1. The scene must be examined for bullets and cartridges.

2. Localisation of the body and the gun must be considered.

3. Traces on the wearing and victims hands must be protected !

Page 34: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Autopsy examination in the case of gunshot

1. Inspection of the victim`s clothing (gun powder traces, damage)

2. Localisation and inspection of the entrance/exit wound

3. Inspection of the canal of the wound

4. Finding the bullet

Page 35: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Commonly asked question

I. How close was the victim to the gun when it was fired ?

II. What was the the trajectory in the body ? (where is the entrance/exit wound ?)

III What was the calibre /kind/ of the gun ?

IV. What was the sequence of the gunshot ?

Page 36: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin
Page 37: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Most important question is ...

Page 38: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

homicide? suicide? accident?

Page 39: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

A typical hunting accident“I swear it was a wild boar”

Page 40: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Captive - bolt guns /to dispatch large animals/

Metal rod is propelled for about 5 centimetres from the muzzle.

Captive bolt inflicts a clean, penetrating injury, which can be

mistaken with stab-like injury.

skin

muzzle

Page 41: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Industrial “stud-guns”

Specific piston acts as a hammer on the metal pin or stud.

skin/wall

muzzle

Page 42: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Rubber and plastic bullets

To disperse riotVelocity about 250 kphEffective range 50-70m

Page 43: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Death from explosion

Both civilian and military circumstances

Page 44: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Death from explosion - mechanisms

a/ blast effect

b/ impact of projectiles originating from the explosives device

c/ impact from surrounding objects and debris impelled by the explosion

d/ burns from hot gas and incandescent objects

Page 45: Sławomir Majdanik Firearm injuries Department of the Forensic Medicine Pomeranian Academy of Medicine of Szczecin

Death from explosion - injuries

“Peppering” by numerous small missiles causing lacerations and bruises.Burning.

A bomb can totally fragment the body and scatter unidentifiable pieces over a large area.