NCJ Number
252254
Journal
Journal of Forensic Sciences Volume: 62 Issue: 4 Dated: 2017
Date Published
March 2017
Length
0 pages
Annotation
This article reports on a study that examined the impact of information from ballistics imaging hit reports on the investigation into violent crimes.
Abstract
Ballistics imaging hits link two crimes involving the same firearm by forensically matching tool marks on the fired bullets or cartridge cases. Interview data collected from detectives who received a hit report were used to explore the relationship between the presence of a hit report and outcomes in 65 gun‐related violent crime investigations in nine U.S. police agencies. Findings indicate hit reports rarely contribute to identification, arrest, charging, or sentencing of suspects, because of delays in producing hit reports. On average, hit reports were completed 181.4 days after the focal crime. This delay forces investigations to proceed without the benefit of information from ballistics analysis. Additionally, hit reports rarely contained detailed information that was immediately useful to investigators. Instead, hit reports required additional research by the investigator to unlock useful information. (Publisher abstract modified)
Date Published: March 1, 2017
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Do Crime Hot Spots Move? Exploring the Effects of the Modifiable Areal Unit Problem and Modifiable Temporal Unit Problem on Crime Hot Spot Stability
- Population-level Effects on Crime of Recovering Firearms from Armed Prohibited Persons: Intention-to-treat Analysis of a Pragmatic Cluster-randomised Trial in California Cities
- Situational Crime Prevention as a Harm Mitigation Policy for Active Shooter Incidents