| Literature DB >> 32060624 |
Dorothee Geisenberger1, Arianna Giorgetti1,2, Matthieu Glardon3, Markus Große Perdekamp1, Stefan Pollak1, Rebecca Pircher4.
Abstract
From the first half of the twentieth century to the present day, injuries and fatalities from captive-bolt livestock stunners are a major topic in forensic medicine. The vast majority of cases account for suicides with the frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital regions being the most common sites of entrance (in descending order of frequency). Due to the limited length of the bolt, the corresponding wound channel within the braincase is only several centimeters long. It has been a controversial subject for a long time, whether the skin-bone complex punched out by the conically grooved end of the steel rod may act as a "secondary projectile" being propelled beyond the actual path of the bolt. To answer this question, experimental shots from various types of captive bolt-guns were fired to simulants. Video-documentation employing a high-speed motion camera showed that the punched-out pieces of skin and bone did not move further than the bolt. Thus, a secondary extension of the total wound channel could not be observed. However, the suction effect caused by the bolt's rearward movement may induce a slight retrograde displacement of the skin-bone complex.Entities:
Keywords: Ballistic simulants; Captive-bolt stunning device; Secondary projectile; Skin-bone imprimatum; Slaughterer’s gun
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32060624 PMCID: PMC7181429 DOI: 10.1007/s00414-020-02262-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Legal Med ISSN: 0937-9827 Impact factor: 2.686
Fig. 1a 3-component model consisting of artificial skin and a synthetic bone plate in front of a gelatin block. b High-speed-camera (Photron Limited, Fastcam SA-X2, Tokyo, Japan)
Fig. 2The captive-bolt guns used for the test shots. a Make Schermer KR. b Make Schermer KS. c Make Pfeiffer
Fig. 3a Experimental shot with a captive-bolt gun make Schermer KS to the 2-component model. Lateral view of the gelatin block at the moment when the bolt has reached its maximum penetration depth (top); position of the punched-out complex after complete retraction of the bolt (middle); specimen excised from the gelatin block after the shot showing the permanent bolt channel in gelatin and the imprimatum at its terminal point (bottom). b Experimental shot to the 3-component model with a captive-bolt gun make Schermer KS
Fig. 4a Entrance site in bone (2-component model, contact shot fired with a gun make Pfeiffer) on the left side and punched out bone fragment on the right side. b Entrance site in skin (3-component model, contact shot fired with a gun make Pfeiffer) on the left side and punched out skin-bone fragment on the right side
| Manufacturer | Type | Cartridge caliber | Bolt length | Bolt diameter | Bolt velocity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schermer | KR | 6.8 × 15 mm | 8.5 cm | 12 mm | 45–65 m/s |
| Schermer | KS | 6.8 × 15 mm | 8.0–8.5 cm | 12 mm | 45–65 m/s |
| Pfeiffer | – | 9 × 17 mm | 6.0 cm | 13 mm | Not indicated |