Tracing bullets to stop crime. work or not
https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/world...776502339981fe
Can't see this working. Bad guys just use false id's to buy ammo. What do you think? |
Of course it won't work, if thieves can illegally access firearms, they can illegally access ammunition.
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Another better option is to make criminals pay dearly for their crimes committed with firearms .
Commit a crime with a firearm and go away for a minimum 10 yrs not including time served awaiting trial , second offence 25 yrs no parole First offence with where a victim is hurt. Automatic 25 yrs Murder , life no parole ever We don’t penalize good drivers when bad drivers are bad but we love to penalize law abiding gun owners when criminals commit gun crimes |
The conviction rate on almost all crime is low. Add in the apathy of cops, prosecutors & judges might mean unnecessary ammo cost for little to no real world deterrence.
More laws when we don't enforce the current ones seems redundant. |
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Remember when they wanted your win # on arrows .
How about putting phone # on baseball bats, so when you get an intruder and defend yourself, they can call you :angry3: |
It’s absolutely silly. I think that maybe the author has invested in a company that provides the service.
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Does he mean bullets as in “bullets” or bullets as in cartridges? Or does he mean to mark the brass. Once most bullets are fired they are unrecognizable, unless they are copper or full metal jacket. Then there is the task of recovering a bullet that is likely to pass through what it hits.
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One step further would be a long drop with a short rope around the neck!! :thinking-006: |
Assume it happens and is successful to some degree. My guess is, they’ll likely find rather quickly that them bullets came from south of the border along with the guns that fired them.
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I attended a trial some years ago, where a "firearms expert" testified that with modern rifling methods it's very difficult to establish that a bullet came from a certain firearm. Grizz |
Assuming this "tasering and micro-stamping a barcode"
Is recoverable, it seems like they want to find out how the bullet gets in possession of the criminal more than tying it to a specific gun. |
Any marking would have to be on the tail-end of the bullet to be readable. The logistics would be ludicrous, having multiple boxes registered to you for target practice. They also don’t seem to know about reloading. Imagine having to register boxes of component projectiles to your PAL at the till?
Reloading press & collet-type bullet puller sales would increase substantially. Bullet mold sales would also go through the roof. As easy as it would be to remove such markings, it would still increase the value of everyone’s unadulterated ammo stockpiles. How many cumulative billions of rounds are in Canadian gun owners collections? I think these gun control daydreamers are under the mistaken impression that ammo expires like fresh produce & the older stuff will all be out of everyone’s inventory in short order. It won’t be. |
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The guy who recently shot and killed an Ontario provincial policeman had a previous gun charge and during sentencing for that charge the judge said the criminal was a victim of colonialism! What an absolute steaming pile of horse turd of an excuse for armed robbery! We're living in backwards land these days. |
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Pull the projectile, file the serial number off, problem solved. They floated this idea about 30 years ago, as stupid now as it was then. Just another socialist attempt to scare people and or calm their fears...
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