NEWS RELEASE FROM THE
CONSERVATIVE PARTY OF NEW YORK STATE
MARCH 8, 2004
For Immediate Release
Contact: Laura Schreiner
March 8, 2004
718-921-2158
www.cpnys.org
CONSERVATIVES BELIEVE EXPANSION OF GUN BALLISTICS UNNECESSARY
In a legislative memo issued to all 212 Members of the Legislature, the
Conservative Party called on the Members to reject expansion of the State's gun
ballistic program stating that the program, which began in March 2001, did not
solve a single case in its first year.
The memo follows:
For well over 100 years, human fingerprinting has been an established method of identifying criminals and DNA fingerprinting was introduced to the forensic world in 1985 as an accepted method of convicting criminals. Both methods are highly reliable; therefore leading many to believe that gun ballistics would be also. Friction causes wear. Over time a gun's ballistic fingerprint changes making it drastically different from human and DNA fingerprinting.
Who can guarantee that the actual barrel hasn't been replaced? Or that nail
file wasn't used to alter the bullet's path? A recent California study of 790
pistols firing 2000 rounds indicated serious problems with ballistic
fingerprinting. When the cartridge used with a particular gun came from the
same manufacturer, computers failed to make the match 38% of the time. When the
cartridges came from different manufacturers, the failure to match was 62%. The
study did not consider problems of wear, which would most likely increase the
failure rate.
Hawaii has had registration and licensing of guns for several decades and has spent thousands of man-hours administering these laws. Despite the massive effort, there is not one single case that police can claim that their laws have been instrumental in identifying a criminal. Why has Hawaii's methods failed? Criminals rarely leave their guns behind, if they do, it is normally because they are killed or seriously wounded, but more importantly - would be criminals seldom get a license or register their weapons.
Ballistic fingerprinting fails to accomplish its intent. It is a useless
diversion of valuable police resources and public money. Unlike human and DNA
fingerprinting that is consistent and valuable in solving crimes, New York's
gun ballistic program which began in March 2001 with a start-up cost of
approximately $4.5 million, has not help solve a single case in its first year.
The Conservative Party urges a NO vote on A. 8542 – Rules -30-