Cranial trauma in handgun executions: Circumferential delamination defect and its relationship with contact/close‐range shooting

Author:

Parra Roberto C.1ORCID,Baraybar Jose Pablo2,Condori Lucio A.3ORCID,Luna Leandro45ORCID,Garizoain Gonzalo6ORCID,Avalos‐Cordero Ernesto7

Affiliation:

1. Forensic Team, Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (United Nations Joint Human Rights Office). Goma Democratic Republic of the Congo

2. Forensic Unit, International Committee of the Red Cross Geneva Switzerland

3. Equipo Forense Especializado, Instituto de Medicina Legal y Ciencias Forenses Ayacucho Peru

4. CONICET, Multidisciplinary Institute of History and Human Sciences (IMHICIHU) Buenos Aires Argentina

5. Bioarchaeology and Forensic Anthropology Research Unit (UIBAF) Faculty of Philosophy and Letters and Faculty of Odontology, Endodontics Chair and Public Health Research Institute (IISAP), University of Buenos Aires Buenos Aires Argentina

6. CONICET, Laboratory of Forensic Science Research (LICiF), Faculty of Medical Sciences National University of La Plata La Plata Argentina

7. Unidad de Absorción Atómica, Laboratorio de Química y Toxicología Forense, Instituto de Medicina Legal y Ciencias Forenses Lima Peru

Abstract

AbstractSkeletal evidence usually constitutes the only source of information to interpret lesion patterns that help to clarify the circumstances surrounding death. The examination and interpretation of bone trauma are essential to the application and utility of anthropology as a forensic science. When discussing the effect of gunshot wounds in bone, it becomes imperative to differentiate between short and long‐distance injuries based on clear, distinct, and observable signs. To contribute to the debate, our focus is directed toward the external analysis of the so‐called circumferential delamination defect (CDD) as an observable proxy for close‐range shooting (≤30 cm) and contact gunshot wounds in the skull. In the context of known extrajudicial killings, in which the perpetrators used short 9 × 19 FMJ ammunition in a close‐range shooting, instances of CDD have been documented. Empirical evidence reinforcing the causal relationship between CDD and close‐range shootings is presented. Elements’ characteristics of firearm residues were also found in remains buried for up to 30 years. Primarily, this work shows that the concentrations of gunshot residues (Pb, Ba, and Sb) resemble those observed in fresh corpses with the same gunshot wound (GSW). Moreover, the correlation observed between CDD and gunshot residues, where the likelihood of CDD increases the closer to the head and the more perpendicular the shot angle is, reinforces CDD as a pivotal discriminatory factor in the skeletal evidence of short‐range or contact shot. This research contributes to the field of forensic anthropology by providing fundamental insights into the etiology of CDD and its practical application.

Publisher

Wiley

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