Abstract

Over a period of 30 years, a number of fired GLOCK cartridge cases have been evaluated. A total of 3156 GLOCK firearms were used to generate a sample of the same size. Our research hypothesis was that no cartridge cases fired from different 9 mm semiautomatic GLOCK pistols would be mistaken as coming from the same gun (a false match). Using optical comparison microscopy, two separate experiments were carried out to test this hypothesis. A subsample of 617 test-fired cartridge cases were subjected to algorithmic comparison by the Integrated Ballistics Identification System (IBIS). The second experiment subjected the full set of 3,156 cases to manual comparisons using traditional pattern matching. None of the cartridge cases were “matched” by either of these two experiments. Using these empirical findings, an established conservative Bayesian probability model was used to estimate the chance that a 9 mm cartridge case, fired from a GLOCK, could be mistaken as coming from the same firearm when in fact it did not (i.e., the false match probability).

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