In this case we know Brown's thumb was so close to the muzzle that residue from the shot penetrated his flesh. His thumb was at most 1 inch from the muzzle.Wildcat, I am not disputing that the weapon was discharged inside the vehicle and hit Brown. I am disputing that the presence of Brown's DNA on the weapon is proof that Brown grabbed Wilson's firearm.
A bullet hitting a victim at close range is likely to contaminate anything in the area with blood and the victims DNA. Therefore, finding Brown's DNA on the weapon isn't proof that Brown grabbed the weapon at any time.
In most TV crime dramas, finding DNA or a fingerprint is taken as proof of guilt. Script writers seem to believe that fingerprints are only left by criminals and DNA is only shed by victims and criminals. The real world is more complicated. There are often many possible explanations of why a persons DNA was found in a specific spot.
In this case we know Brown's thumb was so close to the muzzle that residue from the shot penetrated his flesh. His thumb was at most 1 inch from the muzzle.
This wasn't from some microscopic splatter from 15 feet away.
You and Newtons Bit are looking at only one specific thing instead of the whole picture, that's how conspiracy theorists work not skeptics.
In this case we know Brown's thumb was so close to the muzzle that residue from the shot penetrated his flesh. His thumb was at most 1 inch from the muzzle.
This wasn't from some microscopic splatter from 15 feet away.
You and Newtons Bit are looking at only one specific thing instead of the whole picture, that's how conspiracy theorists work not skeptics.
Actually I was just pointing out a flaw in plague311's reasoning. When challenged, he resorted to name calling insults and derision.
Pretty flashy false dichotomy there. Take a look at what your link says, and what the detective says.
DETECTIVE: Once that decision is made and you swab, then you're going to have to swab those areas that were described earlier. If there was fingerprint evidence, you are going to be swabbing through them, so that's why you need to make a decision whether you want to process this for fingerprints or do you went to process this for DNA.
The detective:
In this case we know Brown's thumb was so close to the muzzle that residue from the shot penetrated his flesh. His thumb was at most 1 inch from the muzzle.
This wasn't from some microscopic splatter from 15 feet away.
You and Newtons Bit are looking at only one specific thing instead of the whole picture, that's how conspiracy theorists work not skeptics.
wiki said:The autopsy noted the absence of stippling, powder burns around a wound which indicate that a shot was fired at a relatively short range. Dr. Michael Graham, the St. Louis medical examiner, notes that gunshot wounds within an inch of the body do not always cause stippling.
Stippling occurs from gunshots that are relatively close range. It could be that Brown's hand was so close to the barrel that the wound was just as large at the stippling. Maybe. However, when officer Wilson pulled Brown's hands out from under his body, gunshot residue would have been transferred, as Wilson's hands had gun shot residue on them.
The diagnostic feature in determining range was the lack of stippling present along with the presence of particles of gunshot residue within the wound track. Wilson claims he never touched Brown's body after the shooting [8/10 interview, p. 10] and this type of diagnostic wouldn't be prone to transfer in that manner.
I thought there was information that Wilson pulled Brown's hands from out and under his body. Was that early and erroneous information, or am I confusing this with another case?
No it's not. The detective explicitly stated that he could test for DNA evidence OR fingerprint evidence but not both. This is not true.
Labs can test the same area for both. i didn't make a false dichotomy, however the detective did offer a false dilemma.
You just quoted Assistant District Attorney Kathi Alizadeh. She's not the detective who was being questioned, she was asking the questions.
That seems like disaster waiting to happen, with that device you take a real gun loaded with real bullets, point it at a subject that does not pose an immediate lethal threat and pull the trigger?
You left out the last sentence, was this done deliberately so you could pretend you didn't read it?Err?
Stippling occurs from gunshots that are relatively close range. It could be that Brown's hand was so close to the barrel that the wound was just as large at the stippling. Maybe. However, when officer Wilson pulled Brown's hands out from under his body, gunshot residue would have been transferred, as Wilson's hands had gun shot residue on them.
Why is it important to test for either, in this case?No it's not. The detective explicitly stated that he could test for DNA evidence OR fingerprint evidence but not both. This is not true.
IMO when all is said and done, Wilson had every right to shoot Brown because Brown was attacking him in the vehicle. It really doesn't matter if he was going for the gun or not.
Oops. I'll do better this time.Obviously you haven't read The Gospel Of St. Michael. Please try to educate yourself before posting.![]()
Oops. I'll do better this time.
IMO when all is said and done, Brown had every right to proactively defend himself by attacking Wilson because Wilson Backed up aggressively. Brown was totally within his rights to deposit his DNA on Wilson's gun, it is the public's gun. Why didn't Wilson just fire a warning shot? At any time Wilson could have curled up into a fetal position and just taken his well deserved beating like the evil white cop he is.
Better?