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How to ID a Bullet

From: KQED
Series: QUEST
Length: 05:05

What if every bullet could tell you who fired it? Read the full description.
Playing
How to ID a Bullet
From
KQED

Bulletmicrostamping_small For years, police and victims families have looked for a way to make bullets talk. A new technology called bullet microstamping aims to do just that -- imprint a unique, traceable code on each bullet a gun shoots. California and New York are both considering making it law. But does the technology work? This piece presents tough questions. When it comes to unsolved gun crimes, police detectives need all the help they can get -- but how much should states spend on a promising, but unsure technology?

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Piece Description

For years, police and victims families have looked for a way to make bullets talk. A new technology called bullet microstamping aims to do just that -- imprint a unique, traceable code on each bullet a gun shoots. California and New York are both considering making it law. But does the technology work? This piece presents tough questions. When it comes to unsolved gun crimes, police detectives need all the help they can get -- but how much should states spend on a promising, but unsure technology?

Broadcast History

Aired twice locally on KQED and KQEI, during B segment of Morning Edition, 6/20/08

Transcript

It was January 10, 2001. Laura Wilcox, a sophomore at Haverford College home on Christmas break, was filling in at a mental health clinic in rural Nevada City.

WILCOX She was working at the front desk that day as a receptionist?

That?s Laura's mother, Amanda Wilcox.

And a client from the clinic walked in with a semiautomatic handgun and shot her four times at point blank range. [CUT EXTRA WORDS HERE] He left three people dead, including our dear Laura, and three severely injured.

Laura's death turned Amanda and her husband Nick into gun control activists. In 2007 they had their first victory: California passed a bullet microstamping law. Starting in 2010, every new model of handgun sold in the state will be designed to leave a unique code on each bullet it fires. Wilcox says this will add critical new evidence.

WILCOX: In our case, we were lucky. He confessed his c...
Read the full transcript

Timing and Cues

SUGGESTED HOST INTRO:
For years, police and victims families have looked for a way to make bullets talk. A new technology called ??bullet microstamping?? aims to do just that -- imprint a unique, traceable code on each bullet a gun shoots. California and New York are both considering making it law. But does the technology work? From KQED in San Francisco, AMy Standen reports.

Related Website

http://www.kqed.org/quest/radio/how-to-id-a-bullet