Ignore me I am working out the bullets from the fragments....lol
Hi Patti , I think their is some significance in the fact that of the bullets bearing Hammersley's initials , 4 out of 5 of them are heavier than the manufacturers specifications ( Eley subsonic ) .
The weight of these bullets should be 2.26 grams . Bullet exhibits DRH 5 , 15 , 35 and 36 are all significantly over this weight . The only bullet bearing Hammersley's initials which is under weight is described as near whole .
It is either an inexplicable coincidence that Hammersley found only the unfeasibly large eley ammunition or it could be that bullets were substituted and those finally presented to the court were not the same bullets . Perhaps the ammunition presented came from one of the unofficial "test firing " of the Anshutz .
This is why there are examination records which compare " bullets from the scene ? " against test firings of the Anshutz before it was test fired .
It would be interesting to weigh those bullets now and see if the weights are the same but unfortunately the police destroyed them all in 1996 . (wonder why ? )
Despite this , there are somehow 14 crime scene spent cartridge cases bearing the exhibit number MDF100 still held at the lab in Huntingdon .
Some very strange things went on with the ballistics evidence and Hammersley plays a significant part in it .