ATF fires more than 150 guns from crime investigations to try to link them to unsolved shootings - Los Angeles Times
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ATF fires more than 150 guns from crime investigations to try to link them to unsolved shootings

Members of the multi-agency task force L.A. Impact test-fire weapons seized at crime scenes to collect the bullet casings. The casings are then analyzed and their characteristics entered into a national ballistics database to help officials solve ot

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The guns were seized during roughly 125 narcotic investigations throughout Los Angeles County over the last two years, but authorities still had an important question about them: How many other crimes were the weapons connected to?

On Friday, federal agents took a key step toward an answer.

Agents test-fired the firearms at the Glendale Police Department’s gun range to catch the shell casings. The agents plan to analyze and upload information about them to a national database of ballistic evidence managed by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The weapons numbered more than 150 and included semi-automatic pistols, long rifles and shotguns. A match to evidence detailed in the database could give investigators a key piece of evidence in an unsolved shooting somewhere.

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“Each firearm leaves a very distinct marking on the back of a shell casing, it’s like a fingerprint,†said Chris Bombardiere, who supervises the ATF Crime Gun Intelligence Center in Los Angeles. “Once they start going in we have a 24- to 48-hour turnaround to where we start linking these firearms to other crimes that occurred where shell casings were picked up.â€

Brian Rose, a supervisor with the Los Angeles Interagency Metropolitan Police Apprehension Crime Task Force, fills in information cards on weapons seized from crimes.
(Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)

Nationwide in fiscal year 2015, federal authorities entered into the database 76,534 casings that were recovered from crime scenes and 130,004 casings that came from test-fires of retrieved weapons. That led investigators to 7,866 matches, according to the ATF.

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“The handguns and the long rifles, they tend to be transient between the criminals. So not one criminal holds on to a gun for very long,†said Brian Rose, a special agent who supervises the Los Angeles Interagency Metropolitan Police Apprehension Crime Task Force, which seized the guns that were test-fired on Friday. “So there’s a good possibility that one of these guns has been used in a previous crime.â€

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