Dave Mack
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Evidence found in the home, i.e., the gun, I don't know where they found it, in the home, in the car, doesn't matter for your purposes, but they've got a match to the bullets fired at the scene.
Were they lodged in the body?
Did they ricochet off the wall?
Were they stuck in the wall?
Were they stuck in the matches?
Were they stuck in the floor?
Doesn't matter.
They're saying they've got a match.
Now, before I get to you about how that match is deduced, I want to talk to you about how difficult would it be for the killer to engrave or write on the bullets?
How would you write something on the bullet?
Well, Nancy, you could take a Dremel tool and then you take the casing of the bullet like I have right here, and you could basically just engrave whatever you want on that casing.
But I think you would have to have a special kind of hatred to go to the lengths of engraving something on that.
I agree.
Now, let me ask you this, Koa.
What if we learn the defendant, the surgeon, Dr. McKee, created his own ammunition?
Yes, people actually do that.
That would leave a trail a mile wide if you created your own bullets.
How do you do that?
So you need a special machine that they use to create a bullet like this, and then you take all the components.
You take the primer on the back, the casing, obviously the gunpowder inside, and then the bullet, and you press it all together.