So, if you've ever watched TV, you know that an expert with a microscope can tell if a mangled bullet from a crime scene came from a certain gun, or if the casings match. Or can they?
Seriously, these guns are mass produced. There were 10,000 barrels made on the same production run. Bullets are soft, malleable, and get squished when they hit things. Does anyone know what degree of accuracy is actually common? I'd buy "This bullet was fired through a S&W barrel, four grooves, probably 6" long." I'm sure there's enough distinctiveness in the combination of groove depth, land width,, pitch, and rifling shape to make that determination. But to say "this damaged bullet matches the test shot from the defendant's gun with 100% accuracy"? No way I buy that.
Likewise with the casings. S&W mass-produced tens of thousands of J-frame revolvers in .38 special last year, largely using the same design they have for years, if not decades, before that. How can there possibly be enough distinctiveness in a firing pin strike to identify one gun amongst hundreds of thousands?
Anyone have an insight into how this really works?