The Annoyed Man wrote:....which would be pretty typical with .22 LR, in which an exit wound looks about like an entrance wound. Also, it can sometimes be difficult to actually find and locate in 3D space any .22 caliber bullets that are still in the body. So you never really know at first whether 16 holes means 8 bullets, 16 bullets, or some combination thereof. I once treated a patient who was shot in the buttocks with a .22 LR, and we could find no exit wound, and no obvious signs of other internal injuries. He was alert and oriented and his vitals were stable, although he was quite a bit butthurt. As he was under arrest at the time, he was transferred to the jail floor at County Hospital. Upon arrival, he took a turn for the worse and he was rushed into a trauma room. There, they finally located the bullet......just under the crown of his skull, where his cerebral hematoma was forming.....hours later.Excaliber wrote:It might also mean that they found 16 holes and aren't sure which are entries and which are exits.ELB wrote:The linked story says:
"up to" to me means they don't know, they just think there were 16 shots fired and some of them hit him. I think good chance the actual number of hits might be somewhat lower.A man survived being shot up to 16 times ...
Worked a case as a LEO, where a guy bought a 25 acp, at a pawn shop. also bought ammo. Loaded the gun while in his car, and somehow accidentally shot himself, in the right side ribs. The bullet struck a rib, moved upward where it struck his shoulder blade, and exited under his left arm pit. He was able to drive himself to the hospital emergency room, where the police were called as a matter of protocol. I got to see the entrance and exit wounds, and they were indistinguishable from each other. The x-ray showed the path that the bullet took, somehow missing any major organs or arteries, just leaving a trail of minute lead particles. I took the gun into evidence, and gave him the receipt for it. I told him that he could pick it up at the PD, if there were no other extenuating circumstances. He said for us to just keep it, he didn't want it back. As far as I know, it is still in the evidence room.