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How ballistic tests are helping find a serial killer in California

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Much remains unknown about a possible California serial killer.

Stockton Police Chief Stanley McFadden told Newsy he's reminding his community to walk in pairs.  

"That safety message we've been messaging is to don't be alone. If you have to be out at night, you know, that area, be aware of your surroundings, all those good things, you know, to minimize the opportunity to be a victim," said McFadden. 

Police have linked seven shootings — six of the victims killed dating back to April 2021. 

Ballistic tests have linked the Stockton casesto one in Oakland, about a 90-minute drive away.  

"This forensic science that we have these days is very helpful to our mission," said McFadden.

Ballistic science continues to improve, essentially allowing crime labs to ID the fingerprint of a bullet fired from a gun. 

How does testing work? Crime lab scientists look at 2D images or 3D maps. Different police departments and ATF have databases they can search and compare.  

"What we're trying to do right now in this is come up with new algorithms, new protocols, and statistical calculations to bring us closer to what DNA is doing," said McFadden. 

Alan Zheng is a mechanical engineer with the National Institute of Standards and Technology or NIST.  

NIST sets the benchmarks, so the way bullets are compared is accurate and the same across the board.   

They run a public database of tool marks, microscopic markings that a gun's mechanisms make on different bullets when fired.  

"One is striated tool marks, which is caused by a sliding motion, and the other one's impress tool marks, which is exactly what it sounds like, something pressing against a softer surface," said Zheng. 

There are more than 100 standard markers in a ballistic test, and scientists added two more this August.

  

Zheng says the goal is to get ballistic identification to the accuracy of DNA and thinks that's about three years away. 

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