Firearms Analysis Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of a firearm as per the Criminal Code?

A

A weapon from which any shot, bullet or other projectile can be discharged and that is capable of causing serious bodily injury or death to a person.

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2
Q

What must the Crown prove about firearms?

A

That the weapon IS a firearm

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3
Q

Does an expert need to be called when there is a certificate of analysis?

A

No.

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4
Q

What areas of firearms cases may experts need to be called?

A

Availability of parts to make the weapon operable as a firearm
Cartridge linking

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5
Q

What was the PCAST conclusion relating to firearms analysis?

A

Foundational validity: NO
Validity as applied: If admitted, must be reported with error rates and disclosure of expert proficiency testing results

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6
Q

What was the charge of interest (in class) in R. v. Donison?

A

Handgun with serial number removed found inside the radiator in the kitchen of an alleged stash house.

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7
Q

What was the overarching issue in R. v. Donison?

A

Did any of the 5 defendants possess the firearm?

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8
Q

What was the relevance of the expert evidence in R. v. Donison?

A

To show that firearm discharged was the same firearm seized from the alleged stash house.

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9
Q

What was the forensic expert called in for R. v. Donison qualified to give opinion evidence on?

A

Firearm cartridge linking

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10
Q

What was the opinion of the expert in R. v. Donison?

A

Both casings were fired from the same gun and it was identified within the limits of practical certainty.

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11
Q

What did the court agree upon with respect to Ms. Plath, the firearms expert in R. v. Donison?

A

Her opinion was subjective
No specific number of agreements between the two items for her to conclude a match

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12
Q

What was a limitation Ms. Plath discussed about firearm analysis in R. v. Donison?

A

There is no discipline-wide error rate and the existing validation studies only relate to particular models

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13
Q

What was the conclusion of the court in R. v. Donison?

A

Court not prepared to conclude a “match”

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14
Q

What did the court find in R. v. Creary?

A

Firearms expert evidence is admissible and reliable
The firearm Creary had and pointed at arresting officer is same gun used in shooting.

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15
Q

What was Ms. Plath’s opinion in R. v. Creary?

A

All 5 cartridges were fired by the same gun that fired the test round.

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16
Q

What was Ms. Plath’s statement of confidence in R. v. Creary?

A

Confident to a “practical certainty”

17
Q

What did Ms. Plath acknowledge about her analysis in R. v. Creary?

A

There are both subjective and objective components

18
Q

What was the verification process in Ms. Plath’s analysis in R. v. Creary?

A

Another qualified CFS scientist did a double-blind verification with same result.

19
Q

What was the error rates discussed by Ms. Plath in R. v. Creary?

A

Not possible to assign one to work done at CFS.
But accuracy of scientific method has been validated through many studies, all between 0-2% error rates.

20
Q

What was the opinion of the judge in R. v. Creary about Ms. Plath’s use of “within the limits of practical certainty”?

A

Not meaningless.
Absolute certainty is scientifically impossible and is not a legal standard.

21
Q

Describe the differences in ideas of Ms. Plath’s proficiency testing in Creary vs Donison

A

Donison: no evidence she had undergone any, but she wasn’t asked
Creary: testified proficiency testing is part of CFS quality assurance program

22
Q

What was the issues surrounding the use of PCAST by the judge in R. v. Donison?

A

Unsure how it came to be in front of the judge
Not an exhibit in the case
Ms. Plath was not questioned about it

23
Q

What was the opinion of Ms. Plath in R. v. Hadi?

A

Three cartridge casings at the scene came from the same gun within the limits of practical certainty?

24
Q

What was the opinion of the court as to Ms. Plath’s conclusions in R. v. Hadi?

A

Defence did not take issue with Plath’s conclusions
Court relied upon conclusions

25
Q

What were the differences in R. v. Hadi vs Donison?

A

Testified about annual proficiency testing
Detailed evidence about error rates and validation studies
Qualifications of verifying scientist outlined

26
Q

What did the judge in R. v. Hadi find different than the judge in R. v. Creary?

A

PCAST report not necessary to be submitted as evidence. Similar to recommendations of a commission of inquiry
Not binding but could be helpful to the court.

27
Q
A