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Forensic Science International | 2002

Diagnosis of a captive-bolt injury in a skull extremely destroyed by fire

Michael Bohnert; Ulrike Schmidt; Markus Grosse Perdekamp; Stefan Pollak

The authors report on a combined suicide of a 71-year-old farmer who fired a shot to his forehead with a livestock stunner before burning himself. As the fire was fueled by a pile of firewood it burnt for many hours, thus, causing subtotal incineration of the body. The remaining bones were calcined and reduced to a residual mass of only 3 kg. In spite of the extreme destruction, a circular bone defect corresponding to the site where the captive-bolt had entered the skull could be identified in the frontal squama. The example of this suicide is used to illustrate the problems of distinguishing between mechanical and thermal fractures. As expected, the attempted isolation and amplification of both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA for the purpose of identification was not successful.


Forensic Science International | 2011

Ethyl sulphate and ethyl glucuronide in vitreous humor as postmortem evidence marker for ethanol consumption prior to death.

Annette Thierauf; Jürgen Kempf; Markus Grosse Perdekamp; Volker Auwärter; Heike Gnann; Ariane Wohlfarth; Wolfgang Weinmann

To clarify the circumstances of death, the degree of inebriation is of importance in many cases, but for several reasons the determination of the ethanol concentration in post-mortem samples can be challenging and the synopsis of ethanol and the direct consumption markers ethyl glucuronide (EtG) and ethyl sulphate (EtS) has proved to be useful. The use of a rather stable matrix like vitreous humor offers further advantages. The aim of this study was to determine the concentrations of ethanol and the biomarkers in the robust matrix of vitreous humor and to compare them with the respective levels in peripheral venous blood and urine. Samples of urine, blood from the femoral vein and vitreous humor were taken from 26 deceased with suspected ethanol consumption prior to death and analyzed for ethanol, EtS and EtG. In the urine samples creatinine was also determined. The personal data, the circumstances of death, the post-mortem interval and the information about ethanol consumption prior to death were recorded. EtG and EtS analysis in urine was performed by LC-ESI-MS/MS, creatinine concentration was determined using the Jaffé reaction and ethanol was detected by HS-GC-FID and by an ADH-based method. In general, the highest concentrations of the analytes were found in urine and showed statistical significance. The mean concentrations of EtG were 62.8mg/L (EtG100 206.5mg/L) in urine, 4.3mg/L in blood and 2.1mg/L in vitreous humor. EtS was found in the following mean concentrations: 54.6mg/L in urine (EtS100 123.1mg/L), 1.8mg/L in blood and 0.9mg/L in vitreous humor. Ethanol was detected in more vitreous humor samples (mean concentration 2.0g/kg) than in blood and urine (mean concentration 1.6g/kg and 2.1g/kg respectively). There was no correlation between the ethanol and the marker concentrations and no statistical conclusions could be drawn between the markers and matrices.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2010

Secondary skull fractures in head wounds inflicted by captive bolt guns: autopsy findings and experimental simulation

Markus Grosse Perdekamp; Beat P. Kneubuehl; Takaki Ishikawa; Hadi Nadjem; Jan Kromeier; Stefan Pollak; Annette Thierauf

Apart from one article published by Rabl and Sigrist in 1992 (Rechtsmedizin 2:156–158), there are no further reports on secondary skull fractures in shots from captive bolt guns. Up to now, the pertinent literature places particular emphasis on the absence of indirect lesions away from the impact point, when dealing with the wounding capacity of slaughterer’s guns. The recent observation of two suicidal head injuries accompanied by skull fractures far away from the bolt’s path gave occasion to experimental studies using simulants (glycerin soap, balls from gelatin) and skull–brain models. As far as ballistic soap was concerned, the dimensions of the bolt’s channel were assessed by multi-slice computed tomography before cutting the blocks open. The test shots to gelatin balls and to skull–brain models were documented by means of a high-speed motion camera. As expected, the typical temporary cavity effect of bullets fired from conventional guns could not be observed when captive bolt stunners were discharged. Nevertheless, the visualized transfer of kinetic energy justifies the assumption that the secondary fractures seen in thin parts of the skull were caused by a hydraulic burst effect.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2011

GSR deposition along the bullet path in contact shots to composite models

Markus Grosse Perdekamp; Max Arnold; Joachim Merkel; Katrin Mierdel; Roland Braunwarth; Beat P. Kneubuehl; Stefan Pollak; Annette Thierauf

In contact shots, all the materials emerging from the muzzle (combustion gases, soot, powder grains, and metals from the primer) will be driven into the depth of the entrance wound and the following sections of the bullet track. The so-called “pocket” (“powder cavity”) under the skin containing soot and gunpowder particles is regarded as a significant indicator of a contact entrance wound since one would expect that the quantity of GSR deposited along the bullets path rapidly declines towards the exit hole. Nevertheless, experience has shown that soot, powder particles, and carboxyhemoglobin may be found not only in the initial part of the wound channel, but also far away from the entrance and even at the exit. In order to investigate the propagation of GSRs under standardized conditions, contact test shots were fired against composite models of pig skin and 25-cm-long gelatin blocks using 9-mm Luger pistol cartridges with two different primers (Sinoxid® and Sintox®). Subsequently, 1-cm-thick layers of the gelatin blocks were examined as to their primer element contents (lead, barium, and antimony as discharge residues of Sinoxid® as well as zinc and titanium from Sintox®) by means of X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy. As expected, the highest element concentrations were found in the initial parts of the bullet tracks, but also the distal sections contained detectable amounts of the respective primer elements. The same was true for amorphous soot and unburned/partly burned powder particles, which could be demonstrated even at the exit site. With the help of a high-speed motion camera it was shown that for a short time the temporary cavitation extends from the entrance to the exit thus facilitating the unlimited spread of discharge residues along the whole bullet path.


Forensic Science International | 2010

Urine tested positive for ethyl glucuronide and ethyl sulphate after the consumption of “non-alcoholic” beer

Annette Thierauf; Heilce Gnann; Ariane Wohlfarth; Volker Auwärter; Markus Grosse Perdekamp; Klaus-Juergen Buttler; Friedrich Martin Wurst; Wolfgang Weinmann


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2008

Postmortem “delivery” in a pregnant fire victim

Benedikt Vennemann; Michael Bohnert; Stefan Pollak; Markus Grosse Perdekamp


Archiv für Kriminologie | 2002

Fatal thoracic compression after being partially run over by an automobile

Markus Grosse Perdekamp; Ulrike Schmidt; Stefan Pollak


Archiv für Kriminologie | 2013

Postmortem detection of accidental methadone intoxication in a 10-year-old girl

Annette Thierauf; Susanne Vogt; Stefan Pollak; Markus Grosse Perdekamp


The Lancet | 2011

Ethyl sulphate and ethyl glucuronide in vitreous humor as postmortem evidence marker for ethanol con

Annette Thierauf; Jürgen Kempf; Markus Grosse Perdekamp; Volker Auwärter; Heike Gnann; Ariane Wohlfarth; Wolfgang Weinmann


The Lancet | 2011

Intracranial impalement with entrance site in the mandibular region: Postmortem elucidation of an ac

Markus Grosse Perdekamp; Hans-Joachim Weisser; Stefan Pollak; Annette Thierauf

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Ariane Wohlfarth

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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Heike Gnann

University of Freiburg

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Jürgen Kempf

University Medical Center Freiburg

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