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  • @Limehouse.

    No, I'm sorry I should have made it clearer.

    What I meant was the position that Valerie said he was in before she removed his body from the car. It is unlikely that the torso moved due to the shooting, but no-one can be sure of the effects of arm or leg spasms.

    Sorry for any confusion.

    Thanks

    John

    Comment


    • Bullet casings in car.

      @NickB.


      I'm sure that I've seen a photo of two bullet casings in the back of the car.

      Can anyone confirm this?

      Thanks

      John

      Comment


      • Originally posted by j.kettle1 View Post
        @NickB.


        I'm sure that I've seen a photo of two bullet casings in the back of the car.

        Can anyone confirm this?

        Thanks

        John
        From what I understand of the gun, the casings would have been discharged when the gun was fired, not when it was loaded. Therefore, there should have been casings in the car and outside where he shot Valerie.

        That is why I am very suspicious about the cartridges (casings) found in the hotel room. I have written about this point elsewhere on the threads, years ago.

        Comment


        • From what I understand of the gun, the casings would have been discharged when the gun was fired, not when it was loaded. Therefore, there should have been casings in the car and outside where he shot Valerie
          Wouldn't this mean that the gun was an automatic?
          Didn't the spent cases need to be removed from the Enfield manually as it wasn't an automatic?

          Comment


          • Originally posted by j.kettle1 View Post
            Wouldn't this mean that the gun was an automatic?
            Didn't the spent cases need to be removed from the Enfield manually as it wasn't an automatic?
            Quite right.

            The cartridge cases are ejected when the revolver is broken.

            This clip illustrates the actions of loading, firing and emptying a double action Enfield Mk2 revolver.

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Limehouse View Post
              From what I understand of the gun, the casings would have been discharged when the gun was fired, not when it was loaded. Therefore, there should have been casings in the car and outside where he shot Valerie.
              Wrong see above post 1685.

              Comment


              • The cartridge cases are ejected when the revolver is broken.
                Thanks for that.

                The video shows all six cases being ejected when the gun is broken. Do you happen to know if this applies to bullets also.
                For instance if only one bullet had been fired would the gun, when broken, eject the empty casing plus the five remaining bullets?

                Thanks

                John
                Last edited by j.kettle1; 08-23-2014, 02:00 PM. Reason: Omission of quote.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by j.kettle1 View Post
                  Thanks for that.

                  The video shows all six cases being ejected when the gun is broken. Do you happen to know if this applies to bullets also.
                  For instance if only one bullet had been fired would the gun, when broken, eject the empty casing plus the five remaining bullets?

                  Thanks

                  John
                  I don't know the answer to that.

                  I know that the earlier Enfields (mk1 and 2) from the late 19th Century had a device which auto ejected only the spent cartridges leaving the unifired rounds still in their chambers.

                  The correct designation for the murder weapon is, I believe, an Enfield .38 No 2 mk1*, and I've not been able to find out what happens to unfired rounds when the gun is broken.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by j.kettle1 View Post
                    What I meant was the position that Valerie said he was in before she removed his body from the car. It is unlikely that the torso moved due to the shooting, but no-one can be sure of the effects of arm or leg spasms.
                    Storie said that Gregsten was shot as he was turning halfway around to his left holding the duffel bag with both hands. She said that he then fell forward over the steering wheel. He couldn't have been killed instantaneously from the bullet wounds to his head because somehow or other he was able to move his hands from that particular position [holding the bag] to one where they ended up gripping the steering wheel. It must have been fairly difficult for the couple to free Gregsten's hands as they were stone cold when she touched them more than half an hour later.
                    *************************************
                    "A body of men, HOLDING THEMSELVES ACCOUNTABLE TO NOBODY, ought not to be trusted by anybody." --Thomas Paine ["Rights of Man"]

                    "Justice is an ideal which transcends the expedience of the State, or the sensitivities of Government officials, or private individuals. IT HAS TO BE PURSUED WHATEVER THE COST IN PEACE OF MIND TO THOSE CONCERNED." --'Justice of the Peace' [July 12th 1975]

                    Comment


                    • It seems a little strange that no one has mentioned that today marks the anniversary of Mike Gregsten's murder. R.I.P Michael.
                      *************************************
                      "A body of men, HOLDING THEMSELVES ACCOUNTABLE TO NOBODY, ought not to be trusted by anybody." --Thomas Paine ["Rights of Man"]

                      "Justice is an ideal which transcends the expedience of the State, or the sensitivities of Government officials, or private individuals. IT HAS TO BE PURSUED WHATEVER THE COST IN PEACE OF MIND TO THOSE CONCERNED." --'Justice of the Peace' [July 12th 1975]

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by j.kettle1 View Post
                        Thanks for that.

                        The video shows all six cases being ejected when the gun is broken. Do you happen to know if this applies to bullets also.
                        For instance if only one bullet had been fired would the gun, when broken, eject the empty casing plus the five remaining bullets?

                        Thanks

                        John
                        Yes it would, the empty case remains in a revolver until it is replaced with a live bullet. It is possible to remove one bullet or case. The cases and/or bullets will only fall out if the gun is held a particular way, held another way they stay in until removed.
                        G U T

                        There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by j.kettle1 View Post
                          Thanks for that.

                          The video shows all six cases being ejected when the gun is broken. Do you happen to know if this applies to bullets also.
                          For instance if only one bullet had been fired would the gun, when broken, eject the empty casing plus the five remaining bullets?

                          Thanks

                          John
                          I posed your question on a gun forum and got the reply that all cartridge cases are ejected irrespective of whether they have been fired or not.

                          Spitfire alias Beaufighter asks the question

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by j.kettle1 View Post
                            ...Newtons third law (every action has an equal and opposite reaction) applies to both the gunman and the victim in a gun system.
                            In other words in order for Mike Gregsten to be propelled in any direction then the gunman would have to be propelled, and to an equal extent, in the opposite direction.
                            Now we know that didn't happen as the bullet entry wounds were virtually on top one another. This couldn't happen if the gunman had recoiled, therefore if there was little or no opposite reaction then Mike Gregsten had little or no forces acting upon him.
                            Basically what I'm saying is that he was shot in the position that he was found...
                            Hello John and welcome to the A6 murder threads.
                            This is a area of some contention as far as I am concerned.
                            Mr Charles Lewis Nickolls (of the Met Science Lab) performed all of the ballistics in the case and gave evidence that the the gun (.38) was the murder weapon and all of the bullets and cases found were all fired from it.
                            Dr Keith Simpson was the Home Office pathologist who, in his book published in the mid 1970's, was sure that the wounds in Gregsten and Storie were made by .32 slugs, i.e. from an automatic.
                            An unexplained anomaly perhaps?
                            Del

                            Comment


                            • What calibre bullets did Simpson specify in his reports at the time and in his evidence at the trial?

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by NickB View Post
                                What calibre bullets did Simpson specify in his reports at the time and in his evidence at the trial?
                                Hi Nick
                                I haven't seen Simpson's reports.

                                Simpson didn't give evidence at the trial with regard to the ballistics, just the nature and position of the wounds.

                                Del

                                Comment

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