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Talk:Even Dogs in the Wild

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The following was inserted into the article below the templates in September 2017 by 2606:f180:1:2e7:2e7:3773:dce8:ff60;

There are some glaring errors about firearms but then the writer is from Scotland and firearms are few and far between. Rebus glances at a bullet hole in a wall and identifies the calibre of the hole as 9 mm (semi auto). In inches this is 0.355 actual. A .38 Webley would be 0.359 actual. It is unlikely that human vision could distinguish a 0.004" difference. Rather than a modern pistol, it could very well have been a war relic, a Webley and Scott revolver.
Since the pistol was a 9mm, there should have been a spent case ejected at the scene which could have accurately indicated the make of the pistol. Further spent cases could be linked by indentation from the firing pin, marks of the ejector and extractors and scratches from the chamber. In police forensic work, the spent case is very important but has been ignored to make a weak point. This case should have been solved very early. Later, and this is a spoiler, someone fires a bullet into another's head then digs it out to prevent identification of the pistol. Did the shooter carry a bone saw, drill, knives, probes, forceps and towels to soak up the blood?
Section deleted from the main page and moved here by The joy of all things (talk) 23:08, 1 November 2018 (UTC)[reply]