‘Anatomy of a hang-fire’: Gun expert cross-examined at Stanley Trial
The defence pressed an expert witness on a rare type of firearm misfire this morning at the murder trial of Gerald Stanley.
Stanley, 56, has pleaded not guilty to a charge of second-degree murder in connection with the 2016 shooting death of 22-year-old Colten Boushie. Stanley allegedly shot Boushie once in the head using a Russian-made Tokarev TT-33 pistol. During previous testimony, Stanley’s son Sheldon said his father told him the gun “just went off” immediately after the shooting.
This morning defence lawyer Scott Spencer cross-examined RCMP Forensic Firearms Specialist Greg Williams, questioning him in detail about “the anatomy of a hang-fire.” Yesterday, Williams told the jury a hang-fire is a firing delay caused by faulty or degraded ammunition, resulting in “a noticeable delay from ‘click’ until ‘bang,’”
One of the three recently-fired cartridge casings recovered at the scene and matched to the Tokarev pistol contained an “unusual bulge,” Williams said, which may have been caused by a hang-fire if someone manipulated the pistol’s action after pulling the trigger. According to RCMP testimony, the casing with the bulge was found inside the SUV which was carrying Boushie and a group of friends, while the other two were found elsewhere in Stanley’s farmyard.