The
Hague Convention of 1899, Declaration III, prohibited the use in
international warfare of bullets that easily expand or flatten in the body. It is a common misapprehension that hollow-point ammunition is prohibited by the
Geneva Conventions, as the prohibition significantly predates those conventions. The
Saint Petersburg Declaration of 1868 banned exploding projectiles of less than 400 grams, along with weapons designed to aggravate injured soldiers or make their death inevitable. Despite the widespread ban on military use, hollow-point bullets are one of the most common types of bullets used by civilians and
police, which is due largely to the reduced risk of bystanders being hit by over-penetrating or
ricocheted bullets, and the increased speed of incapacitation. In many
jurisdictions, even ones (such as the
United Kingdom) where expanding and all other kinds of ammunition are restricted to
firearms certificate holders, it is illegal to
hunt certain types of
game with ammunition that does
not expand.
United Kingdom Most ammunition types, including hollow-point bullets, are only allowed to a section 1
firearms certificate (FAC) holder. The FAC holder must have the calibre in question as a valid allowance on their licence. A valid firearms certificate allows the holder to use ball,
full metal jacket, hollow point and ballistic-tipped ammunition for range use and vermin control. A firearms certificate will only be issued to any individual who can provide good reason to the police for the possession of firearms and their ammunition. Until recently all expanding ammunition fell under section 5 of the
Firearms Act 1968 and was only allowed when conditions were entered onto an FAC by the police. This condition would allow expanding ammunition to be used for: • The lawful shooting of
deer • The shooting of
vermin or, in the case of carrying on activities in connection with the management of any estate, other
wildlife • The humane killing of animals • The shooting of animals for the protection of other animals or humans Some ammunition types are still prohibited under section 5 of the Firearms Act 1968. Ammunition that explodes on impact or any
ammunition that is intended for military use are examples of this. Popular calibres used in the
UK for
vermin,
fox and
deer control are as follows:
.223 Remington,
.243 Winchester,
.308 Winchester,
.22-250 amongst others, all using hollow-point bullets. Many rimfire calibres also use expanding ammunition such as
.22 Long Rifle,
.22 Winchester Magnum Rimfire and
.17 Hornady Magnum Rimfire.
United States The United States is one of few major powers that did not agree to IV-3 of the
Hague Convention of 1899, and thus is able to openly admit to the use of this kind of
ammunition in warfare, but the United States ratified the second (1907) Hague Convention IV-23, which says "To employ arms, projectiles, or material calculated to cause unnecessary suffering", similar to IV-3 of the first Convention. For years the United States military respected this Convention and refrained from the use of expanding ammunition, and even made special FMJ .22LR ammunition for use in
High Standard pistols that were issued to the OSS agents and the Savage Model 24 .22/.410 combination guns issued in the E series of air crew survival kits. After announcing consideration of using hollow point ammunition for
side arms, with a possible start date of 2018, the United States Army began production of M1153 special purpose ammunition for the
9×19mm Parabellum with a jacketed hollow point bullet at per second for use in situations where limited over-penetration of targets is necessary to reduce
collateral damage. The state of
New Jersey bans possession of hollow point bullets by
civilians, except for ammunition possessed at one's own dwellings, premises, or other lands owned or possessed, or for, while and traveling to and from hunting with a hunting license if otherwise legal for the particular game. The law also requires all hollow point ammunition to be transported directly from the place of purchase to one's home or premises, or hunting area, or by members of a rifle or pistol club directly to a place of target practice, or directly to an authorized target range from the place of purchase or one's home or premises. The United States military uses open-tip ammunition in some
sniper rifles due to its exceptional accuracy.
W. Hays Parks, Colonel, USMC, Chief of the JAG's International Law Branch, has argued that this ammunition is not prohibited by military convention in that the wounds that it produces are similar to
full metal jacket ammunition in practice.
Winchester Black Talon scare In early 1992,
Winchester introduced the "
Black Talon", a newly designed hollow-point handgun bullet which used a specially designed, reverse tapered jacket. The jacket was cut at the hollow to intentionally weaken it, and these cuts allowed the jacket to open into six petals upon impact. The thick jacket material kept the tips of the jacket from bending as easily as a normal thickness jacket. The slits that weakened the jacket left triangular shapes in the tip of the jacket, and these triangular sections of jacket would end up pointing out after expansion, leading to the "Talon" name. The bullets were coated with a black colored, paint-like lubricant called "Lubalox", and loaded into nickel-plated brass cases, which made them visually stand out from other ammunition. While performance of the Black Talon rounds was not significantly improved over other comparable high-performance hollow-point ammunition, the reverse taper jacket did provide reliable expansion under a wide range of conditions, and many police departments adopted the round. Winchester's "Black Talon" product name was eventually used against them. After the high-profile 1993
101 California Street shooting in
San Francisco, media response against Winchester was swift. "This bullet kills you better", says one report; "its six razorlike claws unfold on impact, expanding to nearly three times the bullet's diameter". A concern was raised by the president of the
American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) that the sharp edges of the jacket could cut medical personnel's skin and risk spread of disease. An ACEP spokesman later said he was not aware of any evidence to support this claim. Winchester responded to the media criticism of the Black Talon line by removing it from the commercial market and only selling it to law enforcement distributors. Winchester has since discontinued the sale of the Black Talon entirely, although Winchester does manufacture nearly identical ammunition under new brand names, the Ranger T-Series and the Supreme Elite Bonded PDX1. == See also ==