Day 018 - 26 Jul 94 - Page 48
1 Q. And?
A. Page 20.
2
Q. And we turn to page -----
3 A. 20.
4 Q. That is what I have been looking for. We see some
illustrations of captive bolt pistols, do we not?
5 A. Yes.
6 Q. Of those three types illustrated there, which, if any, of
them is the sort which is used at Midland Meat Packers and
7 the other place?
A. The cow puncher was used.
8
Q. The which?
9 A. The bottom one, the cow puncher.
10 Q. The one which has not got a handle?
A. Correct. It has a handle but it does not have a
11 conventional pistol grip. And they also used a bulldozer
which is the same design.
12
Q. A bulldozer?
13 A. Correct.
14 MR. JUSTICE BELL: Mr. Rampton, I already had a survey of
commercial practices used in the stunning of cattle in my
15 bundle, and then I was handed one the other day with
Mrs. Brinley-Codd's blue post-it on it. They are the
16 same, are they?
17 MR. RAMPTON: My Lord, yes, because I already had one too.
18 MR. JUSTICE BELL: When you said between the first and second
addenda -----
19
MR. RAMPTON: Because Addendum 1 is based on the 1987 survey.
20 Can you go back to addendum 1 in that bundle? It should
be the document immediately in front of this survey.
21
MR. JUSTICE BELL: That starts off: "In 1987 a survey was
22 conducted"; is that right?
23 MR. RAMPTON: That is the one, yes, my Lord. (To the witness):
Do you have that?
24 A. Yes.
25 MR. JUSTICE BELL: If I could just hand one of these back
because I think I have two. Thank you.
26
MR. RAMPTON: Do we find a picture of a bulldozer in here or
27 not?
A. No, we do not. In conformation it is identical to a
28 cow puncher. Its basic difference is that the calibre is
bigger; instead of being .22 calibre as indicated in the
29 figure, it is .25 calibre. That is just the grain of the
cartridge.
30
Q. The basic idea of all these different kinds of pistols or
