The problem I have with the Marshall & Sanow database is that it doesn't make any allowance for why a particular bullet had a one-shot stop, or rather why a particular bad guy stopped after being shot once. Did he stop because of severe physical trauma and simply could not continue, or did he stop due to a low pain threshold and non-life threatening hit to the arm that made him retreat? M&S classify both of those instances equally as a one-shot stop.
It may be worthwhile to read a bit about
Dr. Martin L. Fackler (retired Colonel in the US Army's Medical Corps) before dismissing his work as that of a "jello-junkie". But that's just my opinion...
"dismissing"? i think not. unlike some i'm not a fanboy of either side.
while neither group has THE answer, both have their points. all i indicated was that in the end i personally have a bit more faith in the statical data of tens of thousands of street shootings than in gelatin/lab testing.
and as i noted, it was ayoob who called them "jello-junkies", who was also equally tongue-in-cheek with m&s as "morgue-monsters".