Umm, no. A rifle caliber hollowpoint will most likely penetrate all the way through a human body, and even pistol calibers will strike very deeply. Any expanding bullet will near certainly destroy organ it hits. The permanent wound cavity is especially large, that represents tissue that’s totally destroyed. Being fully penetrated by a FMJ bullet is far more survivable.Batman wrote: JHP will transfer all of its kinetic energy/momentum into the target whithout penetrating overly much, dropping/incapacitating it for the time being while not automatically doing sever organ damage, meaning the bullet does its job (taking out the target ) WITHOUT necessarily killing or doing irreparable harm in the process.
That is just utterly wrong. Police use expanding ammunition specifically because of the massive damage the bullets inflict. They are far more likely to kill or cause irreversible damage. I don’t know what gave you the idea that a JHP won’t pierce deeply enough to wreck organs, it’s not like that requires any great deal of penetration to begin with.
The reason police use JHP wherever the are legally entitled to is that JHP is MORE likely to drop a target with the minimum number of hits while at the same time being LESS likely to kill/irreversibly damage it.
The fact is it’s already not hard to inflict a lethal wound with ANY bullet of any caliber. A certain person in Virginia just showed how lethal a 9mm and .22cal pistol can be, and both calibers are considered relatively weak. What is hard is causing so much damage the person cannot fight back for even a minute. That’s when JHP comes in. The police, who are almost always very close to the person they are shooting need to care about this more then a solider. If they don’t want to kill a person, they have beanbag rounds, though a hit on the neck with one of those is still fatal.