Bound
To Misfire
by
John R. Lott, Jr.
by John R. Lott, Jr.
This
week President Bush's program, Project Childsafe, begins distributing
20 million gun locks. Over 712,000 locks will be given out just
in New York. It seems like such a reasonable program, who could
oppose it? After all, if a gun lock can save a life, it seems a
small cost. Unfortunately, despite the obvious feel-good appeal
of these rules, gun locks and safe storage laws are more likely
to cost lives than to save them.
Many
have seen the public service ads put out by the Clinton Justice
Department showing the voices or pictures of children between the
ages of four and eight, implying that there is an epidemic of accidental
deaths of these young children. The ads create the impression that
the archetype case involves naturally curious children shooting
themselves or other children.
Take
the discussion in one of the ads from 2000: "My brother Omar was
eight years old when he died. He had a hole in his tummy. A bullet
hit him. The gun came from the garage. I was just playing. I didn't
mean to shoot daddy's gun."
Accidental
gun deaths tragically claim children's lives, though fortunately
they are much rarer than most people might think. During 2000 there
were 37 accidental gun deaths for children under 10 in the U.S.
In 1999 there were 31, and only six of these cases actually involved
a child firing the gun. Indeed from 1995 to 1999 the entire United
States saw only between five and nine cases a year where a child
under ten either accidentally shot themselves or another child.
Obviously
we want to avoid any deaths where possible, but some perspective
is useful. With over 90 million adults owning a gun and almost 40
million children under 10, it is hard to think of almost any other
potentially dangerous products kept in American homes that have
as few accidental deaths associated with them. Over 1,260 children
under ten died in cars in 1999. Another 370 died as pedestrians
hit by cars. Accidents involving residential fires took 484 children's
lives. Even 92 children under the age of five drowned accidentally
in bathtubs.
The
overwhelming majority of gun owners must be extremely careful or
such gun accidents would be much more frequent.
Those
who accidentally fire a gun are not typical people. Shooters are
overwhelmingly adults who have problems with alcoholism and long
criminal histories, particularly arrests for violent acts. They
are also disproportionately involved in automobile crashes and are
much more likely to have had their driver's license suspended or
revoked. Even if these individuals were to use a lock, locks are
not designed to stop adult males from firing their own gun.
Gun
locks have their own problems. Most importantly, the increased time
it takes to get the gun ready to deter a criminal. Locked guns are
not as readily accessible for defensive gun uses. If criminals are
deterred from attacking victims because they fear people might defend
themselves, gun locks may therefore increase crime. Exacerbating
this problem, many mechanical locks (such as barrel or trigger locks)
also require that the gun be stored unloaded. Loading a gun obviously
requires yet more time to respond to a criminal.
Guns
clearly deter criminals, with Americans using guns defensively over
2 million times each year 4.5 times more frequently than the
500,000 times guns were used to commit crimes in 2001. Over 90 percent
of the time simply brandishing the weapon stops an attack. Even
though the police are extremely important at reducing crime, they
simply can't be there all the time and virtually always end up at
the crime scene after the crime has been committed.
Even
if one has young children, it does not make sense to lock up a gun
if one lives in a high crime urban area. Exaggerating the risks
involved in gun ownership will make people lock up their guns or
cause them not to own a gun in the first place and will result in
more deaths, not fewer deaths.
Recent
research that I have done in my book, The Bias Against Guns, examined
juvenile accidental gun deaths and suicides for all the states in
the United States from 1977 to 1998, found that safe storage laws
had no impact on either type of death. However, what did happen
was that law-abiding citizens were less able to defend themselves
against crime. The sixteen states that adopted these laws during
this period faced over 300 more murders and 4,000 more rapes per
year. Burglaries also increased dramatically.
No
one is exempt from criticism, whether Bush, Clinton, or the media.
Unfortunately, bad advice, no matter how well intentioned, can have
tragic consequences and cost lives.
November
10, 2003
John
Lott [send him mail], a resident
scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author of the
newly released The
Bias Against Guns, which examines the evidence on multiple
victim killings.
Copyright
© 2003 John Lott
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