Disarming
the Law-Abiding
by
John R. Lott, Jr.
by John R. Lott, Jr.
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans
residents got an idea of what life is like without the rule of law.
They had no telephones, no way to call 911. Even if they had, the
police who reported for duty were busy with rescue missions,
not fighting crime. Citizens had to protect themselves. This was
made rather difficult by the citys confiscation of guns, even
from law-abiding citizens.
After five months of denial in federal district court, the city
last week made an embarrassing admission: in the aftermath of the
hurricane, the severely overworked police apparently had the time
to confiscate thousands of guns from law-abiding citizens.
Numerous media stories have shown how useful guns were to the ordinary
citizens of New Orleans who werent forcibly disarmed. Fox
News reported several defensive gun uses. One city resident, John
Carolan, was taking care of many family members, including his
three-year-old granddaughter, when three men came to his house asking
about his generator, threatening him with a machete. Carolan showed
them his gun and they left. Another resident, Finis
Shelnutt, recounts a similar story that the gangs left him alone
after seeing I have a very large gun.
Signs painted on boarded up windows in various parts of town warned
criminals in advance not to try: the owner had shotguns inside.
Last September 8, a little more than a week after the hurricane,
New Orleans police superintendent, Eddie Compass announced:
No one will be able to be armed. Guns will be taken. Only
law enforcement will be allowed to have guns. Even legally
registered firearms were seized, though exceptions were made for
select businesses and for some wealthy individuals to hire guards.
Undoubtedly, selected businesses and well-connected wealthy individuals
had good reason to want protection, but so did others without the
same political pull. One mother saw the need for a gun after she
and her two children (ages 9 and 12) saw someone killed in New Orleans
after the hurricane. The mother said: I was a card-carrying,
anti-gun liberal not anymore.
John C. Guidos was successfully guarding his tavern on St. Claude
Ave on September 7, when police took his shotgun and pistol; indeed,
it was the only time that he saw any cops. Soon afterwards robbers
looted the tavern. Wishing for a gun during disasters isnt
anything new. Just a little over a decade ago, police stood by,
largely helpless, during the Los Angeles riots after the Rodney
King verdict. Yet, not all the victims were defenseless. Korean
merchants stood out as one group that banded together and used their
guns to protect their stores from looting.
A similar lesson hasnt been lost on New Orleans citizens.
As one resident, Art DePodesta, told the New
York Daily News shortly after the storm hit, The cops
are busy as it is. If more citizens took security and matters into
their own hands, we wont be in this situation.
Not
only do law-abiding citizens with guns deter many criminals from
committing a crime to begin with: Possessing a gun is the safest
way to confront a criminal if you are forced to.
Deterrence works. The United States has one of the world's lowest
hot burglary rates (burglaries committed while people
are in the building) at 13 percent, compared to the gun-free
British rate of 59 percent. Surveys of convicted burglars indicate
American burglars spend at least twice as long as their British
counterparts casing a house before breaking in. That explains why
American burglars rarely break into homes when the residents are
there. The reason most American burglars give for taking so much
time is that theyre afraid of getting shot.
Even
without a catastrophe like Katrina, it would have been a poor strategy
for would-be victims in New Orleans merely to call 911 and wait
for help. The average response time of police in New Orleans before
the hurricane was eleven minutes. The Justice Departments
National Crime Victimization Survey has shown for decades that having
a gun is the safest course of action when a criminal confronts you,
far safer than behaving passively.
It
would be nice if the police were always there to protect us, but
we dont live in a utopia and the police understand that they
almost always arrive on the scene after the crime has been committed.
What does New Orleans Mayor Nagin recommend that people such
as John Carolan and his granddaughter do the next time that have
to fend for themselves? The city must know that there isnt
much of a defense for taking citizens guns; after all, it
took them five months to admit to it.
March
22, 2006
John
Lott [send him mail], a resident
scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, is the author of The
Bias Against Guns (Regnery 2003).
Copyright
© 2006 John Lott
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