Reports show gun homicides down since 1990s
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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Gun homicides have dropped steeply in the
United States since their 1993 peak, a pair of reports released Tuesday
showed, adding fuel to Congress' battle over whether to tighten
restrictions on firearms.
A study released
Tuesday by the government's Bureau of Justice Statistics found that
gun-related homicides dropped from 18,253 in 1993 to 11,101 in 2011.
That's a 39 percent reduction.
Another report
by the private Pew Research Center found a similar decline by looking at
the rate of gun homicides, which compares the number of killings to the
size of the country's growing population. It found that the number of
gun homicides per 100,000 people fell from 7 in 1993 to 3.6 in 2010, a
drop of 49 percent.
Both reports also found
that non-fatal crimes involving guns were down by roughly 70 percent
over that period. The Justice report said the number of such crimes
diminished from 1.5 million in 1993 to 467,300 in 2011.
But
perhaps because of the intense publicity generated by recent mass
shootings such as the December massacre of 20 school children and six
educators in Newtown, Conn., the public seems to have barely noticed the
reductions in gun violence, the Pew study shows.
The
non-partisan group said a poll it conducted in March showed that 56
percent of people believe the number of gun crimes is higher than it was
two decades ago. Only 12 percent said they think the number of gun
crimes is lower, while the rest said they think it remained the same or
didn't know.
The data was released three weeks
after the Senate rejected an effort by gun control supporters to
broaden the requirement for federal background checks for more firearms
purchases. Senate Democratic leaders have pledged to hold that vote
again, perhaps by early summer, and gun control advocates have been
raising public pressure on senators who voted "no" in hopes they will
change their minds.
Sen. John Thune of South
Dakota, a member of the Senate Republican leadership, said the figures
show that gun control groups have emphasized the wrong approach to
controlling firearms violence.
"That's what
many of us have argued all along, is that focusing just exclusively on
the guns is not the correct approach to this," he said. Thune said
lawmakers should aim instead at preventing future mass killings by
improving mental health programs and increasing the records that state
governments send the federal background check system so the checks can
do a better job of keeping guns from people who shouldn't have them.
Gun
control supporters said the numbers have declined but remain too high,
with U.S. rates of gun killings remaining far greater than most other
nations.
"None of these studies change the
impact of Newtown and other recent mass slayings, showing the need for
common sense measures" restricting guns, Sen. Richard Blumenthal,
D-Conn., said.
The Justice study said that in 2011, about 70 percent of all homicides were committed with firearms, mainly handguns.
The
trend in firearm-related homicides is part of a broad nationwide
decline in violent crime over past two decades, including incidents not
involving firearms.
Both studies concluded
that most of the decline in gun homicide rates occurred in the 1990s.
The Justice report found that since 1999, the number of firearm
homicides increased from 10,828 to 12,791 in 2006 before declining to
11,101 in 2011.
Though researchers differ over
all the reasons why gun violence has declined, many attribute it to the
aging of the baby boomers. The crime rate was higher in the 1960s and
1970s when many in that large generation were teenagers, an age when
higher proportions of people commit crimes.
Crime
rates dropped in the early 1980s as that generation aged, rose in the
latter part of that decade as the use of crack cocaine grew, then
dropped again in the 1990s as the nation's economy improved, analysts
say.
The Pew report also said:
-The
gun suicide rate is 6.3 per 100,000 people, and there were 19,392
suicides by firearms in 2010. That rate has declined more slowly than
the firearms homicide rate, with 6 in 10 gun deaths now suicides, the
highest proportion since at least 1981.
-More than 8 in 10 victims of gun homicides are men and boys.
-Fifty-five percent of gun homicide victims in 2010 were black, far beyond their 13 percent share of the population.
The
Pew study chiefly used federal data from the federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, and the Justice Department's National
Crime Victimization Survey, a household survey conducted by the Census
Bureau.
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