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- <text id=89TT2174>
- <link 93TO0076>
- <title>
- Aug. 21, 1989: Do Guns Save Lives?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Aug. 21, 1989 How Bush Decides
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 25
- Do Guns Save Lives?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Not as often as the N.R.A. says
- </p>
- <p> "After cabdriver Iran Bolton picked up an early morning
- fare at a Phoenix Ariz., night spot, the customer held a broken
- bottle to her throat and forced her to pull into a deserted
- area. Robbing her of $70, the thug pushed the woman out of her
- cab and threw her to the ground. When her assailant ordered her
- to crawl in the dirt, Bolton responded by emptying her pocket
- semi-auto into him. He died later in a hospital."
- </p>
- <p> Each month American Rifleman, the journal of the National
- Rifle Association, features about a dozen such accounts of armed
- citizens defending themselves against criminals. Based on
- newspaper clippings submitted by N.R.A. members, the stories
- dramatically show how a gun can sometimes prevent a crime and
- perhaps even save a victim's life.
- </p>
- <p> The gun lobby lands on mushier ground, however, when it
- leaps from such examples into a far broader argument: that more
- lives are saved than lost by the firearms Americans acquire to
- protect themselves and their property. The N.R.A. emphasized
- that claim in a two-page newspaper advertisement attacking TIME
- for its report (July 17) on 464 gun deaths that occurred in the
- U.S. in a single week, chosen at random. "Legally-owned firearms
- saved the lives of far more Americans than those lost during
- (TIME's) `seven deadly days,'" the advertisement stated.
- "According to noted criminologist Dr. Gary Kleck of Florida
- State University, every year some 650,000 Americans use firearms
- to thwart criminal assault. That's 12,500 a week."
- </p>
- <p> Even Paul Blackman, research coordinator for the N.R.A.,
- concedes that the advertisement "stretches the data." He adds,
- "I don't know of any criminological study that has tried to
- quantify the number of lives saved based on the number of guns
- that were successfully used for protection."
- </p>
- <p> Kleck says his study did not consider the question of lives
- saved. Nor did he conclude, as the N.R.A. claims, that a crime
- or an assault had been "thwarted" in each of his estimated
- 645,000 (the ad upped it to 650,000) annual instances of a
- protective use of a gun. Kleck notes that his study may have
- included incidents in which a homeowner merely heard noisy
- youths outside his house, then shouted, "Hey, I've got a gun!"
- and never saw any possible attacker.
- </p>
- <p> Still, Kleck estimates that an assailant or the defender
- actually fired a handgun in nearly half the cases. If so,
- 322,000 incidents each year involved great danger, and the
- potential victims credited their guns with protecting them. That
- is about ten times the number who die from guns annually in the
- U.S. "It is possible that guns save more lives than they cost,"
- Kleck says.
- </p>
- <p> His numbers are based on a 1981 poll conducted by Peter D.
- Hart Research Associates. It asked 1,228 U.S. voters whether in
- the previous five years any member of their household had "used
- a handgun, even if it was not fired, for self-protection or for
- the protection of property." Roughly 4% (about 50 people) said
- they had done so. Projecting that percentage onto the number of
- U.S. households in the five years covered by the poll (1976-81),
- Kleck came up with the estimate that handguns had been used
- protectively 3,224,880 times, or 645,000 a year. Comparing that
- with surveys that included rifles and shotguns, he estimated
- that all types of guns are used defensively about a million
- times a year.
- </p>
- <p> Is his analysis valid? "I certainly don't feel very
- comfortable with the way he's used the data," says Hart Research
- president Geoffrey Garin. While Kleck based his findings on the
- Hart survey, his analysis of the circumstances under which guns
- were used came from other studies. Protests Garin: "We don't
- know anything about the nature of the instances people were
- reporting." Says William Eastman, president of the California
- Chiefs of Police Association, about the Kleck conclusions: "It
- annoys the hell out of me. There's no basis for that data."
- </p>
- <p> There is far more research on the question of who is most
- likely to get killed when someone keeps a gun at home. In a
- 1986 study called "Protection or Peril?," Dr. Arthur Kellermann,
- a University of Tennessee professor of medicine, and Dr. Donald
- Reay, chief medical examiner of King County in Washington,
- concluded that for each defensive, justifiable homicide there
- were 43 murders, suicides or accidental deaths. Out of 398
- gunshot fatalities in homes in King County between 1978 and
- 1983, only nine were motivated by self-defense.
- </p>
- <p> The one-week survey by TIME found a similar ratio on a
- national basis: only 14 of the 464 gun deaths resulted from
- defensive firing. An alarming 216 were suicides, 22 were
- accidental, and many of the rest involved homicides among people
- who knew each other well rather than citizens gunned down by
- strangers.
- </p>
- <p> Such statistics do not refute the argument that a gun, even
- if not fired, can save a life by discouraging a murderous
- attacker. Still, Tulane sociologist James Wright points out that
- guns have limited usefulness in preventing crimes. About 90% of
- crimes in homes occur when the resident is away, he notes, while
- violent crimes often take place on the streets. Says Wright:
- "Unless you make a habit of walking around with your gun at all
- times, you're not going to stop that either."
- </p>
- <p> A relatively balanced view of the gun question comes,
- surprisingly, from Kleck. "The vast majority of the population
- lives in low-crime neighborhoods and has virtually no need for
- a gun for defensive reasons," he says. "A tiny fraction has a
- great deal of reason to get anything it can get that might help
- reduce its victimization."
- </p>
- <p> Even the American Rifleman accounts of how helpful a gun
- can be in saving a life may not always tell the full story. In
- the case of cabdriver Bolton, the N.R.A. magazine failed to
- report how chance, rather than her pistol, saved her life.
- Bolton told the Arizona Republic that after she wounded her
- assailant, he grabbed her gun, pushed the barrel against her
- neck and pulled the trigger several times. What really saved
- Bolton was that she had emptied the chamber. Said she: "I kept
- thinking that maybe there was a bullet still in it and it would
- go off at any minute." If that had happened, the incident
- undoubtedly would not have appeared in the Rifleman.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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