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- <text id=93TT2253>
- <title>
- Dec. 20, 1993: "Have We Gone Mad?"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 20, 1993 Enough! The War Over Handguns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER/CRIME, Page 31
- "Have We Gone Mad?"
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In Milwaukee, a rash of murders provokes a drive to ban handguns
- </p>
- <p>By Jon D. Hull/Milwaukee
- </p>
- <p> Most anybody in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, can tell the story of
- how 10-year-old Monique Schweiger's childhood ended. The hard
- part is explaining why. It was just before 7 p.m. a month ago
- in the parking lot of Popeye's Famous Fried Chicken & Biscuits
- on the north side of town. That's where her mother Christine
- was ordered to her knees by two teenagers, 15 and 16 years old,
- who demanded her money. When Christine, an accountant and mother
- of three, said she didn't have any, the 16-year-old apparently
- took offense. As Monique watched, the youth allegedly let loose
- at point-blank range with a 12-gauge sawed-off shotgun, blasting
- away most of Christine's head. Police say he later explained
- that "I'm the big man. I got the gun. Why does she have this
- attitude?"
- </p>
- <p> Guns and attitudes; like so many American cities, Milwaukee
- is aching from the frequent and often fatal combination of the
- two. "It used to be your money or your life," says Sheriff Richard
- Artison. "Now they'll shoot you anyway." Since 1980 the city's
- homicide rate has doubled and now stands at more than 150 so
- far this year, spurred by a deadly convergence of gangs, drugs
- and ever more sophisticated weaponry. Countywide, juvenile arrests
- for homicides climbed from six in 1983 to 82 last year. Admissions
- at Children's Hospital for gunshot wounds rose from 50 in 1989
- to 160 so far this year. At Froedtert Memorial Lutheran Hospital,
- 30% of spinal-cord injuries are caused by gunshots. Milwaukee
- (pop. 630,000) has responded like most cities: with more fear,
- bigger dead bolts and more angry debate about gun control and
- the breakdown of families. "We're a small enough town so that
- every death still really hurts," says Jeffrey Jentzen, the county
- medical examiner, who has watched the carnage rise over the
- years. Sometime in the late 1980s, about the time that crack
- hit town, Milwaukee joined the long list of U.S. cities where
- residents think twice before honking at strangers. "I don't
- give people the finger from my car, and I haven't for a while,"
- confesses Mike Malmstadt, presiding judge of the county juvenile
- division.
- </p>
- <p> The city has tried one security measure after another. A new
- $106 million, 1,200-prisoner-capacity county jail, opened late
- last year, is already overflowing. Metal detectors were installed
- in the sheriff's department in October, and the Milwaukee public-school
- system, with 100,000 students, started random weapons searches
- this fall at the middle and high schools. "I have in front of
- me a list of all my kids who have died between 12/92 and 12/93,"
- says superintendent Howard Fuller. "On that list are 15 kids
- under the age of 17."
- </p>
- <p> He recalls meeting with elementary school students to talk about
- education. "The very first question was about what to do when
- someone starts shooting! We spent the whole time talking about
- how to hit the floor and hide under a desk. Have we gone mad?"
- Teachers are also afraid: two weeks ago, at the suburban Wauwatosa
- West High School, a former student named Leonard McDowell, 21,
- allegedly shot associate principal Dale Breitlow, 46, three
- times in a second-floor hallway with a .44-cal. Taurus revolver,
- killing him.
- </p>
- <p> The day after Christine Schweiger's murder, more than a dozen
- local groups held a previously scheduled press conference to
- launch a petition drive to ban almost all handguns in the city.
- "Up until the past couple of months we've been doing what the
- N.R.A. wanted, and look where it's got us," says Dan Ullrich,
- spokesman for the Campaign for a Better Milwaukee. "Halfway
- measures haven't worked in other cities." The group hopes to
- collect the necessary 20,300 signatures by mid-January, forcing
- the city council either to pass the ban or place it on the ballot
- in either April or November.
- </p>
- <p> Passage by the council seems unlikely; success at the polls
- will require a fierce battle with opponents. A similar measure
- was defeated in more liberal Madison, Wisconsin, last spring,
- 51% to 49%, after an advertising blitz by the N.R.A. "Everyone
- is looking for a magic solution," says James Fendry, head of
- the Wisconsin Pro-Gun Movement. "We see the ban as broadcasting
- to gang bangers and druggies that their victims are less likely
- to be armed." Noting that Wisconsin has nearly 1 million licensed
- hunters, Fendry doesn't give the petition a chance. Nor does
- alderman Fredrick Gordon, who represents some of the most dangerous
- streets in the city. "We're not being victimized by people from
- the N.R.A. who use weapons to shoot deer. We're being victimized
- by criminals."
- </p>
- <p> Yet even in deer-hunting country--the Milwaukee Yellow Pages
- lists more than 30 taxidermists--attitudes are shifting. Wisconsin
- passed a mandatory criminal background check on handgun buyers
- in 1991, and Attorney General James Doyle boasts that more than
- 560 convicted felons have already been foiled from legally purchasing
- a weapon. In 1991, after a bitter debate, Milwaukee approved
- a seven-day waiting period to purchase handguns, and last month
- the city council set aside $50,000 for a gun buyback program
- proposed by Police Chief Philip Arreola, whose officers visit
- schools to hand out gun-safety comic books featuring Molly Magnum
- and Shorty Shotgun.
- </p>
- <p> In a Milwaukee Journal poll last April, 65% of city residents
- favored a ban on handguns and assault weapons. "In this climate
- it's actually possible that a handgun ban might pass in Milwaukee,"
- says Mayor John Norquist, a Democrat. "I'll vote for it, even
- though it won't do much." Norquist prefers strict liability
- laws for manufacturers, more gun controls and tougher sentences
- for gun violations. "The Brady bill is an important first step,"
- he says. "I'm encouraged because guns are becoming unfashionable,
- even creepy."
- </p>
- <p> Certainly they are losing some of their luster in Milwaukee.
- Since October local activists have held prayer vigils at the
- sites of recent homicides. Last Thursday more than 500 residents
- gathered for a two-day seminar on youth violence, some sporting
- red anti-handgun buttons. "We have to take steps to stop these
- guns from pouring into our communities," said Attorney General
- Doyle, addressing the crowd. Banners listed the names of youths
- killed in the past four years--kids like Kendra Miles, 15,
- shot in the chest in October, allegedly by a 14-year-old boy
- while standing on her front porch; Monte Fuller, 12, shot in
- the mouth this fall in a drive-by; Charles Brenson, 15, shot
- dead last month after refusing to surrender his ski jacket and
- shoes. Three days after Brenson's death, on Thanksgiving, Torey
- Dyson, 18, was shot in the chest. He collapsed on the sidewalk
- in front of a large peace mural featuring doves, a rainbow and
- a plea for peace in Milwaukee.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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