The harder states make it to get guns — like New York — the fewer
people die because of them, a new analysis of firearm restrictions
shows.
States with strict gun laws were found to have a low-number of gun-related deaths, a new study found. |
New York State, with its relatively strict laws — restrictions that are
even tougher in the five boroughs — had 4.2 gun deaths per capita in
2013, the third-fewest number of gun-related deaths nationwide,
according to the National Journal’s study released Monday.
It examined gun-related deaths
of all types — from murders to suicides and accidental shootings — in
the year 2013 and found “while it’s certainly true that a number of
factors contribute to the high rates of gun violence in the U.S., a comparison of state laws versus rates of shooting deaths does show a correlation.”
Hawaii had the lowest number of gun-linked deaths — 2.5 per 100,000
people — in the country in 2013, said the National Journal, a public
policy magazine and website.
The Aloha State also places serious restrictions on gun buyers and owners:
Permits are required to purchase handguns, as are background checks and
a 14-day waiting period. In Hawaii, it is also relatively difficult to
get either a concealed- or open-carry permit, according to the study.
The reverse of all that is generally true of Alaska, which had the
highest rate of gun deaths: 19.8 per 100,000 people in 2013. Alaska
doesn’t require permits or background checks to buy or carry guns, and
there is no waiting period to obtain a firearm.
That same year in Virginia, where gun laws are less restrictive — and
where TV news reporter Alison Parker and videographer Adam Ward were
gunned down while live on air by a deranged ex-colleague last week —
there were 10.2 gun deaths per capita, making it the state with the
19th-fewest gun-related deaths.
Advocates of stronger gun regulations and supporters of Second
Amendment gun ownership rights clashed over the study’s significance.
Gov. Cuomo, who pushed hard to make New York the first state to
strengthen its gun laws after the 2012 Sandy Hook school massacre,
hailed the study, saying it “further illustrates that common-sense gun
laws work.
“It is possible to pass protections to combat senseless gun violence
and prevent needless bloodshed, while also respecting Second Amendment
rights,” Cuomo told the Daily News on Monday.
“We did it in New York, and it’s well past time for Washington to do the same.”
Some of National Journal’s findings aligned with research conducted by
the nonprofit group Everytown for Gun Safety, which shows states with
background checks have fewer gun-related domestic violence murders,
homicides of law enforcement officials and suicides.
“Lives are on the line, and we need both Congress and state political
leaders across the country to fix the lax gun laws that are contributing
to the gun violence that we see every day,” Everytown’s Erika Soto Lamb
said.
The National Rifle Association said it had not examined the study and would not comment.
Alan Gottlieb of the Washington State-based Second Amendment Foundation
said politicians often cry out for tougher gun regulations in the wake
of heinous murders, such as the killings in Virginia or in a church in
Charleston, S.C.
But “I don’t know of a proposal that anyone has on the table that would have prevented any of these tragedies,” he said.
Gottlieb said law-abiding gun owners are the ones who feel targeted by — and yet obey — stronger regulations, not crooks.
“Criminals don’t obey laws. That’s why they’re known as criminals,” he said.
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