In America’s endless debate about gun rights versus public safety, there should be no disputing the hard facts in a new report
on gunshot fatalities showing that at least 722 nonself-defense deaths
since 2007 were attributable to individuals with legal permits to carry
concealed weapons. Concealed carry by citizens has been a soaring
phenomenon as states liberalize laws in the name of lowering crime that
allow more permits and easier gun access in public places, even schools,
churches and restaurants.
There
is no central tally of the effects, with states often barring release
of concealed-carry data and Congress hewing to the gun lobby’s
opposition to research on guns’ effects on public health. But a
methodical gleaning of eight years of news accounts by the Violence
Policy Center, a gun safety group, found that in research involving 722
deaths in 544 concealed-carry shootings in 36 states and the District of
Columbia, only 16 cases were eventually ruled lawful self-defense —
even though this has been a major gun rights selling point for the new
laws.
More
gravely, the study found that the fatalities included 17 law
enforcement officers shot by people with legal permits along with 705
slain civilians. There were 28 mass shootings (involving three or more
victims) in which 136 people were killed — even though concealed carry
has also been sold as a defense against massacres like the one in
Newtown, Conn.
In
studying the 544 shootings, the center found 177 cases where people
with gun licenses were ultimately convicted of crimes, including
homicides, and 218 cases where the permit holder used the gun to commit
suicide. There were 44 total lives taken by licensed individuals who
first murdered others, then committed suicide.
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