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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1993-04-15
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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>