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Gun Accidents (From Gun Control Debate, P 300-303, 1990, Lee Nisbet, ed. -- See NCJ-127634)

NCJ Number
127650
Author(s)
D B Kates Jr
Date Published
1990
Length
4 pages
Annotation
Usually grossly exaggerated, the identifiable handgun accident average for children was 10 to 15 accidental fatalities per year for children under age 5 and 50 to 55 yearly for children under age 15.
Abstract
Although it is a terrible tragedy when a child dies in an accident, that does not justify falsifying statistics to concoct an argument for banning handguns. Fatal gun accidents are largely attributable to gun possession among the same kinds of irresponsible aberrant adults who commit murders. When compared to cars (which take 190 times as many lives), handguns are simple mechanisms that are entirely safe for any owner who is responsible enough to observe elementary precautions. Empirical studies show that a gun becomes involved in a fatal accident through misuse. Unlike the average gun owner, those who cause such accidents are disproportionately involved in other accidents, violent crime, and heavy drinking. If their backgrounds of serious felonies, substance abuse, automobile and other dangerous accidents are examined, the question about these reckless or irresponsible people is not whether they will kill themselves or others, but when. Indeed, a large portion of child gun accidents may be attributable to those irresponsible people who leave loaded guns unsecured. 11 notes