By SEANNA ADCOX – Dec. 6, 2008
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — Ten states are responsible for the
bulk of illegal guns that are shipped across state lines for use in crimes,
according to a report released Friday by a national coalition of
mayors.
About 30 percent of guns
traced by federal agents in 2006 and 2007 during crime investigations were
bought in a state other than where the crime occurred, said the report by Mayors
Against Illegal Guns, which largely blamed the transport of illegal guns on
states with lax gun laws.
For 2007, the top sources
for guns used in crimes elsewhere were Georgia, Florida, Texas,
Virginia, California, Ohio,
North Carolina, Indiana, Pennsylvania and
Alabama.
However, the report's
authors placed greater emphasis on per-capita exports of guns, saying that data
is a better indicator of lax gun laws. The gun-friendly South accounted for a
disproportionate amount of the problem when population size was factored in,
according to the report.
West Virginia is the top exporter, per capita, of illegal
guns, with 41 traced guns per 100,000 state residents, followed by Mississippi, at 39 guns per 100,000, and South Carolina, at 31.
The average national rate is 11 exported guns. Kentucky, Alabama, Virginia,
Georgia, Indiana, Nevada, and North Carolina round out the top 10 exporting
states, per capita, reads the report, titled "The Movement of Illegal Guns In
America: The Link between Gun Laws and Interstate
Trafficking."
"States with larger
populations and states with greater gun sales volumes may be expected to be a
source of more crime guns," the report read.
But the report said per
capita rates can "more accurately determine which states are disproportionate
suppliers of interstate crime guns."
A spokesman for New York
Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a co-founder of the mayors' group, said the report is
meant to raise awareness.
"Clearly, a small number of
states are contributing to a very dangerous national problem," said Mark
LaVorgna. "The lack of effort in some states is causing gun crimes in other
states that have strong laws."
Guns bought in Hawaii, the District of
Columbia — which had banned handguns for 30 years — New Jersey and Massachusetts are least likely to be recovered
in a crime elsewhere, the report said…
South Carolina Rep. Mike
Pitts, an ardent gun rights supporter, said the state's high ranking doesn't
surprise him. He recalled a burglary at his home, saying the thief stole about a
dozen of his guns.
"It's not our lax gun laws.
It's our high crime rate that causes the problems," said the Laurens Republican,
a retired police officer and a National Assembly of Sportsmen's Caucuses
committee member. "What's happening is people break into my home, steal my guns
and get a premium price by taking it to other states and selling
them."
LaVorgna scoffed at Pitts'
argument, saying the data is clear, and that break-ins occur in all
states.
The report analyzed five
gun laws, noting that weapons purchased at gun shows — where background checks
on buyers aren't required — could be bought for criminal purposes. Only nine
states and Washington,
D.C., require some form of check
for handgun sales at gun shows.
"This so-called 'gun show
loophole' allows individuals who are prohibited from possessing or purchasing
firearms, such as convicted felons and persons with mental illness, to sidestep
the background check and obtain guns from unlicensed sellers at gun shows," the
report reads.
A spokesman for South
Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, who signed a bill removing the one-a-month limit on
how many handguns a person can buy, said state laws are not the
problem.
"We think we have adequate
controls in place," said Joel Sawyer. "Unfortunately, criminals are always going
to find a way to circumvent the process."
The mayors' group,
co-founded by Bloomberg and Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, is made up of more than
340 mayors from across the country, concentrated in the Northeast, Florida and California.
Their report is based on
data from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, which
traces guns recovered at crime scenes.
It noted that traced guns
don't represent all guns used in crimes because some guns are never recovered
and because some police agencies don't trace every gun found at a crime scene.
It also specifies the ATF often can't determine where a gun came from due to
inaccurate record-keeping by gun makers and retailers. In 2007, 40 percent of
trace attempts were successful. But the report concludes there's no evidence
failed traces distort its findings, since incomplete traces don't vary
substantially between states.