September 26, 2010 | Associated Press
WASHINGTON – Nearly half of the guns that crossed state
lines and were used in crimes in 2009 were sold in just 10 states, according to
a report being released Monday by a mayors' group.
Those states accounted for nearly 21,000 guns connected to
crimes in other states, said the survey by Mayors Against Illegal Guns, an
association of more than 500 mayors led by New
York's Michael Bloomberg and Boston's Thomas Menino.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
traced more than 145,000 guns used in crimes in 2009 and found that more than
43,000 of those weapons were sold in other states.
Forty-nine percent of those guns were sold in
Georgia, Florida, Virginia,
Texas, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, North
Carolina, California or Arizona.
States were also ranked by the number of crime guns
exported per 100,000 inhabitants. Mississippi
led that list, followed by West Virginia,
Kentucky, Alaska, Alabama,
South Carolina, Virginia, Indiana,
Nevada and Georgia.
Those states, the report said, have more relaxed gun laws,
suggesting that "criminals and gun traffickers may favor certain states as the
sources of guns."
For example, in states that do not require background
checks for handgun sales at gun shows, the crime-gun export rate was
two-and-a-half times as much as the rate in states that do require such
checks.