-Caveat Lector-

RevCOAL wrote:
>
> -Caveat Lector-
>
> Interestingly, whomever wrote the article doesn't seem to get the
> connection between the two events...  :-7
>
> June

More interesting is how anyone can get meaningful crime statistics in
just 4 days.

J2
>
> =======================================================================
>
> The Connecticut Post, 9/16/01, p. A8
>
> Hartford (AP) --
>
> The terrorist attacks that hit home this week have gun sales up and crime
> down in the state.
>
> John Kilburn, an assistant professor of criminology and sociology at
> Eastern Connecticut State University noted that crime rates went down
> during World War II.
>
> "Our aggressions are no longer on our neighbors, our partners or the guy
> next to us at the bar," said Kilburn.
>
> In Hartford, which had been coping with one of its highest homicide rates
> in years, criminal activity is drastically down, said police Capt. Mark
> Pawlina.
>
> "The whole mood on the street is very subdued, even among the drug
> dealers and criminal element," Pawlina said.
>
> Windham Heights, a housing project in Windham and frequent target of a
> special drug task force, had American flags hanging from the sills or
> from car antennas.
>
> "I drove around the Heights yesterday, and you could have heard a pin
> drop," said police Sgt. Stephen Ostroski.
>
> In the state's largest city, Bridgeport, Sgt. Raymond Masek said there
> was "an almost eerie calm over the city."
>
> :It's been exceptionally quiet," Masek said.  "The patriotism is
> incredible, and I just think everyone is inside watching CNN.  There are
> less people on the streets at night."
>
> While the criminal element seems to be taking some time off, other people
> seem to be taking their own defense initiatives and buying guns.
>
> There have been reports of increased gun sales in parts of the state.
>
> "People are buying guns and ammunition because they are scared," said
> Scott Hoffman, owner of Hoffman's Gun Center in Newington.
>
> Hoffman reported selling four times as many guns since the terrorist
> attack on New York and the Pentagon.
>
> Many of the people who are buying guns now are those who would not
> normally buy a gun in the past, Hoffman said, such as lawyers and
> doctors.
>
> "People are worried about shortages," said Lawrence Irving, owner of
> Newington Gun Exchange.  Irvine said his gun sales have doubled while his
> ammunition sales have tripled.
>
> ---

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