From:   Rusty�Bullethole, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

One in three young criminals is armed 
Government research shows use of guns is on the rise and
gangster films are blamed for making it seem 'cool'

Tony Thompson
Sunday September 3, 2000
The Observer 

One in three criminals under the age of 25 owns or has access
to a firearm, the Government's researchers have discovered. 

A continuing parliamentary inquiry into the growing number of
black market weapons has concluded that there are more than
three million illegally held firearms in circulation - double
the number believed to have been held 10 years ago - and that
criminals are more willing than ever to use them. 

The events of the past week have provided sobering evidence of
how deeply ingrained Britain's new gun culture has become. 

Officers patrolling the Notting Hill carnival last month said
they had been prevented from searching a suspect, later found
to be carrying a loaded 9mm pistol, for fear of inciting violence.
Last Monday, doormen trying to break up a fight at the Epping
Forest Country Club in Essex watched in horror as several
revellers produced guns and began shooting at them. Two doormen
were hit and seriously injured. A few hours later, a man was shot
in the head during a 'road rage' row in south London. 

Last Tuesday, three people were left fighting for their lives
after a group of young Rolex robbers ambushed them in the driveway
of their luxury home in Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire. Millionaire Joe
Martorana had just stepped out of his BMW when two men snatched
the Rolex from his wrist. 

When his wife, Josephine, tried to raise the alarm, she was shot
once in the back by a handgun. As she lay bleeding, the gunmen
snatched her Rolex. The couple's son, 18-year-old Steven, and his
girlfriend, Isabella, had heard the shot from inside the house.
They rushed through the front door to confront the robbers who
gunned them down. Steven was hit by a bullet in his chest, and
Isabella was shot in the stomach. A few hours later, a 28-year-old
man was seriously injured after being shot at a London nightclub. 

Last Wednesday, Essex builder Ronald Fuller was shot dead by a
moped-riding gunman who waited near his home. Fuller, who has a
child, was shot twice in the head and twice in the body at
point-blank range. Fuller had been acquitted of stabbing a man
to death at the Epping Forest Country Club. Police have not ruled
out a link between his murder and the violence at the club. 

Between 1997 and 1999 there were 429 murders in the capital, the
highest two-year figure for more than 10 years. At least 100 of
them were drug-related; nearly two-thirds of those involved
firearms. Dozens of other firearms incidents resulted in people
being seriously injured. Last month eight people were wounded
when a gunman began shooting indiscriminately outside Chicago's
nightclub in Peckham High Street. 

The picture is the same across the country. Last month a small-time
cannabis dealer, Paul Rogers, was shot dead in front of his young
son after two gunmen burst into his Liverpool home. In Birmingham
and Manchester, police attend more than 100 firearms incidents
every month. In Wales, armed police have been called into action
every day this year. 

Detectives say modern weapons are increasingly being held by young
drug dealers protecting themselves and their territory. They fear
many youngsters are being strongly influenced by the rash of
British crime movies such as Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels
and its newly released follow-up, Snatch, which have made
gangsters chic. 

Small shopkeepers, who in the past have found themselves threatened
with iron bars, baseball bats or knives, are increasingly finding
themselves facing handguns or even automatic weapons. A study by
Independent Retail News shows that a third of all attacks now
involve firearms. 

Lee Jasper, who advises the London Mayor, Ken Livingstone, on
matters of race and policing, believes that, whereas guns were
once reserved for the criminal �lite, they are increasingly falling
into the hands of younger, less experienced criminals. 

'We have a culture developed where people think it is very cool
to carry a gun, and are prepared to use it at the drop of a hat.
The crime has moved on from just protecting your market and your
market share to doling out punishment and intimidation. And the
gun is the first resort - the weapon of choice - for settling
arguments.' 

Government researchers are hoping to track the source of black
market weapons to devise more effective ways of combating the
trade. 

Controls such as the banning of handguns after the Dunblane
tragedy have had no effect on the number of illegally held
guns that are smuggled into the country, supplied by corrupt
dealers or reactivated from supposedly decommissioned stock. 

Meanwhile, makers of bullet-proof vests are reporting record
profits. Vest sales have quadrupled, with 60,000 snapped up
in the past two years at about L400 a time. 

------

I just don't believe the 1 in 3 bit - how are they classifying
firearms? - replica's and airguns included I bet.

Here's the Observer's link to its special report on gun violence:

http://www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/gun/

Rusty


Cybershooters website: http://www.cybershooters.org

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