From:   Thomas A Chandler, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

NEWS RELEASE 
For Immediate Release August 9, 2000   
Texas' Concealed Carry Law Works, Says NCPA Report 
 

DALLAS (August 9, 2000) - A recent report from the National Center for
Policy Analysis (NCPA) shows that Texans with concealed carry permits are
far less likely to commit a serious crime than the average citizen. This
report counters the claims made in the Violence Policy Center's study
"License to Kill III," released today. 

"Many predicted that minor incidents would escalate into bloody shoot
outs if Texas passed a concealed-carry law," said H. Sterling Burnett, a
senior policy analyst at the NCPA and the author of the report. "That
prediction was dead wrong." 

In 1995, Texas Gov. George W. Bush signed a law granting Texans the right
to carry concealed firearms. This made Texas the 23 state to pass a
concealed carry law since 1986. 

According to the report, the slightly more than 200,000 Texans who have
become licensed to carry a concealed firearm are much more law-abiding
than the average person. Comparing arrest rates for example: 


Texans who exercise their right to carry firearms are 5.7 times less
likely to be arrested for a violent offense. 

They are 14 times less likely to be arrested for a non-violent offense. 

They are 1.4 times less likely to be arrested for murder. 
Moreover, of the six licensees who were arrested and tried for murder or
non-negligent manslaughter, four were found not guilty because they had
acted in self-defense. 

The right to carry may also be affecting Texas' crime rate in a positive
way. Texas had a serious crime rate in the early 1990s that was 38
percent higher than the national average. 


Since then, serious crime in Texas has dropped 50 percent faster than for
the nation as a whole. 

Murder rates have dropped 52 percent, compared to 33 percent nationally. 

Rapes have fallen by 22 percent compared to 16 percent nationally. 
This experience is consistent with the experience of other states with
concealed carry laws. According to University of Chicago law professor
John Lott, concealed handgun laws on average reduce murder by 8.5
percent, rape by 5 percent and severe assault by 7 percent. 

"Far from recreating the Wild West, concealed carry laws create a safer
society," said Burnett. "The law allows law-abiding citizens to protect
themselves." 



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The NCPA is a research and educational organization operating under
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. All contributions are tax
deductible. We depend entirely on the financial support of individuals,
corporations and foundations that believe in private sector solutions to
public policy problems. We accept no government grants or contracts. 


For more information: 
Sean Tuffnell, Dallas, TX 972-386-6272
Joan Kirby, Washington, DC 202-628-6671
Internet: http://www.ncpa.org  

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

List admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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