-Caveat Lector-

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Date: Wed, 14 Mar 2001 08:16:22 -0500
From: "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Gunsafe members <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: School murderers

For the (anti-gun) Christian Science Monitor, this is a relatively balanced piece.
 It covers a lot more than guns.

http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/2001/03/12/fp1s3-csm.shtml

Headline:  Where school shooters get their guns
Byline:  Daniel B. Wood
Date: 03/12/2001

(LOS ANGELES ) Eleven-year-old Andrew Golden stole seven guns from his grandfather
before opening fire on classmates outside Westside Middle School in
Jonesboro, Ark., in 1998.

Fifteen-year-old T.J. Solomon broke into a locked case and used his
stepfather's hunting rifles to shoot six schoolmates in Conyers, Ga.,
in 1999.

A 6-year-old who shot a first-grader a little over a year ago in Mount
Morris Township, Mich., found the loaded semiautomatic lying under a
blanket in the house where he was staying.

As the number of school shootings continues to grow, topped by last
week's tragedy in San Diego, several patterns have emerged: The
shooters were often bullied. Many told classmates about their plans
ahead of time. And - as in the case of alleged 15-year-old shooter Andy
Williams - the vast majority got their guns from their own homes or
that of a relative.

As a result, new questions are being raised about the presence of
firearms in the home, and the potential moral and legal liability of
parents when their kids use those guns to kill.

"We are a society in love with our guns," says Robert Meyers, a
professor of anthropology and public health at Alfred University in New
York. "We need to get a grip on how we are socializing our children
into that, as well as examine what are the responsibilities of parents
in restricting access to weapons in the home."

Kids' access to firearms is one of the factors examined in a study of
school shootings by the US Secret Service National Threat Assessment
Center (NTAC). According to the survey, two-thirds of the 41 students
involved in 37 school-shooting incidents since 1974 got their guns from
their own home or that of a relative. In some cases, the guns had been
gifts to the attackers from their own parents.



Statistics of gun ownership

The sheer statistics of gun ownership in America are staggering. The
Coalition to Stop Gun Violence estimates there are 192 million guns in
private hands (65 million handguns, 49 million shotguns, 70 million
rifles), of which handguns account for 80 percent of all firearm
homicides.

The guns are not evenly distributed. Fewer than 10 million individuals
own well over half the total figure, with 34 percent of gun owners
possessing four or more firearms.

But to many, the issue of how those guns are kept is far more sobering.

The American Journal of Public Health last summer said 43 percent of
American homes with both guns and children had at least one unlocked
firearm - a gun that was not locked away or had no trigger lock. And
nearly 10 percent of all gun owners keep their firearms unlocked and
loaded.

Thus, a total of 13 percent of American homes with children and guns
(1.4 million homes with 2.6 million children) store firearms in a
manner accessible to children.

"What has changed in America is availability of guns," says Laurence
Steinberg, a criminologist at Temple University in Philadelphia. "In
earlier generations, the same sets of problems leading youths to commit
these atrocious killings would lead to fist or knife fights. Now they
have access to handguns and automatic weapons so the crimes they commit
have escalated out of control."



Changes in society

But to blame school shootings on the easy accessibility of guns is to
ignore a whole range of societal factors that led the perpetrators to
act out in the first place, say others. And in many cases, the shooters
might have found a way to obtain a weapon, regardless of whether their
parents had one in the home.

Gun groups such as the National Rifle Association (NRA) hold that
changes in society are responsible for the increase in such events over
earlier decades.

"There are more laws on the books today restricting the use and
availability of firearms than 10 and 20 years ago, and yet such
shooting incidents are happening that were unheard of then," says Trish
Gregory, spokeswoman for the NRA. Fifteen states, including California,
require firearms in the home to be locked away, she says, but despite
these laws, the number of homicides by young people has continued to
grow.

In the past, "it was common in several states for kids to carry rifles
and handguns on the school bus for use in target practice after
school," says Ms. Gregory. "We think there has been a change in the
moral fiber of youth that is leading to this."

But the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence charges that the availability of
guns is a clear factor. Handguns in the home increase the likelihood of
suicide by a factor of five, says spokesman Desmond Riley, and increase
the likelihood of homicide threefold.

"The events of San Diego and other recent school shootings prove this,"
says Mr. Riley.

Still, the authors of the Secret Service study, as well as many leading
experts, say the issue is more complex. They say a whole host of
factors from societal mores and community values to family life and
entertainment make drawing any conclusions difficult.

"You can find isolated cases to support every cause and position on gun
ownership and availability," says Dewey Cornell, a professor at the
University of Virginia in Charlottesville. "In addition to issues of
access is how our culture values guns as an instrument of power in
movies, entertainment, and video - so much so that they are overvalued
as a tool by 13- to 15-year-olds who have seen them as a method to
solve problems as long as they can remember."



The bullying factor

Helen Smith, a forensic criminologist in Tennessee who works with
juveniles in court and has written a book on adolescent violence, says
what makes kids kill has nothing to do with the availability of
weapons, but rather, is the result of exposure to ridicule, and
emotional cruelty.

"Kids that have been pushed beyond the brink will go ahead and make the
effort to find whatever weapons they need to carry out their plan," she
says.

Ms. Smith's observation is supported by some of the evidence of the
NTAC study. The survey looked only at incidents of school attacks in
which the school was deliberately chosen as a location important to the
shooter, rather than incidents that arbitrarily happened at a school.

"A lot of the post-mortem analyses by press and experts is that these
events are caused at the last minute by kids who just snapped and
happened to have weapons," says Marissa Reddy, co-author of the study.
"But our analysis shows they didn't just wake up one morning and say,
'I am going to take a gun and shoot someone today.' Most had plans for
many days, others planned for weeks, months even years."



Relations with parents

Beyond the simple availability of guns, say many experts, it is a
meaningful relationship with adults or family that is more important in
determining the inappropriate use of firearms.

"There are bad parental relationships running through all these
episodes," says Dave Kopel, director of the Independence Institute in
Golden, Co.

"When you find parents who are involved in what their kids are up to,
it becomes not about who knows how to shoot, who doesn't, who has
access, who doesn't, who is socialized into guns or not - it becomes
about what it should be: who has a sense of proportion, who has
conquered their sense of hatred of others, who has developed
tolerance," he says. "Parental responsibility is at the core of this."


(c) Copyright 2001 The Christian Science Monitor.  All rights reserved.

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