Reforms to the sales practices of a gun store--which prior to May 1999, sold more than half of the guns recovered from criminals in the Milwaukee--resulted in a 44 percent decrease in the flow of new guns to criminals in the city, according to a new study from researchers with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health's Center for Gun Policy and Research. The study appears in the September/October 2006 issue of The New York Academy of Medicine's Journal of Urban Health.
In May 1999, a highly-publicized government study revealed that a Milwaukee-area gun shop was the nation's leading seller of guns that were later recovered from criminals. Two days after the study was publicized, the dealer announced that his store would no longer sell small, inexpensive handguns, sometimes known as Saturday Night Specials, that are commonly used in crime.
In the Hopkins study, researchers tracked the number of guns that police recovered from criminals within one year of retail sale. This unusually short sale-to-crime interval is considered an indicator of illegal gun trafficking. The store's change in sales policy was associated with a 96 percent decrease in the number of small, inexpensive handguns that were recovered from criminals in Milwaukee that were recently sold by the store. There was also a 42 percent reduction in other types of guns sold by the gun dealer and soon recovered from a criminal. The reductions in Milwaukee occurred abruptly after the change in the dealer's sales practice and appear to be directly attributable to those reforms--a finding supported by the fact that the study authors saw no change in gun trafficking in three comparison cities in the Midwest.
Daniel Webster, ScD, MPH, lead author of the study and co-director of the Johns Hopkins's Center for Gun Policy and Research, said, "There is a long-standing and contentious debate about whether licensed gun dealers play a role in illegal trafficking. Our study shows th
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Contact: Kenna L. Lowe
paffairs@jhsph.edu
410-955-6878
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health
27-Sep-2006