Austin American-Statesman

Mostly True:

Approximat­ely 63% of fatalities were suicides in 2013, according to CDC.

- By W. Gardner Selby wgselby@statesman.com

PolitiFact checks a statement by Hillary Clinton about the daily death toll from gun violence.

Rallying supporters in San Antonio, Hillary Clinton said that she’s running for president in part “to protect our families and communitie­s from the plague of gun violence.”

Clinton went on: “Look, you know, we lose an average of 90 Americans every day because of guns.” Is that so? A check of Clinton’s 90 gun deaths by FactCheck.org, based at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, found that while Clinton’s figure held up for 2013, the last year of available data, it is worth noting that only one- third of firearm deaths consisted of homicides; most other gun deaths counted as suicides.

At least once in talking about this subject, Clinton has clarified her figure by mentioning suicides; according to an Oct. 7 post on her campaign website, she said in Muscatine, Iowa: “We lose between 88 and 92 Americans a day from gun violence — homicides, suicides and accidents — and we have to act.” Let’s go to the numbers. According to the most recent figures from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 33,636 U.S. firearm deaths were recorded in 2013 — or 92 a day, on average. About 63 percent of that year’s firearm deaths, or 21,175, were suicides, with 11,208 considered homicides and the rest classified as unintentio­nal discharges (505), legal interventi­on/war (467) and undetermin­ed (281).

We confirmed those figures and checked the numbers for the four previous years (200912), finding a five-year average of 89 firearm deaths a day. For each year, too, suicides by firearm accounted for far more deaths than homicides by firearm.

Next, we reached out to the CDC, where statistici­an Ken Kochanek said the 2013 figures remain the latest available. Kochanek drew on the agency’s statistics to create a document showing that the rate of U.S. deaths by firearm in 2013, roughly 10.6 per 100,000 residents, exceeded the rate of 10.4 per 100,000 residents for 1999 through 2013. The 15-year high was set in 2012 — 10.7 per 100,000 residents. The 15-year low was set in 2004 — 10.1 firearm deaths per 100,000 residents.

Asked to focus on homicides

by firearm, Kochanek emailed a document indicating the 2013 rate of 3.5 homicides by firearm per 100,000 residents was less than the 3.9 homicides by firearm per 100,000 residents over the 15-year period.

Over those years, the highest rate, of 4.3 homicides by firearm per 100,000 residents, was set in 2006 and the lowest rate, 3.6 homicides by firearm per 100,000 residents was set in two years, 2010 and 2011.

Our ruling

Clinton said: “We lose an average of 90 Americans every day because of guns.”

That’s about right. But it leaves unsaid that the bulk of those deaths are suicides, not homicides. Also, in 2013, the latest year of available data, the rate of homicides by firearm was lower than the rate for 1999 through 2013.

We rate this statement Mostly True.

 ?? Statement:“We ?? HILLARY CLINTON lose an average of 90 Americans every day because of guns.”
Statement:“We HILLARY CLINTON lose an average of 90 Americans every day because of guns.”

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