Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Update on gun fact-checks

- D.L. Davis and Tom Kertscher

As another community mourns the victims of the latest mass shooting in the United States — this one Nov. 7 at a bar in Thousand Oaks, California, that left 12 dead — the nation’s attention again turns to the issue of guns.

According to NBC News, the Thousand Oaks attack is the 12th mass shooting since an Oct. 27 deadly assault at a Pittsburgh synagogue that left 11 people dead. Based on data from the Gun Violence Archive, NBC compiled a listing of mass shootings, defined as “an incident with four or more victims shot.” The tally is 79 shot, with 23 deaths:

1. Nov. 7: Thousand Oaks, California, 23 shot and 13 deaths

2. Nov. 3: Watertown, New York, 5 shot and 0 deaths

3. Nov. 2: Long Beach, California, 4 shot and 0 deaths

4. Nov. 2 Tallahasse­e, Florida, 8 shot and 3 deaths

5. Nov. 1: Springfiel­d, Missouri, 4 shot and 2 deaths

6. Nov. 1: Minneapoli­s, 5 shot and 0 deaths

7. Oct. 31: Detroit, 4 shot and 1 death

8. Oct. 30: Vallejo, California, 5 shot and 2 deaths

9. Oct. 30: Los Angeles, 5 shot and 0 deaths

10. Oct. 29: Riverside, California, 7 shot and 0 deaths

11. Oct. 28: El Dorado, Arkansas, 4 shot and 2 deaths

12. Oct. 27: Memphis, Tennessee, 5 shot and 0 deaths

Wisconsin has seen its share of mass shootings, including 2012 rampage at Oak Creek’s Sikh temple that left seven people dead and Azana Spa in Brookfield where three women were killed.

Following a shooting at a Middleton software company Sept. 19 that left four people wounded and the gunman dead, PolitiFact Wisconsin reported on “What we know about guns” based on factchecks.

Here are things we know about guns

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You can watch PolitiFact Wisconsin segments on Wednesday and Friday evenings during the TODAY’S TMJ 4 Live at 6 newscast.

based on five fact checks we’ve done in 2018:

Guns more likely to be used to assault friend, relative or acquaintan­ce.

In the Democratic primary campaign for governor, Madison Mayor Paul Soglin said: “If there is a firearm available, it is 17 times more likely to be used either for suicide or for assaulting a friend, relative, an acquaintan­ce than it is to be used in fending off an intruder.”

Our rating was Half True. Soglin was on point in stating that a gun is much more likely to be used for a suicide, assault or homicide than used in self-defense but was on less-solid ground when it comes to stating exactly how many times more likely. That depends on the study, many of which do not differenti­ate between known and unknown victims.

Paul Ryan played a role in blocking some but not all action to strengthen gun laws.

Giffords PAC, which fights gun violence, attacked the U.S. House speaker by claiming he “has blocked all action to strengthen our gun laws.”

Our rating was Mostly False.

The political action committee cited a dozen gun-control measures that didn’t get to a vote in the House under Ryan. So, it’s clear he did not move to bring those measures to the floor. But that’s not the same as the Janesville Republican himself blocking the measures, given that other lawmakers, such as committee chairs, also have such power.

Clarifying how often guns are sold without background checks.

While visiting Milwaukee to raise money for Wisconsin Democrats, Montana Gov. Steve Bullock — a possible contender for president in 2020 — declared: “A quarter of our guns are sold outside of the background checks.” Our rating was Mostly False.

The latest study that surveyed gun owners on the topic found that among gun owners who had acquired a gun in some way within the previous two years 22 percent had done so without a background check. But that takes into account people who acquired guns either by purchasing them or by simply receiving them, for example, as a gift.

Support for universal background checks is nearly universal.

U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., said 97 percent of gun owners support universal background checks.

Our rating was Mostly True.

The figure was correct for the latest national poll that asked about requiring background checks for all gun purchases. The only clarificat­ion was that the respondent­s weren’t all necessaril­y gun owners but rather lived in a household where they or someone else own a gun.

A mixed bag when it comes to laws aimed at preventing people with mental illness from getting guns.

Ryan said the nation has “laws on the books designed to prevent people with mental illnesses from getting firearms.” Our rating was Half True.

A federal law, and some state laws, do prohibit people adjudicate­d as “mentally defective” or involuntar­ily committed to a mental health facility from possessing a gun. But experts said that standard includes people who do not pose a danger to others. And it does not account for a larger set of people who might be dangerous but have not been diagnosed with, or treated for, a mental illness.

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