New York Post

Gun sales surge in NY

June checks up 121%

- By SARA DORN

New Yorkers are arming themselves at a record pace.

They bought more guns this June than any other June in the past decade, data show. The FBI ran 52,252 background checks for people seeking to buy firearms in the state, a 121 percent increase from June 2019. Most, or 31,003 background checks, were for people seeking to buy a rifle. Handguns accounted for 11,585 background checks in June this year.

Researcher­s at the University of California Davis estimate that an extra 2.1 million guns sold nationwide between March and May this year are linked to 776 gun-related injuries that would not have occurred without the sales spike.

“During the coronaviru­s pandemic, an acute increase in firearm access is associated with an increase in firearm violence,” the researcher­s wrote.

A second study, by the Brookings Institutio­n, suggests there are 3 million extra guns on the streets as a result of the pandemic and protests in the wake of George Floyd’s killing.

Nationally, the number of gun buys increased 64 percent between March and May, compared to previous years, the UC Davis team found in the study released last month. It examined FBI background checks for firearm purchases in 48 states and correlated them with gun violence.

Cliff Pfleger, owner of Long Island Gun Source, said the Medford store has been so busy he sold six to nine months’ worth of inventory in just a two-month period. Pfleger closed the store briefly after the state shuttered businesses in mid-March, but he was able to secure essential business status andre opened about a week later.

“When the original COVID scare started in the beginning of March and people thought they might get laid off, at that point we saw a huge surge. We sold out of almost everything we had in the store,” he said, noting many firsttime gun buyers opt to buy rifles in order to bypass the license needed for handguns.

“We had lines continuous­ly, even though we didn’t have things to sell,” Pfleger said. “The people who are coming to the store, a lot of them were firsttime firearm purchasers, and they obviously did not apply or have a handgun license.”

At the same time gun purchases soared, so did shootings. New York saw 205 shootings in June — the bloodiest June in 24 years.

 ??  ?? ARMED: Owner Irene Vignola (right) shows customer Christophe­r Giannetti weapons at Rockland Indoor Shooting and Education in Pearl River. Gun sales are burgeoning across the country.
ARMED: Owner Irene Vignola (right) shows customer Christophe­r Giannetti weapons at Rockland Indoor Shooting and Education in Pearl River. Gun sales are burgeoning across the country.

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