The Arizona Republic

Justice is uneven when kids die in gun accidents

- Nick Penzenstad­ler and Ryan Foley and Larry Fenn

USA TODAY The Associated Press DURHAM, N.C. Amy Pittman learned on her first day in jail to bottle up her grief.

As soon as she arrived, guards took her shoelaces so she wouldn’t try to hang herself. Cry too much or scream too loud and she feared they would come back to take everything she had left — her clothes, a sheet, a plastic spork.

But how could she not? How could anyone? Ten weeks before, Pittman was a single mom who worked overnight shifts as a gas station cashier to keep her three kids fed and clothed.

Now, alone in a cinderbloc­k cell, she faced criminal charges for not doing enough to protect them. She pictured her youngest, Christian, 9, in his casket. Blue shirt neatly tucked. Cold to the touch. Dead at the hands of his 12-year-old brother, who had accidental­ly shot him in the back.

“Five minutes can change your whole life,” said Pittman, 38. “I wish every day that I would have stayed home.”

Children under age 12 die from gun accidents in the United States about once a week, on average. Almost every death begins with the same basic circumstan­ces: an unsecured and loaded gun, a guardian’s lapse in attention. And

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