The Columbus Dispatch

Do tougher laws reduce gun violence?

- By Nicole Lewis

“What we know is that states that have tougher gun laws, that keep criminals from getting guns, that keep those dangerous weapons like AR-15s out of the hands of civilians, have dramatical­ly lower rates of gun violence.” — Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., remarks during an appearance on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Oct. 8

In the wake of the mass shooting in Las Vegas that left 58 people dead and hundreds wounded, congressio­nal leaders have reopened the debate over gun-control legislatio­n.

On one side of the debate, politician­s argue that not only is the right to bear arms protected by the Second Amendment but also that many of the proposed gun policies aren’t effective. On another side of the debate, members of Congress are calling for policies that they argue could prevent mass shootings and keep guns out the wrong hands.

We dig into the dueling claims on gun-control policy. On the surface, this seems like a simple case of cutting through the rhetoric to figure out what the facts tell us about gun control. But the fact of the matter is the evidence on both sides of the debate is murky. Let’s take a look. Gun violence declined nationwide into the 2000s, but the researcher­s “cannot clearly credit the ban with any of the nation’s recent drop in gun violence.” The researcher­s estimated that the effects of the ban “may not be fully felt for several years into the future.” And, “should it be renewed, the ban’s effects on gun violence are likely to be small at best and perhaps too small for reliable measuremen­t.” The ban was not renewed.

Murphy cities several studies addressing the connection between gun laws and gun violence. One of the studies from Johns Hopkins evaluates the impact of Missouri’s repeal of a “permit-to-purchase” law in 2007. The repeal was associated with a 23 percent increase in annual firearm-related homicides. The researcher­s concluded that repealing the law “was associated with an additional 55 to 63 murders per year in Missouri between 2008 and 2012 than would have been forecasted had the PTP handgun law not been repealed.”

The study runs into several problems. First, it doesn’t make Murphy’s claim. The study shows that repealing a law led to increased gun violence, not that tougher laws reduced gun violence. Second, it still focuses on a law change in a single state. When we evaluated a claim by Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., that gun laws don’t work, criminolog­ist Gary Kleck pointed out that using a single state opens the door for cherry-picking the data to fit the agenda. And third, it is hard to control for all the variables that could have produced the observed changes, said gun-rights advocate John R. Lott Jr.

Here’s the kicker: The researcher­s caution that passing PTP laws “may not result in as immediate and large a reduction in firearm homicides as occurred in reverse when Missouri’s law was repealed.” Moreover, they don’t know how their findings could be generalize­d to other states.

The rest of the studies cited by Murphy’s spokespers­on address suicides and gun-traffickin­g. Regular readers of the Fact Checker may remember we awarded President Barack Obama Two Pinocchios for making a similar claim in 2015 about gun deaths. Obama’s statements were based on a chart published in the National Journal titled, “The States With the Most Gun Laws See the Fewest Gun-Related Deaths.”

We crunched the numbers to see what happens when suicides are removed from the total number of gun deaths. And in many cases, the results changed, sometimes dramatical­ly. That’s because most gun deaths, nearly 60 percent, are suicides.

There are some guncontrol policies that appear to be effective in reducing violence. In October 2016, Kleck co-published a study in Criminal Justice Review addressing the connection between 19 different guncontrol laws and violent crime in roughly 1,000 U.S. cities. Kleck found that “gun control laws generally show no evidence of effects on crime rates, possibly because gun levels do not have a net positive effect on violence rates.” But there were a few exceptions. Requiring a license to possess a gun and bans on gun purchases by alcoholics appeared to reduce the homicide and robbery rate.

The Pinocchio Test

After each mass shooting, politician­s argue over gun-control policy, with one side focused on how to prevent the next shooting and the other asserting that gun ownership is a constituti­onal right and that most gun laws don’t work. The best evidence available doesn’t lend much support for either side of the debate. Neverthele­ss, politician­s can only work with the informatio­n they have available. And the reality is, as Kleck points out: “We make policy on the basis of incomplete and imperfect informatio­n.”

The best data available show gun permits and restricted sales slightly reduce homicides and robberies. Still, there is no evidence that tough laws “dramatical­ly reduce” gun violence, as Murphy claims. He exaggerate­s the little evidence that lends just a hint of support for his side of the gun debate. For this we award him Three Pinocchios.

 ?? [RYAN STONE/THE NEW YORK TIMES] ?? Continuing mass killings and the gun control debate have done little to stem the popularity of the AR-15, a civilian version of the military’s M-16 without the capacity to fire in automatic bursts.
[RYAN STONE/THE NEW YORK TIMES] Continuing mass killings and the gun control debate have done little to stem the popularity of the AR-15, a civilian version of the military’s M-16 without the capacity to fire in automatic bursts.

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