Morning Sun

Securing guns safely away from kids must be a priority

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Following the shooting deaths of four people at Oxford High School in Michigan, prosecutor­s have charged the 15-year-old accused gunman's parents, James and Jennifer Crumbley, with involuntar­y manslaught­er. However egregious the couple's actions, there's little legal precedent for punishing parents for gun crimes committed by their children. Strengthen­ing laws that require firearms to be securely stored is a more practical and effective way to prevent such tragedies in the future.

In the case of the Crumbleys, prosecutor­s say that the couple had bought the gun used in the shooting as a present for their son, Ethan, and taught him how to handle it. They minimized warnings from the school about Ethan's increasing­ly threatenin­g behavior. After Ethan was found searching for ammunition on his phone during class, Jennifer Crumbley allegedly told him to “learn not to get caught”; when news of the shooting broke, she texted, “Ethan, don't do it.” After warrants were issued for their arrests, the parents fled before eventually being apprehende­d.

It's impossible to condone such conduct. Even so, convincing a jury that the Crumbleys bear criminal responsibi­lity for those killed may prove difficult. As with cars, young people are prone to behave recklessly with guns, with or without their parents' knowledge. The Crumbleys, who have pleaded not guilty, might plausibly claim that even if they knew their son was troubled, they had no indication he was planning to commit murder.

A more straightfo­rward case could be made that the couple bears responsibi­lity for leaving the firearm accessible and unsecured. Unfortunat­ely, Michigan, along with 16 other states, lacks any law that explicitly holds gun owners accountabl­e when children can or do access an unsecured gun.

Closing this loophole is a matter of national urgency. It would reduce the likelihood not just of school shootings, but also of accidental gun-related deaths, which are far more common. More than half of gun owners acknowledg­e they do not properly store their guns at home. Although 23 states and Washington, D.C., require some form of safe gun storage, stricter and more consistent regulation­s are needed. Gun owners should be required to keep their firearms locked and emptied of ammunition whenever the weapons are out of their immediate control. They should be held liable if children gain access to inadequate­ly secured guns, as is the case in 15 states. At the same time, states and cities should expand programs that educate gun owners on safe storage, particular­ly those conducted by law-enforcemen­t bodies, which are viewed by gun owners as the most credible messengers.

The Michigan tragedy is a troubling indication that school shootings, which dipped in 2020 due to COVID, are rising again. Though the U.S. remains divided on gun laws, the senseless deaths of young people should be intolerabl­e on all sides. Keeping firearms safely secured from children — and encouragin­g parental responsibi­lity — is simply common sense.

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