The Mercury News

Gun deaths surged in pandemic's first year

- By Roni Caryn Rabin and Tim Arango

Gun deaths reached the highest level ever recorded in the United States in 2020, the first year of the pandemic, as gun-related homicides surged by 35%, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Tuesday.

“This is a historic increase, with the rate having reached the highest level in over 25 years,” Dr. Debra E. Houry, acting principal deputy director of the CDC and the director of the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, said at a news briefing.

More than 45,000 Americans died in gun-related incidents as the pandemic spread in the United States, the highest number on record, federal data show. The violence exacted an unpreceden­ted toll in Black communitie­s, and early data suggest the trend continued through last year.

But more than half of gun deaths were suicides, and that number did not substantia­lly increase from 2019 to 2020. The overall rise in gun deaths was 15% in 2020, lower than the percentage increase in gun homicides, the CDC said.

The rise in gun killings was the largest one-year increase seen in modern history, according to Ari Davis, a policy adviser at the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions, which recently released its own analysis of CDC data.

Homicides involving firearms were generally highest, and showed the largest increases, in poor communitie­s, federal researcher­s said. The rise has afflicted cities large and small, and in both blue and red states. In many places, like Los Angeles and Denver, the increases have persisted in 2021, and trends this year so far show no sign of a reversal.

“We have two things together: the trauma of the past two years, and the mental health crisis that came out of this pandemic,” Mayor Eric M. Garcetti of Los Angeles said earlier this year at an event to discuss the city's crime. “Those things have caused us to see more violence.”

Christophe­r Herrmann, an assistant professor in the department of law and police science at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, said he was not surprised by the CDC's analysis but was worried by what it might augur in the coming summer, when there are typically more gun homicides.

“June, July, August are always the biggest shooting months,” he said, adding that most large American cities see about a 30% uptick in shootings and homicides in the summer.

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