USA TODAY US Edition

Black Friday brings 200,000 FBI gun checks

202,465 background checks signal demand

- Kevin Johnson

Numbers are surging toward one-year record in face of louder calls for restrictio­ns.

WASHINGTON – The FBI fielded more than 200,000 background checks on Black Friday gun purchases, continuing a steady surge this year following a series of mass shootings that have renewed calls for more restrictiv­e gun laws.

In all, the bureau posted 202,465 checks Friday, an 11% increase from last year and falling just short of the single-day record: 203,086 in 2017.

While background checks, required for purchases at federally licensed firearm dealers, are not a measure of actual gun sales, the National Instant Criminal Background Check System is a way to gauge market demand. The number of firearms sold Friday likely is higher because multiple firearms can be included in one transactio­n by a single buyer.

Black Friday traditiona­lly has been one of the busiest for FBI analysts, but this year’s one-day number comes amid rising monthly volumes that are approachin­g the one-year record of 27.5 million in 2016.

Some of the biggest spikes came in August and September after attacks in El Paso and Odessa, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, that left 38 people dead.

Past spikes in background checks have been driven by fears that lawmakers would tighten gun laws.

For the first time since the bureau began conducting checks in 1998, the number of monthly checks has not fallen below 2 million this year.

USA TODAY reported last week that the rising numbers suggest the industry may be emerging from the “Trump slump” that followed the election of the pro-gun president.

In 2016, when the Obama administra­tion sought tougher gun control legislatio­n, the FBI was inundated with requests for background checks. That’s the year the bureau processed a record number of checks.

FBI Director Christophe­r Wray cited increasing background checks in his request this year for 40 new positions and $4.2 million. Some of the money would be used for new equipment.

Gun check numbers need only remain steady for the rest of the year to break the annual record. The FBI recorded nearly 23 million checks through the end of October.

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