According to the Washington Post, by almost every measure, 2021 has already been a terrible year for gun violence. Many fear it will get worse. Last weekend alone, more than 120 people died in shootings, according to the Gun Violence Archive, with three especially dangerous incidents in Austin, Chicago and Savannah, Ga., killing two and injuring at least 30.
Through the first five months of 2021, gunfire killed more
than 8,100 people in the United States, about 54 lives lost per day, according
to a Washington Post analysis of data from the Gun Violence
Archive, a nonprofit research organization. That’s 14 more deaths per day
than the average toll during the same period of the previous six years.
This year, the number of casualties, along with the overall
number of shootings that have killed or injured at least one person, exceeds
those of the first five months of 2020, which finished as the
deadliest year of gun violence in at least two decades.
From 2015-2019, about 40 people per day were killed in
incidents of gun violence. 2020 saw a huge increase in gun deaths
compared with previous years, and 2021 is trending even higher.
Experts have attributed the increase to a variety of new and
long-standing issues — including entrenched inequality, soaring gun ownership,
and fraying relations between police and the communities they serve — all
intensified during the coronavirus pandemic
and widespread uprisings for racial justice. The violence, its causes
and its solutions have sparked wide-ranging and fierce policy debates.
The Post’s analysis found an increase in shootings during
summers, especially last year, echoing a trend that law enforcement officials and
gun violence researchers have warned about for years. With the weather warming,
school letting out and virus-related restrictions falling away, leaders are
worrying about a deadlier season than usual.
“I’m scared to death of the summer, I’ll be real honest,”
said Mark Bryant, the Gun Violence Archive’s founder. “I expect this to be a
record year.”
Gunfire deaths began to rise in April 2020, when covid-19
shut down much of the country, in-person schooling was paused and more
than 20 million people lost their jobs. Gun violence — like the coronavirus
— takes an unequal toll on communities of color. So as the pandemic took hold,
it was one crisis on top of another.
“What we have is compounded trauma,” said Shani Buggs, an
assistant professor with the University of California at Davis’s Violence
Prevention Research Program. “The pandemic exacerbated all of the inequities we
had in our country — along racial lines, health lines, social lines, economic
lines. All of the drivers of gun violence pre-pandemic were just worsened last
year.”
In most places, violent-crime rates remain well below what they were in the 1980s and early
1990s, a period that gave way to “the great American crime decline.” But last
year, in some of the country’s largest cities, homicides
increased by a total of 30 percent when compared with 2019.
In July 2020, shooting deaths reached a peak of roughly 58
per day and continued, nearly unabated, around that level until early 2021.
Now, the numbers are rising again.
In the nation’s capital, 2020 set a recent record for
homicides — mostly from gun violence — and their number is rising again, even
with the
annual summer crime prevention initiative well underway. Seventy-nine
people were killed in the District during
the first five months of 2021, a 23 percent increase over the previous
year.
At
a recent vigil for Kassius-Kohn Glay, a 16-year-old standout high school
student who was fatally shot last month, his parents said they were conscious
of the danger their son, a young Black man, would face in his Northwest
Washington neighborhood. Last year, Glay saw his
best friend die in a shooting.
“I don’t want this to happen no more,” Glay’s mother,
Juanita Culbreth, said at the memorial. “To the last breath of my body, I’m
going to be sure. I’m going to keep on advocating for y’all.”
Attendees of a vigil for Kassius-Kohn Glay, a 16-year-old killed in D.C. last
month. (Amanda Andrade-Rhoades for The Washington Post)
After a
string of deadly shootings in Miami, the city’s police chief, Art
Acevedo, went on national television to warn about coming months.
“Unless we all start speaking up, speaking out and demanding
our elected officials take action, we’re going to see a lot more bloodshed,”
Acevedo, who also heads the Major Cities Chiefs Association, said on CBS’s
“Face the Nation.”
A week after Acevedo’s TV appearance, a shooting at
a Miami graduation party killed three and wounded five.
Shootings have also increased in cities from Los
Angeles to Chicago to Columbus, Ohio. In Philadelphia, officials are preparing
for what could be the deadliest year in the city’s history. The mayor is
holding regular
updates on gun violence, reminiscent of weekly coronavirus briefings.
But the rise in gun violence is not just a big-city
phenomenon. The number of gunfire deaths has also increased in suburban and
rural areas, though the overall numbers are lower because of smaller
populations.
Areas across the country saw an increase in gun deaths in
2020. High-population urban areas were the most affected, but
residents in suburban and rural areas also experienced more
gun violence.
Researchers note a number of factors they say are driving
the upswing, including the unprecedented surge in gun sales. In 2020, a year of pandemic, protests and elections, people
purchased more than 23 million guns, a 66 percent increase over 2019 sales,
according to a Post analysis of federal data on gun background checks.
In January and February of 2021, people bought more guns
than they did during either month of any previous year in which such purchases
were recorded. In January alone, about 2.5 million guns were sold, the
third-highest one-month total, behind only June and July of 2020.
Before 2020, gun-sales spikes coincided with elections and
mass shootings, such as the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in late
2012. Last year, the numbers climbed during pandemic-induced shutdowns and
again in the summer, with millions protesting a Minneapolis police officer’s
murder of George Floyd.
Controlling for population, the analysis found the higher
the jump in gun sales between 2019 and 2020, the higher the jump in gun
violence that resulted in at least one death.
Michigan and Nevada were among the states with the largest
per capita increase in gun sales and gun-related deaths, while Washington and
Oklahoma saw their rates of gun violence stay relatively flat.
A large body
of research shows gun availability increases the relative risk of
fatal shootings, and Buggs co-authored a
study last year that found an association between firearm purchases
that spring and a statistically significant increase in firearm violence.
Researchers caution against drawing causal links, especially
during a year as unique as 2020, and Buggs said gun sales are among a number of
elements that “are difficult to tease out.” Others have noted that millions of guns were sold in past
decades, when crime rates were falling, and have said one year of data is not
enough to settle the matter.
Early
numbers indicate a large slice of 2020 gun buyers — about a fifth —
purchased their first-ever firearm.
Hawaii is not shown because its data was not granular enough
to estimate sales. D.C. gun sales were too low to chart,
but sales and gun deaths both rose significantly in 2020.
That flood of new gun owners, plus a possible lack of
in-person firearm-safety training because of coronavirus shutdowns, is a
worrying combination for Cassandra Crifasi, the deputy director of the Johns
Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Prevention and Policy.
“All of these people who bought guns in the context of fear
around the pandemic and the unrest and uprising in relation to the
murder of George Floyd, what do they do with those guns now?” she said.
The Post found the number of fatal shootings the Gun
Violence Archive classified as some type of accident increased by more than 40
percent from 2019 to 2020. The number of deadly incidents involving children —
who may get guns from adults who
do not store them properly — also rose by 45 percent, though a share
of that is attributable to other types of shootings. The analysis does not
include suicides because real-time data is unavailable, but researchers have
noted worrying signs that gun-related suicides, along with intimate-partner
violence and family violence, are also on the rise.
The past 14 months have presented “a perfect storm,” Crifasi
said. Along with the mass influx of guns, the pandemic fueled
a recession that overwhelmingly affected low-wage and minority workers
and would keep Black women and men out of jobs longer than other Americans.
Then a police officer killed Floyd in Minneapolis, leading to an erosion of
public confidence in law enforcement. The protests after Floyd’s murder
yielded more
images of police brutality. An increase in violence was underway, but
it continued to rise, experts noted, just as it did after police killings in
Ferguson, Mo., and Chicago in 2014.
The surge in gun violence during 2020 didn’t have a
corresponding increase in defensive use or murder-suicide incidents, but
accidental shootings and incidents involving children did increase.
Includes incidents in which at least one person died.
The pandemic and protests also thinned officer ranks,
sickening them or sending them to manage unrest. Researcher and former U.S.
district judge Paul Cassell has
charted in some cities a decline in street and vehicle stops, termed
“proactive policing.”
Through it all, young people were especially vulnerable,
with activities that normally provide structure and support — in-person school,
sports, social work and community-level violence-prevention programs — not
operating.
California-based Advance Peace is one of those
organizations.
Julius Thibodeaux Jr., the strategy program manager for the
nonprofit’s Sacramento
chapter, calls gun violence “the forgotten pandemic.” The work he and his
team do to fight it depends on human-to-human contact. It can’t be done
remotely.
Before covid-19, Sacramento was on a 28-month run of no
juvenile homicides. But the pandemic temporarily shuttered the program, which
works with those most at risk of being involved in gun violence — as
perpetrators or victims. The regular life-skills classes and one-on-one
counseling were put on hold, outings to places such as Universal Studios and sports
events were canceled, and just hanging out, having a conversation over a meal,
became more difficult. All those interactions help build a foundation that
prevents violence, Thibodeaux said.
“The pandemic really limited us in doing the very things
that make the program successful,” he said. “I don’t think people know what it
means to take a young person out of the environment where they’re impacted by
trauma on a daily basis, to exhale, to take a look around and not feel
threatened by their very environment.”
Thibodeaux has seen more anger in his city since the onset
of the pandemic, more people looking to settle arguments with deadly weapons,
more despair. Homicides in Sacramento rose by 26 percent from 2019 to 2020, and
four young people were killed, including a 9-year-old girl, police
reported.
It could have been worse, Thibodeaux said, if Advance Peace
and groups like it hadn’t continued their work, even in a limited capacity.
Advance Peace Sacramento says it mediated hundreds of conflicts that may have
otherwise escalated. The group’s mentors prevented at least 84 “imminent gun
violence conflicts” and responded to 83 shootings, stopping potential
retaliation, according to a year-end report prepared by the University of
California at Berkeley.
Advance Peace is starting to resume pre-pandemic operations,
but many of the other problems linger, which is why experts expect the violence
to continue.
During the pandemic’s first year, public mass shootings were
largely absent from national headlines — until a pair of deadly rampages in
March, roughly one week apart, in the Atlanta area and Boulder, Colo. This
began a run of high-profile shootings, which account for a relatively small
fraction of overall firearm deaths, that some have
identified as a cluster, where one attack may prompt another.
But throughout 2020 and into 2021, there were soaring levels
of shootings that killed or injured four or more people and didn’t get much
widespread attention beyond the places they occurred.
This is happening amid growing calls to treat gun violence
not only as a matter of law and order but as a public health concern.
Crifasi, of the Johns Hopkins center, has drawn a parallel
to the opioid epidemic: Heroin wreaked
havoc in Black communities for decades, giving rise to a “war on
drugs.” But, she said, “as soon as opioids started impacting White communities,
it was a public health crisis.”
“When we think about gun violence, it’s been ravaging Black
and Brown communities for decades,” Crifasi said. “But it wasn’t until mass
shootings started impacting predominantly White communities that people really
started paying attention.”
There are signs that elected officials are increasingly
embracing a public health approach, perhaps most notably in President Biden’s
American Jobs Plan, which
includes $5 billion over eight years to fund gun violence prevention
programs. Negotiations with Senate Republicans over the proposal are
stalled.
That legislation, along with the latest covid-19 stimulus
package, which allows local governments to direct federal relief money to gun
violence prevention, could have a far-reaching impact, said Buggs, the UC Davis
professor.
“The federal government has never invested in community
violence intervention and prevention in this way,” she said.
The funding could help cities and organizations address the
mental health challenges that come with the violence, including anxiety,
depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and feelings of isolation — work
Buggs said police officers cannot do.
“In communities where there is gun violence, there needs to
be conversations about how can we stop this,” she said. “How can we address
people’s anger and fear and pain in ways that lower the risk of individuals
solving disputes and conflicts in fatal ways.”
In D.C., officials recently rolled
out a program to distribute grants to people or groups involved in
promoting public safety. In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) announced last
month what he described as the largest-ever state investment in violence
intervention and prevention, more than $200 million over three years.
This, Advance Peace’s Thibodeaux said, is a start.
“You can’t just say a prayer and throw pennies at this
pandemic and expect it to go away,” he said. “It’s going to take more than
prayer and pennies.”
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