Guns
used in cross-border crimes originate from states with more lax laws
Boston University
School of Medicine
Opponents of gun
control have frequently pointed to high rates of gun violence in cities such as
Chicago to argue that strong state gun control laws are not effective.
But guns used in
states with stricter gun laws typically flow from states with weaker laws,
according to a new study from Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH)
researchers.
The study, published
in the Journal of Urban Health, found the majority of crime guns used
in Illinois, Massachusetts, and New Jersey come from other states, while
several other states see nearly all of their crime guns purchased in-state.
The researchers also found that wait periods, permit requirements, bans on guns for people with histories of a violent misdemeanor, and relinquishment of guns by people convicted of a violent misdemeanor could together decrease a state's in-state crime guns by 13.7 percent.
The researchers also found that wait periods, permit requirements, bans on guns for people with histories of a violent misdemeanor, and relinquishment of guns by people convicted of a violent misdemeanor could together decrease a state's in-state crime guns by 13.7 percent.
"This study shows that strong firearm laws are effective in reducing access to guns for potential use in crimes in a state," says study co-author Michael Siegel, professor of community health sciences at BUSPH. "It may be that higher rates of gun violence in some states with strong firearm laws may be not because they have strong laws, but because their neighboring states have weak laws."
Using 2006-2016 data
from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, which traces the
origin of a sample of guns recovered after use in a crime in the US, the
researchers were able to identify what proportion of crime guns came from and
were used in each of the 50 states.
The researchers then
compared this "import-export" data with information from the State
Firearm Law Project, a database tracking 133 gun law provisions covering 14
categories of laws across all 50 states for each year during the study period.
Led by Siegel, the project uses detailed definitions of each state law
provision, including specific exemptions, to code a state as having or
partially having that provision.
The researchers
selected eight provisions from the database that might affect the ease of
obtaining a gun:
The researchers created a gun law index with scores from 0 to 8, based on how many of these laws a state had on the books on average from 2006 to 2016, and on the strength of these laws where and when present.
- a licensing requirement for all gun dealers;
- a waiting period before the sale of a handgun;
- a permit requirement for buying a gun;
- a requirement to register or record every handgun sale;
- a ban on people with a history of a violent misdemeanor purchasing guns;
- a requirement for anyone prohibited from possessing a gun to relinquish all guns in their possession;
- a background check requirement for all gun purchases; and
- a state criminal offense for buying a gun for someone who is not allowed to buy or possess a gun.
The researchers created a gun law index with scores from 0 to 8, based on how many of these laws a state had on the books on average from 2006 to 2016, and on the strength of these laws where and when present.
The index ranged from
0 in 24 states to 6.1 in Hawaii and California. New Jersey, with an index of
5.0, had the lowest percentage of traced in-state crime guns at 22.8 percent,
while Indiana, with an index of 1.0, had the highest at 83.8 percent.
Adding controls for
state-level gun ownership and production and density of gun dealers, as well as
crime rates, degree of urbanization, and other factors, the researchers found a
clear association between stronger gun control laws and fewer crime guns
originating in a state.
Crime guns flowed "from Southeastern states with weak gun laws up the coast to Maryland, New York, and Massachusetts; from Midwestern states with weak gun laws to Illinois; and from Western states with weak gun laws to California," the authors wrote. "While the average gun law index across the primary destination states was 3.3, the average gun law index for the primary source states was 1.4."
Crime guns flowed "from Southeastern states with weak gun laws up the coast to Maryland, New York, and Massachusetts; from Midwestern states with weak gun laws to Illinois; and from Western states with weak gun laws to California," the authors wrote. "While the average gun law index across the primary destination states was 3.3, the average gun law index for the primary source states was 1.4."
As states enacted gun
laws during the study period, the researchers saw a decrease in crime guns
originating in those states. They also saw an increase in crime guns
originating in states that repealed or did not add gun laws during the study
period.
The researchers were
able to identify which four laws had the biggest impact. A waiting period for
handgun purchases reduced in-state crime guns by 1.9 percent, requiring permits
to buy a gun by 3.9 percent, prohibiting people convicted of a violent
misdemeanor from owning guns by 3.2 percent, and requiring relinquishment of
guns when a person becomes disqualified from owning them by 4.7 percent.
"This paper
provides evidence that policy makers can now use in deciding what approaches to
take to try to keep guns out of the hands of people who are at a high risk to
commit crimes," Siegel says. "It also shows that if states fail to
act, they may actually be endangering the lives of residents of nearby
states."