Left Rudder

January 15, 2008

GunFacts Hasn’t Any (9)

Filed under: Uncategorized

Pages 3-4 of NoFacts:

Myth: Texas CCW holders are arrested 66% more often.
Fact: Most arrests cited are not any form of violent crime (includes bounced checks or tax delinquency). 13

This “myth” is concerned with a 1998 Violence Policy Center study that demonstrated two points: 1. Texas Concealed Handgun License Holders Arrested for Crimes That Include Murder, Kidnapping, Sexual Assault, Weapon, and Drug Charges; and 2.) Texas Concealed Handgun License Holders Arrested for Weapon Offenses at Rate More Than Twice That of State’s General Population Aged 21 Years and Older.

Author attempts to conflate the two findings and fails miserably. Author cites “13 “Basis For Revocation Or Suspension Of Texas Concealed “, Texas Department of Public Safety, December 1, 1998.” Cite makes no sense whatsoever; Texas DPS numbers show out of 946 crimes by TX CCW permit holders, 263 were felony arrests, including: six charges of murder or attempted murder involving at least four deaths; two charges of kidnapping; 18 charges of sexual assault; 66 charges of assault, including 48 cases of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon; and, 42 weapon-related charges. Six-hundred eighty-three were misdemeanor arrests, including: 194 weapon-related charges and 215 instances of driving while intoxicated.

Fact: The VPC “study” only includes arrests, not convictions.

No cite is provided but the VPC study does say “arrests.” So does the author’s “myth.”

Fact: Many of these arrests in this premature VPC “study” came in the early years of Texas CCWs when the law was not understood by most of the law enforcement community or prosecutors.

Again, no cite.

Fact: Compared to the entire population, Texas CCW holders are about 7.6 times less likely to be arrested of a violent crime.14 The numbers breakdown as follows:
• 214,000 CCW holders15
• 526 (0.2%) felony arrests of CCW holders that have been adjudicated
• 100 (0.05%) felony convictions

Author cites “14 Texas Department of Corrections data, 1996-2000, compiled by the Texas State Rifle Association, www.tsra.com/arrests.htm.”

Link no longer works, but thanks to the Wayback Machine, we find a ’study’ by William Sturdevant was removed in early 2006. Mr. Sturdevant provides no cites.

Fact: A different study concludes that the four year violent crime arrest rate for CCW holders is128 per 100,000. For the general population, it is 710 per 100,000. In other words, CCW holders are 5.5 times less likely to commit a violent crime.16

Author cites Mr. Sturdevant’s ’study’ which contains no references, footnotes, or cites.

January 7, 2008

GunFacts Hasn’t Any (8)

Filed under: Uncategorized

Brief one. Page 11:

Myth: Gun registration will help police find suspects
Fact: Registration is required in Hawaii, Chicago, and Washington D.C. Yet there has not been a single case where registration was instrumental in identifying someone who committed a crime.65 Criminals very rarely leave their guns at the scene of the crime. Would-be criminals also virtually never get licenses or register their weapons

.

Author cites the infamous John Lott. Which is interesting since Lott acknowledges registered guns are used in crimes but rarely.

To debunk this myth, I need cite only one case to render it bogus.

The argument by the author is something of a strawman; one of gun registration’s byproducts is to assist law enforcement in criminal investigations. But there are other advantages of registration such as weeding out those who should not have access to firearms.

January 3, 2008

..And the Sassi Award™ Goes To:

Filed under: Uncategorized

Sassi Muay Thai Expert

This week’s Sassi Award™ for Creative GunLoonery (Darwin Division) goes to:

CHAPARRAL, N.M. (AP) — Getting a tattoo can be a painful proposition, but usually it’s just the needle you have to worry about. Two men trying to trace a loaded .357-caliber Magnum as a pattern for a tattoo accidentally shot themselves, the Otero County Sheriff’s Department said Monday.

Robert Glasser and Joey Acosta, both 22, were treated at a hospital in El Paso, Texas, after the shooting Thursday evening in nearby Chaparral.

Authorities said Glasser was struck in the hand when the gun accidentally went off, and Acosta was hit in the left arm. Their injuries were not life-threatening, authorities said.

Winners receive a handsome piece of wheel-thrown stoneware that is safe for use in dishwashers, microwave ovens, and conventional ovens and may be eligible for a trip to Italy.

January 2, 2008

GunFacts Hasn’t Any (7)

Filed under: Uncategorized

A quickie. Page 15:

Myth: .50-caliber rounds can pierce light armor at 4 miles81

Author cites “81 Senator Dianne Feinstein, Senate testimony, March 9, 2001.”

Unfortunately, Sen. Feinstein said no such thing. In fact, this quote was attributed by the Fifty Caliber Institute to the Violence Policy Center. VPC asserts they made no such claim:

FCI Alleged Lie #1: “.50cal rifles can shoot with deadly accuracy up to four miles away.”4

The Truth (Pages 4-7): The VPC has never claimed any such thing.
As FCI’s staff should well know, the “maximum range” of the 50 caliber
rifle—i.e., the maximum distance a fired bullet will travel if it doesn’t hit anything in the way—is indeed four miles. But the “maximum effective range”—the maximum distance of deliberately aimed fire—is much less. Here is what the VPC actually did write on the subject of “maximum range” and “maximum effective range” in 2001’s Voting From the Rooftops: How the Gun Industry Armed Osama bin Laden, Other Foreign and Domestic Terrorists, and Common Criminals with 50 Caliber Sniper Rifles:
The maximum range of the 50 caliber round is between 7,000 and 8,000 yards, depending on the specific ammunition….This is the maximum
distance a fired 50 caliber bullet can travel, considerably more than the
distance that a round can be accurately fired. The latter, called the “maximum effective range,” is….certainly at least 1,000 yards and about 2,000 yards in skilled hands.5

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