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2.2. Ordinance Establishing Regulations for Storage and Reporting Lost or Stolen Firearms Page 1 of 1
CITY OF SARATOGA
Memorandum
To: Mayor Bernald & Members of the Saratoga City Council
From: Nora Pimentel, City Clerk
Date: June 20, 2018
Subject: Item 2.2. Ordinance Establishing Regulations for Storage and Reporting Lost or Stolen
Firearms (Written Communications)
After publication of the agenda packet for the June 20, 2018 City Council Meeting, the attached
written communications was received for Item 2.2. Ordinance Establishing Regulations for Storage
and Reporting Lost or Stolen Firearms.
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Wednesday, June 13, 2018 4:49 PM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Online Form Submittal: Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
From: noreply@civicplus.com
Sent: Wednesday, June 13, 2018 4:47:23 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: Online Form Submittal: Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
Please share your feedback on the proposed ordinance for storage and reporting
lost/stolen firearms . All comments will be provided to the Saratoga City Council for
consideration at the June 20 City Council meeting. You can also share your input at
the Community Meeting on Monday, May 29 at 7:00 p.m. in the Joan Pisani
Community Center Multipurpose Room, 19655 Allendale Avenue.
First Name Robert
Last Name Petersen
Email Address
Phone Number
Address
City Saratpga
State ca
Zip Code 95070
Comments I strongly support the proposed Saratoga gun storage and
safety ordance
Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Wednesday, June 13, 2018 6:17 PM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Gun Safety Ordinance
________________________________________
From: Terri Singer
Sent: Wednesday, June 13, 2018 6:16:03 PM (UTC‐08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: Gun Safety Ordinance
Hello City Council Members,
I support the proposed gun safety city ordinances. This is a good effort to improve gun safety in homes. We are ALL in a
new world of indiscriminate school shootings and general violence involving guns. Saratoga is not immune to potential
gun violence. Let’s inact simple gun safety measures that most citizens who own guns probably use.
Thank you for your putting forth these ordinances.
Terri Singer
Sent from my iPhone
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Wednesday, June 13, 2018 6:38 PM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Online Form Submittal: Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
From: noreply@civicplus.com
Sent: Wednesday, June 13, 2018 6:36:36 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: Online Form Submittal: Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
Please share your feedback on the proposed ordinance for storage and reporting
lost/stolen firearms . All comments will be provided to the Saratoga City Council for
consideration at the June 20 City Council meeting. You can also share your input at
the Community Meeting on Monday, May 29 at 7:00 p.m. in the Joan Pisani
Community Center Multipurpose Room, 19655 Allendale Avenue.
First Name Tony
Last Name zuccarino
Email Address
Phone Number
Address
City SARATOGA
State CA
Zip Code 95070-5433
Comments I oppose this ordinance, since it's too vague on what
constitutes a locked container, though I am sympathetic to
several of the theoretical benefits of this proposal. There are
too many ways to cheat this ordinance that will effectively only
burden the homeowner, while only slowing down the illegal
taking and use of the firearm. Besides which we don't need to
spend city money on this topic, only to have the NRA or some
2
state organization file suit to block, which based on the Hellyer
Supreme Court decision, you will most likely lose. Check into it.
Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Thursday, June 14, 2018 9:45 PM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Online Form Submittal: Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
From: noreply@civicplus.com
Sent: Thursday, June 14, 2018 9:43:34 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: Online Form Submittal: Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
Please share your feedback on the proposed ordinance for storage and reporting
lost/stolen firearms . All comments will be provided to the Saratoga City Council for
consideration at the June 20 City Council meeting. You can also share your input at
the Community Meeting on Monday, May 29 at 7:00 p.m. in the Joan Pisani
Community Center Multipurpose Room, 19655 Allendale Avenue.
First Name Charles
Last Name Hunger
Email Address
Phone Number Field not completed.
Address Field not completed.
City Field not completed.
State Field not completed.
Zip Code Field not completed.
Comments Why do we need a city ordinance? It's already a state law
((Pen . Code, §§ 23635-23650), which says that ALL firearms
must have a safety locking device, like a cable or trigger lock,
and/or be stored in an approved safe.
Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Thursday, June 14, 2018 12:57 AM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Online Form Submittal: Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
From: noreply@civicplus.com
Sent: Thursday, June 14, 2018 12:56:09 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: Online Form Submittal: Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
Please share your feedback on the proposed ordinance for storage and reporting
lost/stolen firearms . All comments will be provided to the Saratoga City Council for
consideration at the June 20 City Council meeting. You can also share your input at
the Community Meeting on Monday, May 29 at 7:00 p.m. in the Joan Pisani
Community Center Multipurpose Room, 19655 Allendale Avenue.
First Name Jeff
Last Name Walker
Email Address
Phone Number Field not completed.
Address Field not completed.
City Field not completed.
State Field not completed.
Zip Code Field not completed.
Comments I’m afraid that this ordinance will do ABSOLUTELY nothing to
stop or deter the use of a firearm. The city continues to add
ordinances without any inforcement. This one is crazy.
Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Friday, June 15, 2018 11:34 AM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence SUPPORT letter for Safe Storage
Ordinance
Attachments:Saratoga safe storage support letter 06.15.18.pdf
From: Allison Anderman
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2018 11:32:34 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Cc: Mary-Lynne Bernald; Manny Cappello; Howard Miller; Emily Lo; Rishi Kumar
Subject: Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence SUPPORT letter for Safe Storage Ordinance
Dear Mayor Mary-Lynne Bernald and the members of the City Council,
On behalf of Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, please find the attached letter in support of the
proposed safe storage ordinance that will be read at the June 20, 2018 meeting of the City Council.
Sincerely,
Allison Anderman
--
Allison Anderman
Managing Attorney
Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence
| giffordslawcenter.org
@GiffordsCourage
Nothing contained in this communication is intended as legal advice to any person or entity and should not be regarded as such. Giffords Law Center
to Prevent Gun Violence and its attorneys provide general information about gun laws to interested groups, individuals, and legislators. Giffords
Law Center attorneys do not represent clients and do not form attorney‐client relationships. You should not consider communications with Giffords
Law Center or its attorneys to be confidential unless we have agreed to such confidentiality.
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Saturday, June 16, 2018 4:34 PM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Firearms legislation
From: Larry Townsend
Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2018 4:32:19 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: Firearms legislation
From: Larry Townsend
For Saratoga City Council, please distribute.
Education before Legislation is a wiser decision
Rather than reacting to a problem is it not advisable to prevent its beginnings?
Self defense is a fundamental part of all mankind and our civil rights provide for that with the
rules of law in this country. Mankind comes along to invent tools made of stone, stick, sinew and
metals. The tools gave them an advantage acquiring protein and a means of defense from
aggression.
When push comes to shove human ingenuity has parlayed those skills to the extreme.
Constructively we put instruments into space to visit other planets in our solar system and
beyond.
Destructively armies have launched nuclear weapons to stop all out wars.
Domestic firearms pale by comparison but remain a tool as intended for the deterrent of life
threatening crimes.
The trick is educating the defendants to their levels of responsibilities and putting fear in the
heart of the criminal aggressor.
Owning a firearm is a responsibility and a liability that requires an education and training.
Criminal use of any tool capable of lethal force needs to be punished summarily.
Taking away our tools for self defense will only embolden criminal use of life threatening
objects.
Please don’t be lead away from reason. The State of California has already covered every
ordnance you are about to implement.
Best regards.
Lawrence Townsend
a frequent visitor to Saratoga
2
Zip-95123
Sent from my iPhone
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Saturday, June 16, 2018 10:03 AM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Proposed gun legislation
From:
Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2018 10:01:00 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: Proposed gun legislation
This proposal is basically covered by state laws. The only people who conform to any law/regulation are the
ones whose behavior need not be regulated. On a practical level,this yields a net nothing concerning
misbehavior in the populace which misbehaves. It does however, stoke the causes of various groups such as the
NRA,CRPA etc..etc. and increases their financial resources. When such frivelous legal actions are taken, panic
sets in and gun owners stock up on ammo and arms. President Obama wins the industries "Gun Salesman of the
Year" award by the firearms industry every year. In contrast, President Trump's support of 2nd Amendment
rights has forced some firearms manufactures into bankruptcy.
The trend here is pretty clear, gun control results in more people acquiring more firearms and
ammo. California's robust approach to gun control created the 80% lower receiver market which arguably
causes no gun control via 'ghost guns'. These products had no market 25 years ago when there was no
perceived need for them. It would be wise to pay attention to this reality and ignore this proposed fantasy.
sincerely
Michael Hansen
Ojai, CA 93023
____________________________________________________________
We Say Goodbye To Kelly Ripa
risingstarnewspaper.com
http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL3132/5b2542549515b42540d7bst01vuc
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Sunday, June 17, 2018 8:56 AM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Proposed firearm storage ordinance
From: Amro Sirhan
Sent: Sunday, June 17, 2018 8:54:50 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Cc: Rishi Kumar; Amro Sirhan
Subject: Proposed firearm storage ordinance
Dear City Council of Saratoga,
I am a resident of Saratoga and have been for over 13-years. I wanted to thank you for making our City safe and
clean.
I am writing to you to urge you to vote against the proposed firearm storage ordinance for the following
reasons:
1. First of all there is several state laws that exist in place covering this area as you already know and have
quoted them on your web site
2. This proposed ordinance will further victimize the victim. Put yourself in the shoes of a citizen who had
just come back from work to find that his or her house had been broken into and many of his or her
valuable possession were stolen. This proposed ordinance would be forcing the responding Deputy to tell
the victim that it was their fault for not properly storing their legally owned property in their own house.
The deputy would have to issue a citation to the victim when the victim is expecting the Deputy to do
everything in their power to catch the suspect.
3. We need to stop further victimization the victim. The action needed is to be tougher on criminals not on
law abiding citizens. Tougher laws and mandatory jail sentences to burglary suspects.
4. Burglaries (home and vehicles) have been on the rise in the bay area due to the so called “early release
of nonviolent criminals.” Please explain to me how this ordinance will help reduce crime and penalize the
criminals.
2
I urge you to consider ways to make it harder for the criminals to victimize our citizen and our beautiful
city. Let’s be tougher on crime and criminals and not make the life of law abiding citizen harder than it already
is. What is really needed is to provide our Deputies with all the tools and resources they need to drive burglars
away from our streets and lovely city. Adopt ordinances that impose mandatory jail sentences on criminals that
break into citizen’s homes and victimize them.
Sincerely,
Sirhan family
Saratoga, Ca
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Sunday, June 17, 2018 9:11 PM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Proposed Gun Storage Law
From: Mark Weisler
Sent: Sunday, June 17, 2018 9:09:42 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: Proposed Gun Storage Law
Hon. Mary-Lynne Bernald, Mayor
Hon. Manny Cappello, Vice Mayor
Hon. Howard Miller, Council Member
Hon. Emily Lo, Council Member
Hon. Rishi Kumar, Council Member
Dear Honorable Council Members:
I am opposed to the proposed mandatory gun storage law you are considering.
My reasons are below.
The Proposed Law…
Violates the Second Amendment by infringing on the Second Amendment. It reduces the rights of the
citizen in his own home.
-United States Supreme Court: the “inherent right of self-defense has been central to the Second Amendment
right[,]” and “the need for self-defense, family, and property is most acute” in the home.- Heller
-Because of the importance of self-protection in the home, the Supreme Court expressly held that “any ban on
handgun possession in the home violates the Second Amendment, as does [a] prohibition against rendering any
lawful firearm in the home inoperable for the purposes of immediate self-defense.”
The Heller decision at the U.S. Supreme Court recognized that the Second Amendment is an individual right to bear
arms.
District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570 (2008),[1] is a landmark case in which the Supreme Court of the
United States held that the Second Amendment protects an individual's right to possess a firearm unconnected with
service in a militia for traditionally lawful purposes, such as self-defense within the home, and that Washington,
D.C.'s handgun ban and requirement that lawfully-owned rifles and shotguns be kept "unloaded and disassembled
or bound by a trigger lock" violated this guarantee.
Violates the Fourth Amendment concerning privacy which provides for “the right of the people to be secure
in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.”
Violates the Oath of Office You Took to Uphold the Constitution
Will Not Make Children or Anyone Safer
2
Doesn’t Address Physical Security in Schools: If we want to have safe schools, why don’t we?
We safeguard courthouses and government buildings. Why can’t Council work with school boards and security
experts (not necessarily law enforcement) to secure our schools? What have you done in this regard?
Is Vague —
A citizen can’t completely discern when they are breaking the proposed law. Keeping the firearm at all times within
“arm’s length” is one interpretation of the proposed law. Another, according the Sheriff’s Lieutenant at the recent
community meeting, is the “total circumstances extant at the time of the crime or situation” which means the citizen
will not know if they are breaking the law and the matter will be left to the judgement of law enforcement on the
scene and later the district attorney.
Substitutes laws for civility and virtue.
This proposed law substitutes standardized, required behavior for civility, judgement, and virtue. I would rather have
the matter addressed through education, training, and community than forced constraint.
Does Not Address Mental Health — If we want to do more to reduce “gun violence” we should safeguard the
mental health of the children.
Have you taken steps to ensure that children and students in your community each has someone to talk with about
issues? What have you done to recognize and stop bullying? We need to teach skills in how to deal with issues and
problems so they don’t feel weapons are the solution. I would like to see our community genuinely deal with the
mental health aspect of gun violence, starting with young people, rather than infringe on Constitutional rights.
Sincerely,
—
Mark, Saratoga Resident
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Monday, June 18, 2018 1:13 AM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Proposed ordinance re. locking reliquary firearms & a more reasnable suggestion
Attachments:20171111_093724_resized.jpg; Scan0041.pdf; 20160317_123653 (2).jpg; 20160620_
173959 (1).jpg
From: Jerry Jeska
Sent: Monday, June 18, 2018 1:09:56 AM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Cc: Nora Pimentel
Subject: Fwd: Proposed ordinance re. locking reliquary firearms & a more reasnable suggestion
Dear Saratoga City Council Member:
Why must an owner be required to keep relic and antique replica firearms, such as those here pictured attachments,
locked up?
While all except two are indeed functioning pieces, these relics and replicas of antiques would never be burglarized for
the purpose of commission of crimes, certainly no "mass shootings".
Antiques and replicas thereof do not fire modern ammunition so few individuals would have any idea how to load
them. (The Civil War replica, item #5, is a cap and ball gun which does not handle cartridges any more than do the
muzzleloaders.) The US Government does not even consider antiques to be "firearms".
While I've shot and hunted with the muzzleloading long guns, most would be used as display items. Many of your
constituents possess relics--impossible to display locked in a safe and trigger locks would ruin the display
appearance. Moreover, the entire trigger guard of the items in pics #2-3 can be removed with a simple
screwdriver. Anything not welded can be disassembled.
Incidentally, trigger locks can be removed from any firearm via use of an electric drill. One could not even mount a
trigger lock on the two antique revolvers. Item #4 will not hold a trigger lock, which would simply slip off as it has no
trigger guard to hold it.
Not only would this storage provision not deter theft of relics and antique replicas, it would not prevent suicides (by far
the most common cause of firearm deaths). Few suicide-inclined family members would know how to load these items,
and a suicidal owner would have any lock keys and safe combinations anyway.
Many of your constituents possess (hunt with and maybe collect) bolt action rifles. While they do use modern
ammunition, such rifles are rarely be used for, or stolen for, commission of crimes. Why should these be required to be
locked up? (See attachment 20160317_123653 showing a WWI model relic painstakingly converted into a hunting
rifle.) Long guns are used in only about 3% of gun crimes, according to reports by former state Attorney General Kamala
Harris.
https://www.oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/publications/firearms-report-15.pdf
https://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/publications/firearms-report-14.pdf
Gun owners do not like being stolen from. Particularly if the item is a family heirloom owners will commonly take
reasonable precautions such as burglar alarms, decorative window bars or safes/locking devices (if deemed warranted).
Theft of any legally owned firearms will be willingly divulged in a police report, if only to secure insurance
compensation. Therefore a requirement such as San Jose has adopted regarding reporting of theft is superfluous.
2
Once again--
If burglarized, none of the antiques or replicas would be suitable for commission of crimes.
Trigger locks on these items would ruin their display purpose.
Owners do not want to lose their firearms in a burglary and will take measures to deter such.
Excepting the bolt action rifles, none use modern ammunition, nearly eliminating their use for commission of suicide
or criminal activity.
Should you have questions regarding any of the pictured items and their application to my points, please feel free to
contact me.
Ordinances should not be passed without consideration of unintended consequences/collateral
damage. Constitutional rights should not be compromised, especially when no enhancement of public safety will be thus
achieved.
Please reject this oppressive, useless ordinance.
Instead take substantive, effective measures:
You can help firearms owners protect the public by joining with other Santa Clara Co. cities to urge the CA state
legislature to restore the felonious status of firearms theft. (Currently the theft of less than a value of $950 is only a
misdemeanor, and most gun-related crime involves firearms costing less than that amount.)
You can protect students by urging schools to have their safety programs reviewed and assessed through the free
School Shield program. I understand that grants are available to implement those recommendations.
I appreciate your time and attention.
Regards,
Jerry P. Jeska
MA-history
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Monday, June 18, 2018 7:18 PM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Online Form Submittal: Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
From: noreply@civicplus.com
Sent: Monday, June 18, 2018 7:16:45 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: Online Form Submittal: Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
Proposed Firearm Storage Ordinance
Please share your feedback on the proposed ordinance for storage and reporting
lost/stolen firearms . All comments will be provided to the Saratoga City Council for
consideration at the June 20 City Council meeting. You can also share your input at
the Community Meeting on Monday, May 29 at 7:00 p.m. in the Joan Pisani
Community Center Multipurpose Room, 19655 Allendale Avenue.
First Name Ray
Last Name Froess
Email Address
Phone Number
Address
City Saratoga
State CA
Zip Code 95070
Comments I sent an email to 'saratoga_cc@saratoga.ca.us'
Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser.
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Monday, June 18, 2018 4:35 PM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: Proposed Saratoga Gun Laws
From: Ray Froess
Sent: Monday, June 18, 2018 4:33:33 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: Proposed Saratoga Gun Laws
Thanks for having the meeting May 29 on the Storage of Firearms in a Residence and Reporting Lost or Stolen Firearms.
I hope you don’t pass these laws.
What evidence is there that these proposed laws will improve safety? Unless people know the law, it won’t have any
effect other than punish them after they unknowingly break it. Do you know that the 2017 California Guns Law book is
560 pages? In addition, we have Federal laws, County laws (which I don’t know) and now we are considering adding City
laws too. How many of us curly up and read the City’s “Code of Ordinances”?
I think most residents have enough sense to not leaving a gun laying around and to report a missing gun. Do we need a
“nanny” ordinance about kitchen knives too? Speaking of knives, do you know that a person armed with a knife 21 feet
away can get to an officer before he can unholster his gun? How long will it take to unlock your gun in a home invasion?
Instead or passing more laws I’d suggest the City develop a list of safety items and add these to the list. A good starting
point is are some of the items in the “Saratoga Neighborhood Watch” brochure at
http://www.saratoga.ca.us/DocumentCenter/View/1563/Neighborhood‐Watch‐Brochure‐PDF?bidId=
Ray Froess
659
[Journal of Law and Economics,vol. XLIV (October 2001)]
2001 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved. 0022-2186/2001/4402-0014$01.50
SAFE-STORAGE GUN LAWS: ACCIDENTAL
DEATHS, SUICIDES, AND CRIME*
JOHN R. LOTT, JR.
American
Enterprise Institute
and JOHN E. WHITLEY
University of Adelaide
Abstract
It is frequently assumed that safe-storage gun laws reduce accidental gun deaths
and total suicides, while the possible impact on crime rates is ignored. We find no
support that safe-storage laws reduce either juvenile accidental gun deathsor suicides.
Instead, these storage requirements appear to impair people’s ability to use guns
defensively. Because accidental shooters also tend to be the ones most likely to
violate the new law, safe-storage laws increase violent and property crimes against
law-abiding citizens with no observable offsetting benefit in terms of reduced ac-
cidents or suicides.
I. Introduction
The benefits of laws requiring that citizens safely store their guns seem
undeniable, in terms of both fewer juvenile accidental gun deaths and sui-
cides. Some have argued that these restrictions might also reduce crime rates
to the extent it makes it more difficult for criminals to steal guns. This is an
issue that most congressional Republicans and Democrats agree on. If new
gun control laws are passed during the 2000–2001 legislative session, one
component of the bill probably will involve mandating trigger locks to be
included with any gun sales. Similar views were expressed by presidential
candidates of both major parties in the 2000 campaign.
1 During just the last
couple of years, numerous states considered laws mandating safe storage of
guns. Illinois passed a law mandating that guns be kept locked or otherwise
securely placed when a child under 14 may have access to them, and New
Jersey and California passed new laws requiring guns be sold with locks.
2
* We would like to thank Gertrud Fremling, David Kopel, Bill Landes, and the seminar
participants at Dartmouth College, University of Santa Clara, and the University of Washington
for helpful discussions.
1 David B. Ottaway, A Boon to Sales, or a Threat? Wash. Post, May 20, 1999, at A1; John
McCain Profile, Nat’l J., November 6, 1999.
2 Mark Schauerte, Gov. Ryan Signs Bill That Requires Firearm Owners to Store Guns, St.
Louis Post-Dispatch, June 8, 1999, at A1; Editorial, Trigger Locks, The Record(BergenCounty,
N.J.), October 14, 1999, at L10; and Rene Sanchez, The Battle for California, Wash. Post,
October 23, 1999, at A1.
This content downloaded from 047.044.179.026 on June 19, 2018 14:10:10 PM
All use subject to University of Chicago Press Terms and Conditions (http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/t-and-c).
660 the journal of law and economics
Concerns over accidental gun deaths and suicides are important in this
debate. In 1998, 53 children under age 10 died from accidental gun deaths.
In cases where the weapon involved could be identified, six of these deaths
involved handguns. Only one suicide with a gun is reported in this age group.
When all children under age 15 are examined, the total number of accidental
gun deaths totals 121, of which 26 were identified as involving handguns.
The number of gun suicides is much higher than for younger ages, 154.
3
A study by the General Accounting Office claims that mechanical
locks—such as those that fit over a trigger or in a barrel of a gun—provide
“reliable” protection only for children under age 7,
4 so it is unclear what
percentage of older children’s deaths would have been prevented by the use
of these locks. Nor would the locks even have been relevant in accidental
gun deaths for cases where the gun cannot be realistically be locked up, such
as hunting.
But gun locks are costly, too. Not only is there the actual expense of the
locks, but even more potentially important is the reduced effectiveness of
using the gun defensively. Locked guns may not be as readily accessible for
defensive gun uses. If criminals are deterred from attacking victims because
of the fear that people might be able to defend themselves, gun locks may
in turn reduce the cost of criminals committing crime and, thus, increase
crime. This problem is exacerbated because many mechanical locks (such
as barrel or trigger locks) also require that the gun be stored unloaded.
5
Loading a gun then requires yet more time to respond to a criminal.
6 The
costs of locks and the fear of accidental gun deaths, whichishighlypublicized
when these laws pass, should also reduce gun ownership and may thus also
further encourage crime.
7
There is evidence that restrictions on people’s ability to defend themselves
encourages criminals to attack. The potential defensive nature of guns is
indicated by the different rates of so-called hot burglaries, where residents
3 There is an issue of whether deaths are properly classified as accidental, but the bias
frequently appears to be to err on the side of classifying deaths as accidental.
4 The study argued that the mechanical locks could frequently be pried off with a screwdriver
or smashed with a hammer. U.S. General Accounting Office, Accidental Shootings: Many
Deaths and Injuries Caused by Firearms Could Be Prevented (March 1991).
5 Putting a lock on a loaded gun actually makes an accidental dischargepossible(forexample,
by dropping the gun) that would not be possible if a loaded gun were not locked.
6 One almost humorous example of the problems associated with removing gun locks was
provided by Maryland Governor Parris Glendening, who set up a press conference to dem-
onstrate how easy it was to use a gun lock, but the lock did not easily disengage and it took
him “numerous” tries before he was able to remove the lock (Gerald Mizejewski, Glendening
Shows Off Trigger Lock, Wash. Times, March 23, 2000, at C1).
7 Data that we have from the National Opinion Research Center’s General Social Survey
does indicate a drop in state gun ownership rates coinciding with the passage with safe-storage
laws.
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safe-storage gun laws 661
are at home when the criminals strike.
8 Fifty-nine percent of the burglaries
in Britain,which hastough gun control laws,are“hotburglaries.”Bycontrast,
the United States, with laxer restrictions, has a “hot-burglary” rate of only
13 percent. Consistent with this, surveys of convicted felons in America
reveal that they are much more worried about armed victims than they are
about running into the police. This fear of potentially armed victims causes
American burglars to spend more time than their foreign counterparts
“casing” a house to ensure that nobody is home. Felons frequently comment
in these interviews that they avoid late-night burglaries because “that’s the
way to get shot.”
9
After Tasmania’s horrible multiple victim public shooting in 1996, Aus-
tralia outlawed defensive gun ownership, instituted strict locking require-
ments for guns, and banned many types of guns. But neither total crime nor
total crime with guns declined in Australia. In the 4 years after the law,
armed robberies rose by 51 percent, unarmed robberies by37percent,assaults
by 24 percent, and kidnappings by 43 percent.
10 And although murders did
decline by 3 percent, manslaughter rose by 16 percent.
11
On the other hand, those supporting safe-storage laws point to how locking
up guns can reduce crime by discouraging or preventing burglars from ob-
taining guns through theft.
12 The effects in both directions seem plausible,
8 For example, Gary Kleck, Targeting Guns: Firearms and Their Control (1997); David B.
Kopel, The Samurai, the Mountie, and the Cowboy (1992); and David B. Kopel, Lawyers,
Guns, and Burglars: Lawsuits against Gun Companies and the Problem of Positive Externalities
(paper presented at the American Criminology Meetings, Toronto 1999), provide international
evidence on hot-burglary rates.
9 James D. Wright & Peter H. Rossi, Armed and Considered Dangerous: A Survey of Felons
and Their Firearms 151 (1986), interviewed felony prisoners in 10 state correctional systems
and found that 56 percent said that criminals would not attack a potential victim that was
known to be armed. They also found evidence that criminals in those states with the highest
levels of civilian gun ownership worried the most about armed victims. Examples of stories
where people successfully defend themselves from burglaries with guns are quite common
(see John R. Lott, Jr., More Guns, Less Crime: Understanding Crime and Gun Control Laws
(1998), and Robert Waters, The Best Defense: True Stories of Intended Victims Who Defended
Themselves with a Firearm (1998)). For example, see Burglar Puts 92-Year-Old in the Gun
Closet and Is Shot, N.Y. Times, September 7, 1995, at A16. George F. Will, Are We “A Nation
of Cowards”? Newsweek, November 15, 1993, discusses more generally the benefits produced
from an armed citizenry.
10 The Australia Bureau of Statistics can be found at http://www.abs.gov.au.
11 England also recently banned handguns and centerfire rifles and shotguns, yet it now leads
the United States by a wide margin in robberies and aggravated assaults, and although murder
and rape rates are still higher in the United States, that difference has been shrinking (Nicholas
Rufford, Official: More Muggings in England than US, Sunday Times (London), October 11,
1998).
12 While we know of no empirical evidence that has been provided to back up this claim,
it has been an issue that has been raised in legislative debates over safe-storagelaws.Legislative
hearings on safe-storage laws have raised this issue in both Hawaii (February 15, 2000) and
Maryland (February 16, 2000).
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662 the journal of law and economics
but the question is the relative sizes of the effects, and that is an empirical
question.
Guns are not the first item with safe-storage laws that economists have
studied. Safety caps for medicines have been required for many years now
and have been studied extensively. Surprisingly, Kip Viscusi found that safe-
storage rules in this area actually lead to more poisoningsbecauseofa“lulling
effect.”13 Because of the safety caps, he argues, families no longer store
medicines as far out of children’s reach as previously. A similar result could
occur for guns if the General Accounting Officeiscorrectthatgunmechanical
gun locks are not that reliable.
14
Despite the active policy debate on guns, there has been surprisingly little
similar research on the safe storage of guns. Results similar to those for
medicine safety caps or automobile safety regulations could be quite im-
portant for this debate. While a medical journal provides some preliminary
evidence on safe-storage laws and accidental gun deaths,
15 no evidence exists
on any of the other possible effects of these laws. No one has investigated
the impact of these laws on suicides or on the possible costs of these laws,
in particular, whether the laws make it difficult for people to quickly access
a gun for self-defense.
II. The Existing Literature
David Klein and coauthors argued that accidental gun deaths and gun
suicides are strongly linked to owning a gun for self-defense.
16 Studying all
the fatal gun accidents involving persons under age 16 in Michigan from
1970 to 1975, they concluded that guns used in fatal accidents were nearly
always kept for self-protection. While they did not have direct evidence to
prove this point, Klein and coauthors claimed that “guns used for self-
protection are more likely to be involved in accidental shootings because
hunting or target guns are much less likely to be stored loaded or to be kept
where they are readily accessible.” In a later paper, Klein found that pre-
13 W. Kip Viscusi, The Lulling Effect: The Impact of Child-Resistant Packaging on Aspirin
and Analgesic Ingestions, 74 Am. Econ. Rev. 324 (1984).
14 This is part of a more general phenomenon. As Sam Peltzman, The Effects of Automobile
Safety Regulation, 83 J. Pol. Econ. 677 (1975), has pointed out in the context of automobile
safety regulations, increasing safety restrictions can result in drivers offsetting these gains by
taking more risks in how they drive. Indeed, recent studies indicate that drivers in cars equipped
with air bags drove more recklessly and got into accidents at such sufficiently higher rates that
it offset the life-saving effect of air bags for the driver and actually increased the total risk of
death posed to others (Steven Peterson, George Hoffer, & Edward Millner, Are Drivers of Air-
Bag-Equipped Cars More Aggressive? A Test of the Offsetting Behavior Hypothesis, 38 J.
Law & Econ. 251 (1995)).
15 Peter Cummings et al.,State Gun Safe Storage Laws and Child Mortality Due to Firearms,
278 JAMA 1084 (1997).
16 David Klein et al.,Some Social Characteristics of Young Gunshot Fatalities, 9 Accident
Analysis & Prevention 177, 181 (1977).
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safe-storage gun laws 663
dominately low-income urban families with child gunshot victims had “kept
loaded guns within ready reach because they had no confidence that the
police offered them protection against neighborhood crime.”
17
If Klein and his coauthors are correct in that it is guns primarily stored
for self-defense that result in accidents and if gun owners are correct that
guns help mitigate harm when an attack occurs, safe-storage laws could
reduce fatal gun accidents while simultaneously decreasing the ability for
self-protection. This would thus lower the cost to criminals and increase
crime. The empirical question is then whether the reduction in accidental
gun deaths or suicides outweighs any costs from increased crime. The test
carried out in this paper will provide some qualitatively different evidence
on the ability of guns to deter criminals.
18
Half of all fatal gun accidents are self-inflicted. In cases where the fatal
injury is inflicted on somebody else, the person firing the gun is on average
6.6 years older than the victim. Shooters tend to be between the ages of
15–24 and from low-income families. Data from 1980 indicate that the race
of the victim and shooter were the same in 96.5 percent of the cases, while
the sex was the same in 75 percent of the cases. Shooters also tend to
demonstrate “poor aggression control, impulsiveness,alcoholism,willingness
to take risks, and sensation seeking.”
19 Others have found that accidental
shooters were much more likely to have been arrested for violent acts and/
or for alcohol-related offenses, and a disproportionate number had been in-
volved in automobile crashes and traffic citations.
20 They were also much
more likely to have had their driver’s licenses suspended or revoked.
Passing safe-storage laws that are largely unenforceable might result in
only those who are the most “law-abiding citizens” to change their behavior.
But, as just discussed, these are not likely to be the high-risk groups for
accidental shootings. Because accidental shooters tend to be more likely to
17 David Klein, Societal Influences on Childhood Accidents, 12 Accident Analysis & Pre-
vention 275, 277 (1980).
18 There is a large literature on the ability of guns to deter criminals, including Ian Ayres
& John J. Donohue III, Nondiscretionary Concealed Weapons Laws: A Case Study of Statistics,
Standards of Proof, and Public Policy, 1 Am. L. & Econ. Rev. 436 (1999); William Alan
Bartley & Mark A. Cohen, The Effect of Concealed Weapons Laws: An Extreme Bound
Analysis, 36 Econ. Inquiry 258, 259 (1998); Dan A. Black & Daniel S. Nagin, Do Right-to-
Carry Laws Deter Violent Crime? 27 J. Legal Stud. 209 (1998); Stephen G. Bronars & John
R. Lott, Jr., Criminal Deterrence, Geographic Spillovers, and the Right to Carry Concealed
Handguns, 88 Am. Econ. Rev. 475 (1998); Kleck,supra note 8; Lott,supra note 9; John R.
Lott, Jr., The Concealed-Handgun Debate, 27 J. Legal Stud. 221 (1998); John R. Lott, Jr., &
David B. Mustard, Crime, Deterrence, and Right-to-Carry Concealed Handguns, 26 J. Legal
Stud. 1 (1997); Florenz Plassman & T. Nicolaus Tideman, Geographical and Temporal Vari-
ations in the Effects of Right-to-Carry Laws on Crime (working paper, Virginia Polytechnic
Inst. & State Univ. 1999); Lawrence Southwick, Self-Defense with Guns: The Consequences
(working paper, SUNY Buffalo 1997); and Wright & Rossi,supra note 9.
19 Kleck,supra note 8.
20 Julian A. Waller & Elbert B. Whorton, Unintentional Shootings, Highway Crashes, and
Acts of Violence, 5 Accident Analysis & Prevention 351 (1973).
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664 the journal of law and economics
violate the laws anyway, it is possible that safe-storage laws will raise the
cost of deterring criminals where the benefit of reducing accidents is smallest.
The issue of suicide raises two questions: (1) whether safe-storage or other
gun control laws prevent suicides using guns and (2) whether these laws
reduce total suicides or merely change the method of suicide. However, the
second question becomes relevant only if safe-storage laws indeed have much
of an effect on gun suicides. The few existing studies that test for the impact
of gun control laws (but not safe-storage laws) on total suicide rates use
cross-sectional level data and find no significant relationship.
21 Some other
studies use proxies for gun ownership rates (for example, the number of
federally licensed firearms dealers or subscriptions to gun magazines) and
analyze whether they are correlated with suicides.
22 Still other studies use
surveys on individual suicide attempts, so as to describe various individual
characteristics (such as impulsiveness) and examine whether suicides are
more likely when guns are available.
23
The normal assumption is that more guns will almost by definition increase
both accidental gun deaths and gun suicides, although as this discussion
suggests that it is possible that the risks vary with the type of household
buying guns. Yet an appendix, which is available from the authors, provides
evidence (based on either ownership data from the General Social Survey
or gun magazine sales) that the link between gun ownership and either of
these types of death is actually fairly difficult to establish. Survey data on
gun ownership rates are never statistically related to accidental gun deaths
or gun suicides, and using gun magazine sales as a proxy for gun ownership
21 Martin S. Geisel, Richard Roll, & R. Stanton Wettick, Jr., The Effectiveness of State and
Local Regulation of Handguns, 4 Duke Univ. L. J. 647 (1969); Douglas R. Murray, Handguns,
Gun Control Laws, and Firearm Violence, 23 Soc. Probs. 81 (1975); Matthew R. DeZee, Gun
Control Legislation: Impact and Ideology, 5 Law & Pol’y Q. 367 (1983); and Myron Boor &
Jeffrey H. Bair, Suicide and Implications for Suicide Prevention, 66 Psychol. Rep. 923 (1990).
Kleck,supra note 8, at 287, summarizes his take on this research by claiming that “[o]n the
whole, previous studies failed to make a solid case for the ability of gun controls to reduce
the total suicide rate.” Geisel, Roll, & Wettick (supra, at 676) find evidence of a reduction in
suicide with respect to an index that they create on gun control, but they could find nosignificant
or even meaningful results when they used dummy variables for the different laws.
22 There is a debate within criminology and the medical literature over whether the acces-
sibility of guns leads to higher suicide rates, but this literature does not address the impact of
safe-storage laws, and the evidence is fairly primitive. For example, a recent medical journal
study compared the rate of gun suicides during the first week after people buy a gun with the
suicide rate during any given week for people who do not own guns. It concluded that the
rate for people who just bought the gun was 57 times higher (Garen T. Wintemute et al.,
Mortality among Recent Purchasers of Handguns, 341 New Eng. J. Med. 1583 (1999)). The
authors took this as strong evidence that suicides could be prevented if guns had not been
purchased. However, the research in criminology is more mixed. (For an extensive survey, see
Kleck,supra note 8, at 265–88.) It often has to rely on rather imprecise variables, such as the
number of federally licensed firearms dealers in a county to proxy for gun ownership (Lin
Huff-Corzine, Greg Weaver, & Jay Corzine, Suicide and the Availability of Firearms Via the
Retail Market: A National Analysis (working paper, Univ. Central Florida 1999)).
23 Kleck,supra note 8, at 269–75.
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safe-storage gun laws 665
implies only a small relationship in a small percentage of specification (the
relationship is even smaller than if nongun magazines are used).
III. The Raw Data
Fifteen states adopted safe-storage laws between October 1, 1989, and
January 1, 1996, with the average law being adopted in the middle of Sep-
tember 1992.
24 For the implementation dates of safe-storage laws, we relied
primarily on an article published in the Journal of the American Medical
Association,25 although this contained laws passed only through the end of
1993. The Web site for Handgun Control provided information on the three
states passing laws after this date and confirmed the information found in
the medical journal for the earlier dates.
26 The laws share certain common
features, such as making it a crime to store firearms in a way that a reasonable
person would know that a child could gain use of a weapon. The primary
differences involve exactly what penalties are imposed and the age at which
a child’s access becomes allowed. While Connecticut, California, and Florida
classify such violations as felonies, other states classify them as misde-
meanors. The age at which children’s access is permitted also varies across
states, ranging from 12 in Virginia to 18 in North Carolina, Texas, and
Delaware.27 Most state rules protect owners from liability only if firearms
are stored in a locked box, secured with a trigger lock, or obtained through
unlawful entry.
The data examined in this study span 1977–96 for the crime rates and
1979–96 for the accidental death and suicide rates. Most of the analysis is
conducted at the state level because the county-level data are not disaggre-
gated by age and only a tiny fraction of 1 percent of the counties will
experience an accidental gun death or gun suicide by children under age 15
in any given year.
28,29
24 The states in order of adoption are Florida (October 1, 1989), Iowa (April 5, 1990),
Connecticut (October 1, 1990), Nevada (October 1, 1991), California (January 1, 1992), New
Jersey (January 17, 1992), Wisconsin (April 16, 1992), Hawaii (June 29, 1992), Virginia (July
1, 1992), Maryland (October 1, 1992), Minnesota (August 1, 1993), North Carolina (December
1, 1993), Delaware (October 1, 1994), Rhode Island (September 15, 1995), and Texas (January
1, 1996).
25 Cummings et al., supra note 15.
26 See http://www.handguncontrol.org.
27 The ages for different states are California (14), Connecticut (16), Delaware (18), Florida
(16), Hawaii (16), Iowa (14), Maryland (16), Minnesota (14), Nevada (14), New Jersey (16),
North Carolina (18), Rhode Island (16), Texas (18), Virginia (12), and Wisconsin (14).
28 Data are available from the authors. More precisely, the data exclude accidental gun deaths
for children under age 1, although it is our understanding that the number of accidental gun
deaths in that category are exceedingly rare relative to even the small number of accidental
gun deaths in the 1–4-year-old range.
29 We have examined the county-level data for 1977–94 used in Lott,supra note 9, but could
not find a relationship between safe-storage laws and total accidental gun deaths or suicides.
Because of obvious objections to using these aggregate numbers, since only a small share of
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666 the journal of law and economics
Three of the 15 states adopting the safe-storage laws had the laws in effect
for only 1 full year, 10 states for 4 full years, six states for 5 full years, and
three states for 6 or more years. Because the different states have such
different crime, accidental death, and suicide rates, the before-and-after rates
need to be made comparable. Therefore, the simple graphs presented here
will primarily compare the before-and-after rates for only the 10 states that
had their law in effect for at least 4 full years, although the other groupings
of states produce similar results. We will also indicate how the raw data
changed during the sample for the 36 states that did not adopt safe-storage
laws.
Not all states experience accidental gun deaths in any given year. In 1996,
for example, 12 states experienced at least one death for children under 5,
16 states for children between 5 and 9, and 32 states for children between
10 and 14. Suicides were more spread out across the states for 10–14-year-
olds, with 40 states experiencing at least one suicide.
As a rough method to detect any effect from the passage of the law, Figure
1 illustrates how accidental gun death rates changed over time for states with
safe-storage laws for children under age 15 relative to those without such
laws. The diagram provides information on per capita accidental death rates
from guns and per capita accidental death rates from handguns. Handguns
are examined separately because much of the public debate has focused on
the possible risks of having handguns in the home.
30 Unfortunately, most
gun deaths (about 56 percent) are listed as “unclassified” as to the type of
weapon, but this does not pose a major problem forthecomparisonspresented
here as the share of unclassified cases remains fairly constant over the period.
To calculate the ratio of accidental deaths in states with safe-storage laws
relative to those without the law, the yearly accidental death rate in each
individual state that adopted a safe-storage law is divided by that same year’s
average accidental death rate in states that do not adopt the law. The figure
reports the average of these ratios for the safe-storage states. The comparison
is made in this way because different states adopted safe-storage laws in
different years, and we want to examine how the accidental deaths changed
in the years before and after the law while making sure that we account for
national trends.
Year 0 in Figure 1 constitutes the year that the law was passed, and year
1 is the first full year that the law was in effect.
31 While the states adopting
accidental deaths or suicides involve juveniles, we will focus on the state-level data. The safe-
storage laws are also statewide laws, although county-level data could be useful in differen-
tiating the impact of these laws on different population groups.
30 Indeed, the first agreement that President Clinton made with gun makers to voluntarily
include locks was made with respect to handguns. See also, for example, Amanda Ripley,
Ready. Aim. Enter Your PIN, N.Y. Times Magazine, November 21, 1999, at 82–83, which
discusses the need for handgun locks.
31 The average law went into effect in early July, so the law was in effect, on average, for
half a year during the year that it is adopted.
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safe-storage gun laws 667
Figure 1.—How accidental gun death rates for children under age 15 changed in states
with and without safe-storage laws. Vertical axis: Ratio of accidental gun and handgun death
rates for the 10 states that passed safe-storage laws and ended up having them in effect for at
least 4 years relative to those rates in states that never had safe-storage laws in effect.
safe-storage laws tended to have lower accidental gun death rates than states
without the law, the figure indicates little systematic impact of safe-storage
laws on accidental deaths. Following adoption, the relative rate of accidental
gun deaths in states passing the laws first falls and then rises. The rate of
accidental total gun deaths in the two sets of states ends up being virtually
the same at the end of the period as when the law passed. The same holds
for the subcategory of handgun deaths. Despite these laws potentially being
most likely to stop accidental handgun deaths, there is no obvious decline.
In fact, while relative accidental handgun deaths fall at first, the relative
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668 the journal of law and economics
accidental handgun death rate in states passing the laws almost doubles 4
years afterward.
32,33
The relative changes in suicide are shown in Figure 2, and they are cal-
culated in the same way as for Figure 1. For suicides, no clear impact can
be observed. The relative gun suicide rate ends up at almost the exact same
level 4 years after adoption as the year that the law is adopted. Suicides from
all methods (the middle curve) actually rose slightly between year 0 and year
4, but it was due to an increase in suicides by nongun methods. If a rela-
tionship between safe-storage laws and suicides exists, it will have to be
ferreted out by more sophisticated regression estimates, such as the ones
presented in Section V.
Figure 3 examines the relative violent crime rates, and it provides the first
indication that crime rates may have changed around the time that safe-
storage laws were enacted. For the 10 states that had their safe-storage laws
in effect for at least 4 years, the relative violent crime stopped falling when
these laws were adopted and then ended up even higher at the end of the
period.
IV. Other Factors
While very large changes can sometimes be seen in the raw data, patterns
often only emerge once other factors are taken into account. As with the
preceding diagrams, probably the most obvious variables to account for in
explaining accidental gun deaths for children are the rates at which other
nongun accidental deaths occur, as well as the rate at which other age groups
32 The Cummings et al., supra note 15, research provides evidence of a 23 percent drop in
juvenile accidental gun deaths after the passage of safe-storage laws. Juvenile accidental gun
deaths did decline after the passage of the law, but what Cummings et al.miss is that these
accidental deaths declined even faster in the states without these laws. While the Cummings
et al.piece examined national data, it did not use fixed year effects, which would have allowed
them to test whether the safe-storage states were experiencing a drop relative to the rest of
the country. The simple dummy variable that they use is only picking up whether the average
juvenile accidental death rate is lower after the passage of safe-storage laws. One potential
problem with this approach is that any secular decline in accidental gun deaths would produce
a lower average rate after the law even if the rate of decline was not affected by the law.
Finally, because they did not break down the results by type of gun or, as we shall do later,
by a more detailed age breakdown, they never observed some of the anomalies that we will
show for some categories of accidental gun deaths (for example, for handguns) actually rising
after the passage of safe-storage laws. In a recent interview with USA Today, Cummings stated
“that, unlike Lott, he didn’t explore the possibility that gun-storage laws actually cause crime.
‘I guess I wouldn’t have, because it seems like a very implausible connection,’ Cummings
says. ‘But I guess anything’s conceivable.’ ” (Martin Kasindorf, Study: Gun-Lockup Laws Can
Be Harmful, USA Today, May 11, 2000, at 8A.)
33 If the base years had been made using year 1 in Figure 1 (the last full year before the
safe-storage law was enacted) and 1990 in Figure 2, the differences in accidental handgun
deaths for those under age 15 is truly dramatic. At the same time that accidental handgun
deaths are exploding in safe-storage states (increasing fourfold by year 3 and still being 2.25
times higher in year 4), the accidental handgun death rate is plummeting in states without the
law (declining by 56 percent in 1994 and 81 percent in 1996).
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safe-storage gun laws 669
Figure 2.—How gun suicide rates for children under age 15 changed in states with and
without safe-storage laws. Vertical axis: Ratio of suicide rates for the 10 states that passed
safe-storage laws and ended up having them in effect for at least 4 years relative to those rates
in states that never had safe-storage laws in effect.
in the population die from accidental gunshots. Since none of the safe-storage
restrictions apply to people older than 17, we will use the percapitaaccidental
gun death rate for people over age 19. Accidental gun deaths for those outside
the age group impacted by the safe-storage law may also proxy for not only
the availability of guns in the home since some of these deaths will involve
parents or other adults, but also for other risk factors that might vary by
state. We also ran estimates where the accidental gun death information for
those over age 19 is broken down into narrower age groupings under the
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670 the journal of law and economics
Figure 3.—How violent crime rates changed in states with and without safe-storage laws.
Vertical axis: Ratio of the violent crime rate for the 10 states that passed safe-storage laws
and ended up having them in effect for at least 4 years relative to those rates in states that
never had safe-storage laws in effect.
assumption that those closest in age to the age group being studied would
explain more of the variation. While there is some evidence for that hy-
pothesis since these narrower age groupings for people over age 19 help
explain more of the variation in juvenile accidental gun deaths, none of the
results for the safe-storage laws were affected.
The data allow the accidental death data to be disaggregated by age (1–4,
5–9, 10–14, and 15–19 years of age; see the Appendix for the descriptive
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safe-storage gun laws 671
statistics of these variables). If the desire to access guns were the same for
all age groups, one would expect that if safe-storage laws prevent access to
guns, they would have their biggest impact for the youngest children. As
noted earlier, the General Accounting Office reported in 1991 that mechanical
safety locks are unreliable in preventing children over 6 years of age from
using a gun,
34 and there is probably little that can prevent an older teenager
from doing what he wants. Yet, even if the benefits are smaller for older
children, it is possible that children who are even older than the ages for
which the restrictions apply could experience a drop in accidental gun deaths.
The general specification that we will use is
Accidental Gun Death Rateijk
p b Safe Storage Law Dummy b Accidental Nongun Death Rate1jk2ijk
b Accidental Gun Death Rate for Adults b Control Variables3jk4jk
b State Fixed Effects b Year Fixed Effects a ,56 ijk
where the Accidental Gun Death Rate is that rate for age group i in state j
and year k. Besides the law dummy, the accidental nongun death rate for the
same age group, and the accidental gun death rate for adults, we account for
vectors of control variables and state and year fixed effects.
A similar approach will be used to explain how suicides by youngsters
vary. We will include information on suicides for people in that age group
committed by means other than guns along with suicide rates for people
older than 19 years of age. Whatever might cause youngsters to attempt to
commit suicide by means other than guns might also help explain the rate
at which they try to commit suicides with guns. In addition, factors that
determine the general suicide rate for those over age 19 might also be relevant
for explaining the gun suicide rate for those under that age.
It is simply not possible to use the same level of disaggregation by age
for suicides as was used for accidental deaths. For example, there was only
one suicide using a gun for children under age 10 in 1996. State and year
fixed effects would easily explain all the variation even using state-level data.
The categories thus have a somewhat broader age range: one category with
children under age 15 and one with adolescents aged 15–19.
To try to account for differences other than safe-storage laws, in addition
to the normal fixed state and year effects, we incorporate an extensive data
set on state-level variables. This includes 36 demographic variables, by the
percentage of the population that belongs to a certain sex and race (black,
white, and other) by 10-year age groupings (10–19 and 20–29 years of age).
It also includes real per capita income, poverty rates, median education,
unemployment, percent of families with only one parent present, state pop-
34 U.S. General Accounting Office,supra note 4.
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672 the journal of law and economics
ulation and state population squared (to account for population density), as
well as information on per capita unemployment insurance payments, income
maintenance payments, and government retirement payments to those over
age 64.
Unfortunately, one variable that we do not have is the rate at which people
are arrested for violating these laws across different states, although we do
examine whether the violation is a felony or a misdemeanor. This inability
to obtain data on enforcement is one reason why we examine how the ac-
cidental gun deaths, suicides, or crime rates vary across each of the 15 states
that passed safe-storage laws. The consistency of these results provides some
assurance the results do not arise simply because some states enforce the
law while others do not. Even in the couple of cases where a significant
effect is found for an individual state, that impact is not consistent across
accidental gun deaths, suicides, and crime rates.
While much of the focus of other gun laws is on the crime rate, gun laws
also control the accessibility and availability of guns and, hence, might affect
accidental gun deaths and suicides. Therefore, we will also account for right-
to-carry laws, one-gun-a-month purchase rules, states that border one-gun-
a-month states, waiting periods, and mandatory prison penalties for using
guns in the commission of a crime. While one of the authors has previously
examined the impact of right-to-carry laws on county-level accident and
suicide rates and found no evidence of any significant impact, it is still
possible that some specific age groups might be placed at greater risk. For
instance, waiting periods might impact an adult’s ability to obtain a gun to
commit suicide, while it is less plausible that this would apply to suicides
by younger people under 18.
35
V. The Results
A. Accidental Gun Deaths
The first set of estimates use a simple dummy variable that is set equal
to the portion of the first year that the safe-storage law is in effect and then
equal to one for all subsequent years. Specifications 1, 5, and 9 in Table 1
account for only state and year fixed effects. The other specifications also
account for all the other variables discussed in the preceding section, with
the exception of the other gun control laws. The estimates are broken down
in two ways, by age category (1–4, 5–9, 10–14, and 15–19 years of age,
although because of space considerations this last category is not shown
here) and by whether the rate of nongun accidental deaths for people in that
35 Recent editorials in medical journals have called for research on whether waiting periods
impact suicides. M. L. Rosenberg, J. A. Mercy, & L. B. Potter, Firearms and Suicides, 341
New Eng. J. Med. 1609 (1999).
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TABLE1Impact of Safe-Storage Laws on Accidental Gun Deaths, by Age GroupUnder Age5Ages5–9OnlyFixed EffectsAll Other Control Variables UsedOnlyFixed EffectsAll Other Control Variables Used(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8)Safe-storage law dummya8 77E7(1 228)1 05E6( 982)1 05E6( 988)1 03E6( 971)1 59E6(2 106)*1 90E6(1 69)1 78E6(1 583)1 77E6(1 581)Accidental death rate for people in age group frommeans other than guns00107( 175)000937( 154)0105(1 109)0102(1 062)Accidental gun death rate for people over 19 years of age169(2 40)*0275( 403)x2343 94 419 51 425 49 453 47 389 91 454 87 722 46 722 46Ages10–14Ages15–19OnlyFixed EffectsAll Other Control Variables UsedOnlyFixed EffectsAll Other Control Variables Used(9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16)Safe-storage law dummya3 95E7( 433)1 46E6(1 11)1 46E6(1 11)1 48E6(1 12)9 13E7( 779)7 87E7( 485)8 30E7( 511)6 43E7( 405)Accidental death rate for people in age group frommeans other than guns00018( 018)000283( 027)00584(1 021)00425( 757)Accidental gun death rate for people over 19 years of age0655( 789)6405(6 34)x2669 31 949 30 950 33 986 64 807 23 949 30 950 33 986 64Note.—All regressions are weighted tobits, where the weighting is each state’s population, and use state and year fixed effects Specifications 1, 5, and 9 accountfor only fixed year and state effects Not reported for the other specifications are the 36 demographic variables, state population and population squared,unemployment,poverty rate, income variables, or the fixed effectsNp918aEquals fraction of year that the law is first in effect and 1 thereafterThe two-tailed test is significant at the 10% level* The two-tailed test is significant at the 5% levelThis content downloaded from 047.044.179.026 on June 19, 2018 14:10:10 PMAll use subject to University of Chicago Press Terms and Conditions (http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/t-and-c).
674 the journal of law and economics
age group or whether the accidental gun death rate for people over 19 years
of age is accounted for.
Despite these different combinations, it is difficult to observe any evidence
of reduced accidental gun deaths from the safe-storage law. Half the 16
coefficients are negative and half are positive, with the only statistically
significant estimate implying that safe-storage laws increase accidental gun
deaths. Some of the point estimates do imply a large percentage impact for
the two youngest age groups, but the net effect on all four age groups added
together is actually very small—resulting in four more accidental deaths
(ignoring the even smaller estimates provided by the regressions with only
the fixed effects: six lives saved for those ages 1–4 years, 12 more lives lost
for those ages 5–9, 12 lives saved for those ages 10–14, and 10 more lives
lost for those ages 15–19). The differential pattern for different age groups
also seems inconsistent with what would be predicted from safe-storage
laws.36
While increases in the accidental death rate from nongun methods for
people in an age group is almost always positive, it is never statistically
significant. Thecoefficientsalsoindicatethatincreasingthepercapitanumber
of nongun accidental deaths by one increases the number of accidental deaths
by guns by at most .01. Perhaps not surprisingly, the accidental gun death
rate for people over age 19 does a much better job of explaining the accidental
gun death rate for juveniles that are relatively closer in age—increasing
accidental gun deaths over age 19 by one per 1,000 people increases the per
capita number of accidental gun deaths for 15–19-year-olds by .64 per 1,000
people. The results for the other control variables are presented for some of
these specifications in an appendix that is available from the authors, but
most variables are not statistically significant.
These results were robust to including other gun laws, accounting for the
age at which the law applies or whether the penalty was a felony or mis-
demeanor, using separate dummy variables or before-and-after trend for each
state that passed the safe-storage law, year fixed effects by region, lagged
values of the endogenous variable, and interacting the safe-storage law
dummy with the violent crime rate to see if the law produced feweraccidental
gun deaths in low-crime areas. We also tried using Poisson estimates to
reestimate these regressions. (These results are available from the authors on
request.) The few gun law coefficients that were statistically significant ac-
tually implied increases in accidental gun deaths.
Taken together, these estimates provide no consistent evidence that safe-
storage laws reduce accidental gun deaths. The adverse consequences of
safety caps for medicine or car safety regulations do not appear to be present
here, but neither are there any benefits. Not only are the coefficients almost
36 Consistent with the raw data, rerunning the results for accidental handgun deaths implies
that these deaths actually rose after the passage of the safe-storage laws.
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safe-storage gun laws 675
never statistically significant, but when they are significant, they are more
likely to indicate increased accidents after the law. In any case, the effect
(if it does indeed exist) is extremely small and implies only a few more
deaths a year. As noted earlier, in the description of the previous research,
one possible reason for these laws not having an effect is that accidental
deaths primarily occur among the not-so-law-abiding segments of society,
and these groups do not appear to care very much whether a law exists
regarding the storage of guns.
37
B. Suicides with Guns
Our examination of suicide laws follows the set of specifications used to
examine accidental gun deaths, butwithtwoexceptions:(1)theagecategories
for children under 5, ages 5–9, and ages 10–14 have been combined into
one group, children under age 15, and (2) the variables on accidental deaths
from other sources and for people over age 19 have been replaced by the
analogous variables for suicides.
The estimates in Table 2 correspond to the earlier results presented for
accidental gun deaths in Table 1. These results also fail to indicate any
significant change in gun-related deaths. While the coefficients for both sets
of results are negative, they are statistically insignificant and relatively small.
The estimates for children under age 15 using the control variables imply
that anywhere froma2to4.8percent drop in gun suicides from the safe-
storage law, while the similar estimates for 15–19-year-olds are somewhat
larger, at up to 5 percent. As with the case of accidental gun deaths, the
effectiveness of the law was expected to decrease with age, not only because
not all 15–19-year-olds are covered by the law, but also because of the
presumed inability to actually prevent older juvenile access. Yet again, how-
ever, these differences are not statistically significantly different from zero,
and they are not statistically significantly different from each other. The
estimates that come closest to being statistically significant at the 10 percent
level for a two-tailed t-test are those that account only for fixed effects.
Adding only the variables for the rate at which people in the age group
commit suicides by other means and the suicide rate for people over 19 years
of age reduces the t-statistic below one for both regressions.
The other reported coefficients for nongun suicides for people in these age
37 Because people might be the least likely to store their guns safely when they feel the most
threatened, and the survey data provided in Section VD confirms this, we also reestimated the
earlier regressions for accidental gun deaths and suicides by interacting the violent crime rate
with the safe-storage law dummy variable. If people are more likely to feel threatened in high-
crime-rate areas, higher crime rates should be associated with smaller reductions in accidental
gun deaths and suicides. The coefficients are slightly more negative than reported earlier, but
the results are qualitatively unchanged. Our interpretation of these results is that accidental
gun deaths and gun suicides are simply not a problem in the law-abiding households who are
most likely to alter their behavior.
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TABLE2Impact of Safe-Storage Laws on SuicidesUnder Age15Ages15–19OnlyFixed EffectsAll Other Control Variables UsedOnlyFixed EffectsAll Other Control Variables Used(1) (2) (3) (4) (5)(6)(7)(8)Safe-storage law dummya4.65E7(1.601)1.74E7(.403)1.84E7(.389)7.69E8(.178)4.22E6(1.330)3.67E6(1.195)3.83E6(1.248)3.68E6(1.194)Suicide rate by people in agegroup committed by meansother than guns .0285(.706).0195(.477).3598(.863).0337(.804)Suicide rate by people over 19years of age .0191(2.627)*.0276(.534)x2425.34 563.71 512.23 570.86 1,225.57 1,434.68 1,435.43 1,435.71Note.—All regressions are weighted tobits, where the weighting is each state’s population, and use state and year fixed effects Specifications 1 and 5 account foronly fixed year and state effects Not reported for the other specifications are the 36 demographic variables, state population and population squared, unemployment,poverty rate, income variables, or the fixed effectsNp918aEquals fraction of year that the law is first in effect and 1 thereafter* The two-tailed test is significant at the 5% levelThis content downloaded from 047.044.179.026 on June 19, 2018 14:10:10 PMAll use subject to University of Chicago Press Terms and Conditions (http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/t-and-c).
safe-storage gun laws 677
groups and the suicide rate for those over 19 are all positive. However, only
the suicide rate for those over 19 is statistically significant in explaining the
suicide rate for children under age 15. (The estimated values for the other
coefficients are available from the authors.)
We then checked whether these results were robust to including other gun
laws, accounting for the age at which the law applies or whether the penalty
was a felony or misdemeanor, using separate dummy variables or before-
and-after trend for each state that passed the safe-storage law, year fixed
effects by region, lagged values of the endogenous variable, interacting the
safe-storage law dummy with the violent crime rate to see if the law produced
fewer accidental gun deaths in low-crime areas, and using Poisson estimates
to reestimate these regressions. (These results are available from the authors
on request.) Unlike the estimates for accidental gun deaths, we did find a
couple of coefficients that indicated that gun suicides declined after the pas-
sage of the safe-storage law. However, even in these cases, the evidence
clearly rejects the hypothesis that the total number of suicides, committed
by all methods, would be reduced.
C. Crime Rates
Jessica Lynne Carpenter is 14 years old. She knows how to shoot....Under the
new “safe storage” laws being enacted in California and elsewhere, parents can be
held criminally liable unless they lock up their guns when their children are home
alone...sothat’s just what law-abiding parents John and Tephanie Carpenter had
done....[The killer], who was armed with a pitchfork...hadapparently cut
the phone lines. So when he forced his way into the house and began stabbing the
younger children in their beds, Jessica’s attempts to dial 9-1-1 didn’t do much good.
Next, the sensible girl ran for where the family guns were stored. But they were
locked up tight....[T]he children’s great-uncle, the Rev. John Hilton, told re-
porters: “If only (Jessica) had a gun available to her, she could have stopped the
whole thing. If she had been properly armed, she could have stopped him in his
tracks.” “Maybe John William and Ashley would still be alive,” Jessica’sunclesaid.
38
38 Vin Suprynowicz, Las Vegas Rev.-J., September 24, 2000, at 2K. There are many related
stories that indicate that crimes would have been successful if the gun had been locked up or
not accessible to children. Take a case in Grand Junction, Colorado (Ellen Miller, Man Faces
Suspects Accused of Attacking Him after Getting Ride, Denv. Rocky Mtn. News, March 14,
2001): A building contractor, on his way home from work, picked up three young hitchhikers.
He fixed them a steak dinner at his house and was preparing to offer them jobs. But two of
the men grabbed his kitchen knives and started stabbing him in the back, head and hands. The
attackers only stopped when he told them that he could give them money. But instead of
money, the contractor grabbed a pistol and shot one of the attackers. The contractor said, “If
I’d had a trigger lock, I’d be dead. If my pistol had been in a gun safe, I’d be dead. If the
bullets were stored separate, I’d be dead. They were going to kill me.’’ A typical example of
a young person using a gun defensively is from Clearwater, Florida (Alleged Intruder Shot,
in Critical Condition, Gainesville Sun, March 11, 2001): At 1:05 a m., a man started banging
on a patio door, briefly left to beat on the family’s truck, but returned and tore open the patio
door. At that point, after numerous shouts not to break into the home, a 16-year-old boy fired
a single rifle shot, wounding the attacker.
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678 the journal of law and economics
The lack of benefits in the preceding sections is consistent with two pos-
sible explanations: either the safe-storage laws have no impact on people’s
behavior in storing or owning guns, or the laws alter the behavior of people
for whom the risks of accidental gun deaths or suicides were already very
low. This second explanation is consistent with what we know about the
types of people involved in accidental gun deaths, but additional information
on changes in crime rates can help distinguish between these two hypotheses.
The specifications reported here are similar to those discussed in the pre-
ceding tables, although the crime-specific arrest rates and the execution rate
for murder are now included. Table 3 finds that safe-storage laws are sig-
nificantly related to higher rape, robbery, and burglary rates and that these
effects are quite large, at least for the first two categories—with rape and
robbery rates rising by 9 percent and 10 percent, respectively.
39,40 Specifi-
cations using only the safe-storage law dummy and fixed state and year
effects or excluding the other gun control laws imply a similar pattern of
results. These are surely very large changes in crime rates that occur when
the safe-storage laws are adopted. However, as the survey data in the next
section shows, the percentage changes in the rate at which people lock up
their guns or no longer own guns after these laws are passed are even much
larger.
The coefficients from Table 3 predict that the 15 states that had the safe-
storage law in effect in 1996 experienced 3,738 more rapes, 26,724 more
robberies, and 69,741 more burglaries.
41 It is possible to put a rough dollar
value on the losses that result from these safe-storage laws. The National
Institute of Justice has estimated the costs to victims of various types of
crime, as a result of lost productivity, out-of-pocket expenses, medical bills,
property loses, as well as losses from fear, pain, suffering, and lost quality
of life.
42 Using our smallest estimated increase in these three crimecategories,
the total annual loss to victims from safe-storage laws is about $652 million
39 Including lagged values of the crime rates as an explanatory variable does not alter these
findings. The coefficients for rape, robbery, and burglary still remain positive and statistically
significant, and the signs of the other coefficients remain unaltered. The results for the later
regressions on which the figures are based actually become more significant and the pernicious
impact of the safe-storage law more pronounced.
40 Poisson estimates were also employed for the murder and rape regressions,andthisactually
implied an even stronger relationship between safe-storage laws and crime rates. The incidence
rate ratio estimates were murder 1.0496 (z-statistic p 4.082) and rape 1.1048 (z-statistic
p18.213). The other crime variables could not be estimated using Poisson simply because so
few observations had zero values.
41 Not including the other gun control variables for a set of regressions that correspond to
those in Table 3 produced a slightly different change in crimes: 3,819 more rapes, 21,000 more
robberies, and 49,733 more burglaries.
42 Ted R. Miller, Mark A. Cohen, & Brian Wiersema, Victim Costs and Consequences: A
New Look (1996).
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TABLE3Impact of Safe-Storage Laws on Crime RatesViolentCrime Murder Rape RobberyAggravatedAssaultPropertyCrime Burglary LarcenyAutoTheftSafe-storage law dummya0104( 372)039(1 141)092(3 357)**1056(2 823)**041(1 493)02( 059)061(2 678)**0094( 498)0052( 165)Right-to-carry lawsb02(8 88)**034(17 62)**01(3 34)039(19 52)**03(15 35)**009(3 87)*02(14 35)**007(2 99)003( 20)One-gun-a-monthpurchase rulea059( 713)132(1 808)054( 679)11( 999)136(1 430)037( 656)0057( 085)084(1 503)004( 043)Neighbor’sadoptionof one-gun-a-monthpurchase rulea233(3 855)**153(2 093)*089(1 508)00232( 029)25(3 639)**117(2 818)**081(1 662)146(3 600)024( 355)Waiting period dummy124(1 459)026( 249)046( 561)019( 333)155(1 587)086(1 456)159(2 288)*033( 578)1384(1 428)Length of waiting period in days020(1 865)0244( 925)019(1 419)023( 807)027(1 110)0155(1 716)026(2 489)*0109( 750)0628(2 564)Length of waiting period in dayssquared002(1 802)0019(1 322)0016(1 401)002(1 273)00078( 568)0016(1 939)0026(2 694)**00067( 831)0049(3 611)AdjustedR29491 9262 9068 9599 9356 9095 9238 9078 9341F-test13 026 49 13 92 12 80 16 20 11 61 21 55 11 66 17 06N994999 994 1,001 1,001 1,001 1,001 1,001 1,001Note.—The table reports the natural log of the crime rate The table uses state-level, violent, and property-crime data from the Uniform Crime Report All regressionsare weighted least squares, where the weighting is each state’s population, and use state and year fixed effects Not reported are the 36 demographic variables, state populationand population squared, unemployment, poverty rate, income variables, or the fixed effects All crime rates are in natural logsaEquals fraction of year that the law is first in effect and 1 thereafterbChange in the crime rate from the difference in the annual change in crime rates in the years before and after the change in the law (annual rate of change after the lawminus annual rate of change before the law)F-test values are in parenthesesThe two-tailed test is significant at the 10% level* The two-tailed test is significant at the 5% level** The two-tailed test is significant at the 1% levelThis content downloaded from 047.044.179.026 on June 19, 2018 14:10:10 PMAll use subject to University of Chicago Press Terms and Conditions (http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/t-and-c).
680 the journal of law and economics
in 1998 dollars. If the rest of the country were to adopt similar safe-storage
laws, the most conservative estimates here imply that there would be 5,070
more rapes, 23,525 more robberies, and 24,058 more burglaries.
As expected, higher arrest rates and higher execution rates for murder deter
violent crime, and the longer a right-to-carry law is in effect, the greater the
drop in crime.
43 One-gun-a-month rules raise violent crime, although the
effect on crimes other than murder are not statistically significant. It is also
interesting to see that one-gun-a-month rules are frequently consistent with
increased crime in neighboring states. At the very least, concerns about crime
arising from straw purchasers exporting guns to neighboring states appears
to be misplaced.
We then examined the effect of accounting for the age at which the law
applies or whether the penalty was a felony or misdemeanor. Breaking down
the effect by the age for which the law applies produces larger increases in
rape, robbery, property crimes, burglary, and larceny. Treating violations as
a felony rather than a misdemeanor creates a bigger increase in all the crime
categories except for auto theft, although the differences are statistically
significant only at better than the 1 percent level for aggravated assault,
property crime, and burglary.
44 Including the other gun control laws and
regional year fixed effects produces similar results.
The preceding discussions examine only how the adoption of safe-storage
laws change the before-and-after average crime rates. Yet, as noted earlier,
sometimes such simple averages can be quite misleading. Figure 4 graphs
out the estimates based on the simple before-and-after law linear and squared
trends. These results indicate that the dummy variable approach underesti-
mates the crime-increasing impact of safe-storage laws. The simple dummy
variable in Table 3 actually found a very slight insignificant decline in violent
crime. Looking at Figure 4, it is easy to see how the after-law average violent
crime rates are less than the prelaw average, yet it is also obvious that violent
crime rates stopped declining and started rising at the time the safe-storage
law was passed. After an upward displacement in violent crime, the violent
crime starts declining again but remains above what its predicted rate would
have been if the law had not been passed. In a country of 270 million people,
this difference of 33 violent crimes per 100,000 people would amount to
43 Each 1 percentage point increase in execution rates is associated with a 4 percentage point
drop in murder rates.
44 Disaggregating the estimates down to the individual states reveals that, especially for rape
and robberies, the vast majority of states with safe-storage laws experience more crime. For
rapes, 14 of the 15 states adopting safe-storage laws faced higher rates, and the one state for
which this was not true only had an extremely small drop (Texas experienced a .3 percent
decline). The numbers are not quite as lopsided for robberies, but 11 of the 15 statesexperienced
an increase. While the overall effect of safe-storage laws on aggravated assaults is not statis-
tically significant, 10 of the 15 states did experience a decline in this type of crime.
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safe-storage gun laws 681
Figure 4.—Comparison of the change in average violent crime rates after the adoption of
a safe-storage law with the preexisting trend.
over 89,000 violent crimes. The patterns for the individual crime categories
were similar, and the graphs are available from the authors on request.
45
Table 4 provides more refined estimates of the victimization costs of safe-
storage laws. The first part of the table calculates the difference in the number
of crimes by year between the new trend as a result of the safe-storage law
and what the crime rates would have been if the prelaw trend had continued.
45 The graphs also make it clear why rape and robbery rates were the only violent crime
categories using the simple dummy variable to show a statistically significant increase in crime
after the passage of safe-storage laws. While all the violent crime categories increase when
safe-storage laws go into effect, rape and robbery were the only categories where the crime
rates rose above the previous prelaw averages.
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682 the journal of law and economics
TABLE 4
Costs of Safe-Storage Laws in Terms of Higher Crime Rates
Year after Passage Murder Rape Robbery
Aggravated
Assault Burglary Larceny
Auto
Theft
1 168 1,856 16,037 7,118 58,125 14,326 28,532
2 287 3,313 26,488 15,319 101,123 23,441 51,134
3 358 4,326 30,758 24,565 127,850 27,313 67,369
4 380 4,869 28,807 34,821 137,980 25,946 77,075
5 355 4,932 21,152 46,050 132,023 19,384 80,373
Average increase
in victim costs
a 1,070.6 399.2 235.6 688.4 176.4 9.4 26.4
Note.—The table uses the quadratic before-and-after trends and the control variables used in Table 3
The table reports the change in the number of crimes by year after the adoption of the safe-storage law
a In millions of 1998 dollars, using the National Institute of Justice’s estimates
The 15 states with safe-storage laws would be expected to experience 168
more murders in the first full year that the law is in effect. The number of
murders peaks in the fourth full year at 380 murders. The number of rapes
and aggravated assaults is still rising 5 full years after the law is in effect,
while robberies peak at almost 31,000 during the third year. Of the property
crimes, burglaries show the biggest increase over the period.
The total victimization costs using the National Institute of Justice’s es-
timates continue rising over the period, reaching $3.4 billion during the fifth
year. The average yearly cost to victims over the 5 years is $2.6 billion, of
which $2.4 billion arises because of increased violent crimes.
There is one final prediction about the impact of safe-storage laws on
crime: after the passage of safe-storage laws, crimes should bemoreattractive
to criminals in residences than in other places. Unfortunately, the Federal
Bureau of Investigation’s Uniform Crime Reports do not disaggregate crimes
in this manner. After contacting state law enforcement agencies, we obtained
yearly data for 1987–99 for two states (California and Oregon) that show
the percentage of homicides and robberies that took place in residences.
While the data are very limited, Figure 5 suggests that California’s safe-
storage law increased the rate at which crimes occurred in the home. While
the percent of homicides and robberies exhibit no observable pattern in
Oregon (a state without the safe-storage law), the California data indicate
that these percentages obtained their lowest values in 1993 for robberies and
1992 for homicides, and there is a general upward trend after those dates
(California enacted its safe-storage law in 1992).
46
46 Simple regressions running the percentage of these crimes committed in residences on
time trends for the years and including fixed state and year effects provides some additional
support. An F-test for the difference in before-and-after trends equals 1.72 for homicide and
1.47 for robberies.
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safe-storage gun laws 683
Figure 5.—Percentage of homicides and robberies in residences in California and Oregon
before and after the adoption of a safe-storage law.
D. Did Safe-Storage Laws Change the Rate at Which
People Locked Up Guns?
While we observe an economically and statistically significant increase in
crime after the passage of safe-storage laws, a more direct tie between the
passage of the laws and individuals locking up guns would be very helpful.
Otherwise, it is possible that the passage of the law did not alter the rate at
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684 the journal of law and economics
which individuals either locked up or owned guns. Fortunately, several types
of survey data are available. One survey sponsored by thePoliceFoundation
47
asked 2,568 people about whether they owned a gun as well as how they
stored it.
A total of 2,562 people answered “yes” or “no” to the question of whether
a gun in the home was stored loaded and unlocked, but missing information
for other questions reduced the sample size in the regressions to 2,394. The
survey included a great deal of information that allowed us to measure race,
how safe the individual feels at home alone, whether they have ever used a
gun for self-defense, whether they have had training in how to use a gun,
age, where they live, employment status, marital status, education, political
views, whether a veteran, number of children, number of children under age
3, how frequently they attend religious services, religious preferences,family
income, whether they have ever been arrested, sex, state codes, and infor-
mation on whether the surveyor thinks that the person being surveyed in-
vented the defensive gun use. Dummy variables were used to identify these
different characteristics.
48 A detailed appendix of the complete list of the
characteristics and their average values for those that acknowledged that they
owned guns as well as those who claim that they did not is available on
request from the authors.
The variable for whether a gun is stored unlocked and loaded equals one
when this is true and zero otherwise. Because we have a dummy variable
as an endogenous variable, we will estimate logit regressions. A dummy is
included for whether a safe-storage law was in effect at the time of the
polling in 1994, as well as a variable for the number of years (including
parts thereof) that the safe-storage law has been in effect. The results (avail-
able on request) indicate that states with safe-storage laws had higher rates
of households leaving guns loaded and unlocked (coefficient p .69,t-statis-
tic p 2.3) but that the rate fell the longer that the law was in effect (coef-
ficient p .1248,t-statistic p 1.646). Six years after adoption of the law,
states with safe-storage laws have a lower percentage of homes with loaded,
locked guns.
The other coefficient estimates are basically whatone would expect.People
who have used a gun in self-defense or who feel the least safe are more
likely to have a gun that is loaded and unlocked, but only the first effect is
statistically significant. Men and those living on farms are also more likely
to have a gun that is loaded and unlocked. Other characteristics of people
47 Police Foundation, National Study of Private Ownership of Firearms in the U.S. 1994
(1997).
48 The left-out characteristics picked up in the intercept are for an employed, married,veteran,
Protestant, weekly-church-attending, white male with no education living in the open country
who feels very safe at home and makes less than $5,000 per year.
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safe-storage gun laws 685
in this category are interesting, though less obvious: Asians, Catholics, and
those making between $50,000 and $75,000.
Because the decline in the rate that guns are stored loaded and unlocked
in the previous regression could be due to either people with guns now storing
them differently or a decline in gun ownership, we also reestimated this
regression solely on those individuals that report that they own guns. Doing
so produces very similar though more significant results, with the coefficient
on the number of years that the safe-storage law is in effect now equalling
.0995 (t-statistic p 1.995).
Other survey data are also available from the General Social Survey,
conducted by the National Opinion Research Corporation. While this survey
has the advantage of being given in many different years, it can investigate
only what happens to the number of guns owned and not whether guns are
being stored loaded and unlocked.
49 The results imply that gun ownership
rates fell by 1 percentage point per year faster after the law than they did
beforehand (although the change was statistically significant only at the 17
percent level for a two-tailed test). If true, this represents a substantial change
in gun ownership. After 5 years, the level of gun ownership in these states
would be expected to fall from 28 to 23 percent.
There are several possible reasons for this decline in ownership, although
the price of gun locks themselves does not seem particularly important. The
most likely factors would be either the new possible criminal penalties for
owning a gun or the increased perceptions of the riskiness of having a gun
in the home given the news attention surrounding thelaw’spassage.However,
differentiating safe-storage-law states on the basis of whether they make
violations a felony or a misdemeanor does not appear to make a difference
in explaining the drop in gun ownership. It is not immediately obvious how
to measure the impact of increased perceptions of risk on gun ownership.
VI. Conclusion
Safe-storage laws have no impact on accidental gun deaths or total suicide
rates. While there is some weak evidence that safe-storage laws reduce ju-
venile gun suicides, those intent on committing suicide appear to easily
substitute into other methods, as the total number of juvenile suicides actually
rises (if insignificantly) after passage of safe-storage laws. The pattern across
49 There are also a couple of other problems: not all states are surveyed, and the survey was
conducted only in 1977, 1980, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1987–91, 1993, 1994, and 1996. Fewer
people were also included in any given year, with between 907 and 1,970 people. Because the
General Social Survey reports national weights, we reweighted the state-level percentages to
reflect the composition of people in that state using the 36 demographic groupings that we
have used in the earlier regressions. We regressed the percent of the population with guns on
the year trends for before and after the adoption of the safe-storage and concealed handgun
laws as well as all the measures of income, state population, unemployment, poverty, and
demographics used in earlier regressions.
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686 the journal of law and economics
ages and with regard to the type of gun is also difficult to reconcile with the
theory that safe-storage laws will reduce juvenile accidental gun deaths. The
only consistent impact of safe-storage laws is to raise rape, robbery, and
burglary rates, and the effects are very large. Our most conservativeestimates
show that safe-storage laws resulted in 3,738 more rapes, 21,000 more rob-
beries, and 49,733 more burglaries annually in just the 15 states with these
laws. More realistic estimates indicate across-the-board increases in violent
and property crimes. During the 5 full years after the passage of the safe-
storage laws, the 15 states faced an annual average increase of 309 more
murders, 3,860 more rapes, 24,650 more robberies, and over 25,000 more
aggravated assaults.
The impact of safe-storage laws is consistent with existing research in-
dicating that the guns that are most likely to be used in an accidental shooting
are owned by the least law-abiding citizens and thus are least likely to be
locked up after the passage of the law. The safe-storage laws thus manage
to produce no significant change in accidental deaths or suicides and yet still
raise crime rates because households with low accidental death risks are now
the ones most likely to obey the law.
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safe-storage gun laws 687
APPENDIX
TABLE A1
Descriptive Statistics for Endogenous Variables
Variable Mean SD Min Max
Accidental gun death rate
for ages (N p 918):
Under 5 2.62E 06 5.01E 06 0 .0000455
5–9 4.21E 06 7.31E 06 0 .0000604
10–14 .000011 .0000123 0 .0000875
15–19 .0000182 .0000211 0 .000208
Nongun accidental death rate
for ages (N p 918):
Under 5 .0001995 .0000788 1.10E 12 .0005212
5–9 .0001164 .0000483 0 .0003763
10–14 .0001229 .0000484 0 .0003382
15–19 .0004679 .0001598 .0000347 .0012447
Suicide rates for those under
age 15 (N p 918):
Gun 3.38E 06 3.47E 06 0 .0000285
Other method 2.48E 06 2.83E 06 0 .0000242
Total 5.86E 06 4.75E 06 0 .0000449
Suicide rates for those between ages
15 and 19 (N p 918):
Gun .0000763 .0000426 0 .0003402
Other method .00004 .0000232 0 .0001844
Total .0001162 .0000527 0 .000431
Natural log of crime
rates (N p 1,017):
Violenta 5.9692 .7013274 2.68 7.979955
Murder 1.749346 .7675413 2.3 4.39
Rapea 3.412765 .4988437 0 4.9
Robbery 4.658273 .9991612 1.17 7.4
Aggravated assault 5.450054 .6910092 2 7.350902
Property 8.346207 .3342765 6.4 10.02
Burglary 6.961164 .4242595 4.65 9.8
Larceny 7.922934 .3196749 6.08 8.81
Auto theft 5.846315 .6062313 3.28 7.517467
a N p 1,010
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1
Crystal Bothelio
From:City Council
Sent:Tuesday, June 19, 2018 4:43 PM
To:Howard Miller; Manny Cappello; Emily Lo; Mary-Lynne Bernald; Rishi Kumar; James
Lindsay; Crystal Bothelio; Nora Pimentel
Subject:FW: "Why Do Kids Shoot Up Schools?"
From: Virginia Fujii
Sent: Tuesday, June 19, 2018 4:42:18 PM (UTC-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)
To: City Council
Subject: "Why Do Kids Shoot Up Schools?"
Dear Mayor and Council Members,
I am not a resident of your beautiful City, but I do visit and shop in your stores. I am very disappointed to read
the proposed gun legislation being discussed tomorrow night. It is unconstitutional and illogical. I offer the
link below as a more thoughtful approach on to how to protect our children.
John Taylor Gatto is an award winning educator from New York. Asked, after Columbine to explain why such
a thing would happen, he gave a lecture that is pertinent to this discussion now. It is linked below: "Why Do
Kids Shoot Up Schools?" - John Taylor Gatto on Columbine - C-SPAN - 2001
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9nb7OzUIb8
Please consider the deeper issues that drive the violence. Also, please recall the historical fate of every nation
whose people have surrendered their guns only to be slaughtered by oppressors with weapons.
Thank you for your consideration.
Virginia Fujii
2
2
I. REQUIRING INDIVIDUALS TO REPORT THE THEFT OF LOSS OF A FIREARM WITHIN 48 HOURS IS
UNENFORCEABLE AND WILL ONLY RESULT IN FEWER REPORTS TO POLICE.
Under the preemption doctrine a local regulation will be struck down if it duplicates state law, conflicts
with state law, or enters a field wholly occupied by the state to the exclusion of local regulation, either expressly
or by implication.[1] In the present case, the mandatory reporting of the theft or loss of a firearm is already
required under state law following the enactment of Proposition 63.[2] This provision subjects gun owners to
penalties if a firearm, which is lost or stolen, is not reported to authorities within 5 days of the time he or she
knew or reasonably should have known that the firearm was lost or stolen.[3]
With the enactment of Proposition 63, the state has fully and completely occupied the field regarding the
reporting of lost or stolen firearms. To pass additional requirements at the local level that is duplicative and
otherwise contradictory to state law will be struck down as preempted.
From a policy perspective, mandatory reporting requirements may appear sound, but in practice will
only result in fewer firearms being reported. This is because when coupled with the mandatory locked-storage
requirements also being considered by the City, reporting a firearm as lost or stolen may expose an individual to
additional criminal liability should the person have failed to secure their firearms in accordance with the
ordinance. The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, which reads “[n]o person. . . shall be
compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself,” will prevent such individuals from being
compelled to report the loss.[4]
As a bedrock of our criminal justice system, the Fifth Amendment prohibits police, prosecutors, and
judges from requiring an individual to provide evidence or testimony that could result in potential criminal
charges against them (compelled speech). Governor Brown noted these complicated policy issues when he
vetoed numerous pieces of legislation prior to the voters passing Proposition 63. In his veto message, Governor
Brown wrote that he had vetoed similar measures in 2012 and 2013 stating “I continue to believe that
responsible people report the loss or theft of a firearm and irresponsible people do not… it is not likely that this
bill would change that.” Even Governor Brown’s predecessor Governor Schwarzenegger vetoed a similar bill
reasoning that it “could result in cases where law-abiding citizens face criminal penalties simply because they
were the victim of a crime, which is particularly troubling.”[5]
Given the enforcement difficulties, other jurisdictions considering similar measures have rejected them.
Recently, the Sacramento Police Department reviewed identical Oakland, Berkley, and Alameda County
reporting requirements, only to discover that not a single investigation, arrest, or conviction had taken place. In
San Francisco, when police do try to enforce this portion of the municipal code, the cases are dismissed on
constitutional grounds. One District Attorney for the County of San Francisco even stated, “I do not believe [the
1
Crystal Bothelio
From:Nora Pimentel
Sent:Wednesday, June 20, 2018 3:22 PM
To:Crystal Bothelio
Subject:FW: Mandatory Storage and Lost/Stolen Reporting
I am forwarding you this one (below) to include in your pdf, since its different from what I am collecting.
Thanks
From: Walter Windus
Sent: Wednesday, June 20, 2018 2:30 PM
To: Nora Pimentel <npimentel@saratoga.ca.us>
Subject: Mandatory Storage and Lost/Stolen Reporting
Please convey to the Saratoga City Council my opposition to this proposed ordinance.
1. This is an unnecessary ordinance since the topics are already covered by state law.
2. It is not likely to be universally enforced since it is very unlikely that law enforcement will go from
house to house inspecting for violations.
3. It will make criminals out of many of the Saratoga citizens, those who are inadvertently in violation of
this ordinance.
4. It will degrade if not destroy relations between the citizens and law enforcement for fear of being cited
if law enforcement is contacted for another issue. Therefore the citizens will be reluctant to report
crimes or act as witnesses.
5. Surely the Saratoga City Council has other more important business to consider rather than spending
their valuable time on this topic. The news media has not indicated that these are a problem in
Saratoga.
Thanks for forwarding my comments.
Best regards,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Windus
95070‐3538
Storage and Reporting of Lost or Stolen Firearms
Item 2.2, June 20th 2018 Saratoga City Council Meeting
Oppose, but conduct additional public meeting to solicit sensible public safety
recommendations.
1. Vague requirement
a. What does “reasonably should have known [of loss or theft] really mean?
2. No evidence of any benefit, but penalizes innocent victims.
a. Prop 63 requires 5 days. No evidence that 2 days is better.
b. US DOJ study indicates no benefit even within a 6 month reporting window.
3. Storage requirement was rejected in other communities as jeopardizing public safety.
a. Risk if homeowner responds to knock on door with gun in hand or on hip.
b. Home invasion or violent confrontation often occur within a few seconds*.
Under ideal circumstances, a cable lock (most common locking device and
included with gun purchase) takes just under 90 seconds to render firearm
usable.
The proposal renders self-protection and protection of others virtually
impossible without any demonstrable benefit.
* Sources: FBI and DOJ research
Dave Truslow