The
National Review
(August 13,
2002 5:06 p.m. EDT) - A year ago it would have been shocking
news: a governor publicly telling women to get a
concealed-handgun permit so that they can defend themselves
against a serial killer. Contrast this with the typical
recommendation that women behave passively or simply make sure
that their doors are locked.
Louisiana's governor, Mike Foster, last week pointed to the
undeniable: Police, while extremely important in fighting crime,
simply can't be there all the time. People should
"assist" the police in searching for the killer, but
"you have a right to get a (concealed) gun permit... if you
know how (to use a gun) and you have a situation with some
fruitcake running around, like they've got right now, it sure
can save you a lot of grief."
The governor's advice is excellent, yet seldom heard. Despite
all the free suggestions offered in the media, the U.S.
Department of Justice's National Crime Victimization Survey has
shown for decades that resistance with a gun is by far the
safest course of action when one is confronted by a criminal.
The probability of serious injury from a criminal confrontation
is 2.5 times greater for women offering no resistance than for
those resisting with a gun.
Men also benefit, but the benefit is smaller because there is,
on average, a smaller difference in strength between violent
criminals, who are almost always men, and male victims than for
female victims. For men, passive behavior is 1.4 times more
likely to result in serious injury than resisting with a gun.
In my own research, I examine county crime rates for the entire
United States from 1977 to 1998. Murder rates decline when
either sex carries a concealed handgun, but the effect is
particularly pronounced for women. An additional woman carrying
a concealed handgun reduces the murder rate for women by three
to four times more than an additional armed man reduces the
murder rate for men.
Cases where women use guns to save their lives and the lives of
their families occur all the time, though they are rarely given
any news coverage.
Take a few cases just during the last week of July:
- Nashville, Tenn. A man broke into a woman's home at 3:15 a.m.
on a Sunday. In what police described as "a violent home
invasion" the woman stopped the attacker by shooting him in
the leg.
- Reno, Nev. A maintenance man began punching and slapping a
female nightclub owner after she complained about the quality of
his repairs. She first tried unsuccessfully to defend herself
with a knife. When the man continued his attack, the woman, a
concealed-handgun permit holder, pulled a handgun from her purse
and fired a warning shot. The man fled the scene.
- Albuquerque, N.M. A woman in her 30s was awakened at 1:30 a.m.
on a Saturday "by a flashlight pointed toward her face and
with a man straddling her ... he threatened to kill her."
She struggled and was able to get a hold of a gun, fatally
shooting the attacker three times in the chest.
- Macon, Ga. A 67-year-old woman stopped two men from robbing
her by pulling a shotgun on them. When they saw the gun the
robbers ran out of the store.
Many women live in fear of crime, but - as these stories
indicate - locking yourself in your home doesn't guarantee
safety. In all these cases, there was simply not sufficient time
to call the police and wait for them to arrive. How else could
these women have handled men who were much stronger then they
are?
Some people find it hard to believe that, as research shows,
there are two million defensive-gun uses each year. After all,
if these events were really happening, wouldn't we hear about
them on the news?
Gun crimes inundate the news, but when was the last time you saw
a story on the national evening news (or even the local news)
about a citizen using her gun to stop a crime? Unfortunately,
the advice offered by Governor Foster is rarely heard. Yet, in
the wake of Sept. 11, the usual "if you simply give
attackers what they want everything will be O.K." attitude
is being seriously questioned.
For some, that rethinking couldn't come soon enough.
John
R. Lott Jr. is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise
Institute
and author of