| Gun Violence Continues as Conference Releases New Survey
on Gun Safety Day
By Ed Somers
As
the nation's mayors and police chiefs carried their call for common-sense
gun legislation to the Congress on Gun Safety Day, The U.S. Conference of
Mayors released a survey which shows the continuing deaths in cities due
to gun violence. The
report, entitled "The Death Toll Since Columbine: Victims of Gun
Violence in Cities," covers the experience of just 44 U.S. cities in
which 556 persons have died as a result of gun violence since April 20.
It is a report on the actual fatalities produced by this gun
violence, based on the cities' responses to a late-August request for
information by The U.S. Conference of Mayors. For
these cities, the report lists, by date, between April 20 and September 1,
the name and age of each victim (except where police department policy
does not permit the release of this information, or where the victim could
not be identified.) (see Center Section for the
listing of names). The
report notes that on only two days during this period -- April 24 and
August 26 -- no firearms deaths occurred in any of the 44 cities.
In addition, 61 of these gunshot fatalities were 18 years of age and
under. The youngest victim
was just three, the oldest was 84. As
Conference of Mayors President Wellington E. Webb stated in unveiling the
survey, "this report makes it clear that, while Columbine may have
been the event that moved a nation to say, 'this has got to stop,' the
fact is, it has not stopped." The
44 cities covered in the report range in size from Detroit, which has a
population just over one million, to Superior, Wisconsin, with a
population of 27,500. An
additional 24 cities responding to the Conference's request for
information on gun violence fatalities since April 20 reported that none
had occurred. A
full copy of the report is available on The U.S. Conference of Mayors web
site at www:usmayors.org/uscm .
Not
Just Names In
addition to listing the names of the victims and dates of their deaths,
the report also includes brief descriptions of the circumstances
surrounding a number of these shootings.
Perhaps one of the most poignant is the following incident: Gary,
IN: On June 30, Blake King,
widely regarded in the community as "a fine young man," was shot
and killed after having argued with a friend.
While Blake and his friend appeared to be settling their
differences in a civilized manner, their argument became physical, with
pushing and shoving. After
the fight and the argument appeared to be over, Blake's friend went home,
retrieved a handgun, returned to the scene, and shot Blake in the head.
Rushed to a local hospital, he was pronounced dead approximately
one hour later. The victim,
who was the nephew of Mayor Scott King, had turned 17 four days prior to
the shooting. Mayor
King joined Mayor Webb at a press conference on the eve of Gun Safety Day
and said, "one of the recurring duties of mayors is to attend the
funerals of victims of gun violence, a very difficult duty. On July 5, I attended yet another such funeral, but this one
was for my nephew." Mayor
King's nephew was shot by a gun that was not secured by a safety lock. "I
don't suggest that passage of any laws is a cure for what ails us, but it
is an important start... it could mean a few less Blakes," added
Mayor King. |
Return to Previous Page
|