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Posted: 12/16/2001 9:23:48 AM EDT
[url] http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/16/national/16GUNS.html[/url]
Steep Rise in Gun Sales Reflects Post-Attack Fears

December 16, 2001
Steep Rise in Gun Sales Reflects Post-Attack Fears
By AL BAKER

Gun and ammunition sales across the country have risen sharply since Sept.
11 as more Americans take what many consider to be the most personal step
toward feeling safer: arming themselves.
According to statistics from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, surveys
by firearms associations and anecdotal evidence from storefront gun shops
and distributors from Arizona to Florida to Lower Manhattan, the jump in
weapons sales followed quickly on the first jarring images of the
terrorist attacks.
The rise was anywhere from 9 percent to nearly 22 percent during
September, October and November, according to F.B.I. statistics on
background checks for purchases. The total peaked in October, at
1,029,691.
Those in the gun industry say a range of firearms have been purchased,
from high-priced handguns small enough to fit inside a purse to shotguns
and assault rifles that can be leaned against a wall inside a clothes
closet. And, they say, there has been a steady stream of serious- minded
first-time buyers.
``Sept. 11, like other catastrophes, makes people panic, makes them
fearful, makes them want to protect themselves and their families against
the enemy, who, in this case, is hard to identify,'' said James Alan Fox,
Lipman professor of criminal justice at Northeastern University in Boston.

``People may say, `Let Tom Ridge watch out for our shores. I'll watch out
for my doors,''' he added.
To many in and out of law enforcement, such a proliferation of deadly
weapons is unsettling, even as scores of new gun owners argue that their
right to bear arms is worth exercising to gain a feeling of personal
security in troubled times.
``We are always concerned with the overall numbers of guns that are
available and out on the street making things unmanageable for law
enforcement,'' said William B. Berger, the police chief of North Miami
Beach, Fla., who is president of the International Association of Chiefs
of Police, the nation's oldest and largest group of law enforcement
executives, with 19,000 members worldwide.
Some gun manufacturers - like those in other industries - are aggressively
seeking new clients because of Sept. 11. Ithaca Gun Company is selling its
Homeland Security model for ``our current time of national need.'' The
Beretta gun company has its ``United We Stand,'' a 9- millimeter pistol
bearing a laser- etched American flag. The company sold 2,000 of them to
wholesalers in one day in October, said said Jeff Reh, vice general
manager of Beretta U.S.A.
Gun control advocates have voiced stong concern about the increased sales,
citing statistics showing that guns, though purchased by the law- abiding,
often end up later in criminals' hands. Some law enforcement officials
echo that thought. The advocates also say that more guns in circulation,
particularly in the hands of the untrained, increase the chances of
violence in the home, suicide, or accidental shooting.
Link Posted: 12/16/2001 9:25:05 AM EDT
[#1]
Nevertheless, guns are being bought with the feeling that they will make
the buyer safer. Scott Abraham, a Long Island investment broker in his
30's, said he never dreamed of buying a gun until Sept. 11. Last month he
bought a Mossberg shotgun because ``I don't want to be caught
shorthanded,'' and made a spot to hide it in his house. Thomas M. Iasso,
53, a former police officer who stopped carrying a gun two years ago,
bought a .40-caliber Glock after the terrorist attacks - and carries it.
``You can't sit there and tell me you can protect me anymore because you
can't,'' Mr. Iasso said, explaining his purchase.
Both Mr. Abraham and Mr. Iasso bought their guns at John Jovino Gun Shop,
the city's oldest, in Little Italy. The shop owner, Anthony F. Imperato,
said there has been a steady increase in potential customers expressing
interest in obtaining a New York City pistol or shotgun permit. Other
people, with permits, want additional weapons, and some people just want
to buy self-defense equipment, like pepper spray.
At Mr. Imperato's gun factory, Henry Repeating Arms Company in Brooklyn,
there has been a run on the Henry U.S. Survival Rifle since Sept. 11. It
was first manufactured four years ago but its ``name and style and
features make it particularly desirable'' now, Mr. Imperato said. The
components of the gun, a version of the United States Air Force AR-7, can
be disassembled and placed in its stock, which is waterproof and floats.
Gun shops and distributors across the country tell similar stories. Local
reports in several states, including Texas, Nevada and Virgina, said
officials have cited increases in gun sales, and in applications for
concealed-weapons permits in the days immediately after the attacks.
Members of the Air Line Pilots Association may soon be allowed to carry
firearms in their cockpits.
According to Andrew M. Molchan, the director of the 4,000-member
Professional Gun Retailers Association in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., firearms
retailers have seen significant jumps in sales, especially among
first-time buyers and the wealthy.
``Maybe they had more to protect or maybe they had more to lose, or,
psychologically, they thought they had more to lose,'' Mr. Molchan said.
In a survey done about 10 days after the September attacks, the National
Shooting Sports Foundation found that 15 percent of gun retailers who were
questioned had reported sales increases of more than 25 percent, said
Douglas Painter, executive director of the 1,800-member, Connecticut-based
organization. The majority of those retailers were in places close to the
attacks, like New York City and Washington, as well as in Florida, where
some of the terrorists are believed to have lived for a time, he said.
Now the big question is how long the increase in sales will continue.
Opinion is split. Many retailers say the buying habits may be affected by
global events. ``Only time will tell if this current increase in sales
will be long-term.''Mr. Painter said.
Some gun retailers say that sales have already begun to level off or
decrease in recent days, and that they do not think overall gun sales for
the year will break records.
The F.B.I. statistics show increases in the number of background checks
for firearms sales and other transactions from September through November.
But they had increased very slightly in August as well.
Link Posted: 12/16/2001 9:28:00 AM EDT
[#2]
Daniel A. Wells, the assistant operations manager for the National Instant
Criminal Background Check System, the F.B.I. division that keeps data on
the sales of long guns and handguns, pawn shop redemptions and permit
requests, said the number of checks increased 12 percent on Sept. 12 over
the same day in 2000.
The number of background checks for gun purchases and other transactions
increased to 864,038 for September, an increase of 10.5 percent over the
same month last year. In October, they were 1,029,691, a gain of nearly 22
percent over October 2000. And last month, they were 983,186, an increase
of more than 9 percent over November 2000, the F.B.I. figures showed. That
followed declines in each of those months - traditional hunting season
months - between 1999 and 2000. So far this month, however, the numbers
are on track to be slightly lower than they were last December, though the
holiday buying season is not over.
The checks do not represent gun sales, but are considered the most
accurate gauge of the number of gun purchases. Such increases were
expected, just as gun sales jumped in limited geographical regions, after
incidents like the Los Angeles riots, or before the passage of the Brady
Act of 1994, that established a nationwide system of background checks for
handgun purchases.
``This time you can project it nationally,'' Wayne R. LaPierre, chief
executive of the National Rifle Association, said of the increased gun
sales.
No one can say for sure if the increase can be attributed solely to the
Sept. 11 attacks, but many law enforcement officials and gun industry
insiders agree it is a primary reason. Because the F.B.I. has been keeping
statistics only since November 1998, it cannot determine whether the
increases are part of some cyclical pattern. Some buyers said part of
their reason was a feeling that crime was beginning to inch up, and the
belief that a worsening economy may increase crime further.
``If they were sitting on the fence between `should I buy a gun or not buy
one,'' well, this was the catalyst that pushed them over,'' said a former
employee of a major gun manufacturer who lost his job early this year as a
result of slumping sales.
The gun industry has been in a general decline over the last three decades
as the popularity of sport hunting has waned and fewer young people have
been introduced to firearms. Low crime rates and a buoyant economy are
also thought to have contributed to the downturn in gun ownership.
Still, the vast number of weapons already loosed upon American streets
often wind up in the hands of those with insufficient training, gun
control advocates say. And they stay in circulation for years.
``We will see the ultimate consequences of that down the road when we see
death and injuries that are associated with the proliferation of
handguns,'' said Tom Diaz, senior policy analyst at the Violence Policy
Center, a nonprofit gun control group in Washington.
He said most guns would sit on closet shelves or in glove compartments,
never used to fight crime, let alone terrorism. ``What are you going to
do, shoot an envelope filled with anthrax or stop a 747 with a handgun?''
he asked. ``It's literally crazy.''
Link Posted: 12/16/2001 9:28:52 AM EDT
[#3]
The executive director of Doctors Against Handgun Injury, Robert V.
Seltzer, has said that people need to think before buying a weapon and
that if they buy one, they ``need to store it properly: unloaded, locked,
with the ammunition stored separately and securely.''
Around the country, gun instruction classes have shown significant
increases in enrollment. Mr. LaPierre said the waiting period to attend
courses for weapon-carrying permits has jumped to more than two months
from two weeks.
At the Firing Line, a South Philadelphia gun shop and pistol range where
there has been a 20 percent increase in the sale of guns since Sept. 11,
the owner, Gregory J. Isabella, said the economy may be sour, but that has
not stopped sales. He said he sold 58 guns in the first 20 days after the
attacks, an increase of 20 percent or more over the same period last year,
and sold 18,000 rounds of ammunition in the same period, an increase of
more than 30 percent. Sales at his shop have steadied, but are still ahead
of last year's pace. He said women were buying their own guns, or
ammunition for their husbands as a Christmas stocking stuffer. Other
customers, he said, come by just to shoot at the Osama bin Laden targets.
``I got him!'' Mr. Isabella said he could hear shooters saying, or, ``I
got even with him!'' It's a way to blow off steam and, perhaps, practice
for some nebulous future event.
``Let's just say that personal security is now on the mind of individual
citizens,'' Mr. Isabella said. ``Definitely.''

Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company | Privacy Information
Link Posted: 12/16/2001 11:00:28 AM EDT
[#4]
Ahh, what a wonderful change from a year ago.
Link Posted: 12/16/2001 11:18:51 PM EDT
[#5]
Link Posted: 12/16/2001 11:23:40 PM EDT
[#6]
Link Posted: 12/17/2001 4:37:41 AM EDT
[#7]
i really dont know what to make of this x-cept that maby there are a lot more pro-gunners out there now. i hope anyway.
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