Can an assault weapons ban reduce killings if
firearms last 100 years?
Firearms remain operational for a century or more,
complicating any path to reform in a country with the highest gun ownership
rate per capita in the world
Even if a ban on sales were effectively implemented
tomorrow, there would still be somewhere between 15m and 20m assault rifles in
circulation.
Mona
Chalabi
@MonaChalabi
Mon 5 Apr
2021 07.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/05/assault-weapons-ban-firearms-lifespan
Six days
before a man shot and killed 10 people, he legally purchased the military-style
firearm he used for the crime. The incident – one of three recent mass
shootings – yet again renewed a public debate about banning assault weapons in
the US and seems like a potential example of a shooting in which an assault
weapon ban might have been effective in reducing the death toll of the attack.
But would it?
When
firearms are recovered by law enforcement because of their use or suspected use
in a crime, the weapons are recorded in a database along with the date of their
first retail sale. The amount of time between those two events is known as the
“time to crime” and is published by the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms
and Explosives (ATF). While the suspect involved in the Boulder shooting waited
just six days, the national average time to crime is 8.3 years according to
2019 statistics from the ATF.
This
dataset is much broader since it includes a wide variety of crimes and
suspected crimes but the number still poses a significant problem for
policymakers that are attempting to prevent future mass shootings. Even if a
nationwide ban on sales were effectively implemented tomorrow, there would
still be somewhere between 15m and 20m assault rifles in circulation out of the
estimated 393m guns held in the US.
Averages
can be misleading though, the range here is pretty vast – guns can be recovered
days or decades after purchase. But it is relevant to note that in only 7% of
cases were the guns recovered less than 3 months since the purchase date. State
differences are also huge. In Arizona, 12% of recovered firearms were purchased
less than 3 months ago, while in Connecticut and Arkansas, it’s just 4%.
The fact that
those weapons could continue to be used for years to come isn’t just a
hypothetical given the lifespan of assault weapons. Firearms remain operational
for a century or more further complicating any path to reform in a country with
the highest gun ownership rate per capita in the world.

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