Analysis
Fourth of July is a US celebration. Why is it the
riskiest day for mass shootings?
Chris Stein
Homicides spike in the summer, and large gatherings
with a lot of people – and alcohol thrown in – can see gun violence
Tue 4 Jul
2023 06.00 EDT
Gun
violence is a daily reality across the US, but an emerging body of research
indicates the most risky day for mass shootings in the nation is the Fourth of
July, when Americans celebrate their independence from Britain.
Using data
from the Gun Violence Archive, James Alan Fox, a criminologist at Northeastern
University, found that there have been 52 mass shootings on the Fourth of July
over the past decade, averaging just over five a year, and more than on any
other given day.
His
analysis, which he implemented for USA Today, underscores how, in a country
where Republicans in many states have acted to loosen gun laws, it is routine
that the barbecues, block parties and parades held to commemorate the US’s birthday
become scenes of bloodshed.
“The fact
that you have states that allow concealed carry without a permit, without any
training, is problematic. When you have block parties, for example, people are
going there with guns in their pockets, and then they can get into an argument
over even trivial things, which can lead to gunfire, and it’s a large gathering
like a block party or a party at an Airbnb, lots of people get shot in the
crossfire,” Fox said.
“They may
not be involved in that argument, that dispute, but the bullet doesn’t know
that.”
Last year,
a gunman opened fire from a rooftop and killed seven people attending an
Independence Day parade in the affluent Chicago suburb of Highland Park,
Illinois. The violence was part of a string of mass killings that led gun
control-wary Republicans in Congress to partner with Democrats and pass
legislation that contained modest reforms intended to halt the violence.
But the
drumbeat of killings and woundings continues. Though definitions of mass
shootings vary, the Gun Violence Archive categorizes them as incidences in
which at least four people are shot, reporting 647 of these events in 2022, and
340 so far this year.
Massacres
at schools, shopping malls and churches have shocked Americans, but such mass killings
are comparatively less common. Defining them as incidences in which at least
four people have been killed, the Gun Violence Archive reports 36 last year,
and 25 this year so far.
Many mass
shootings are instead like what happened in Baltimore’s Brooklyn Homes
neighborhood this past weekend, in which two people were killed and 28 injured
when gunmen opened fire at a block party in an incident that is still being
investigated.
Daniel
Webster, a professor focusing on gun violence reduction strategies at the Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, said Brooklyn Homes is
“a community very under-resourced, a lot of folks struggling and guns are
readily available. So you put that brew together with the well-into-the-night
gatherings, you’ve got the potential, anyway, for a mass shooting.” Brooklyn
Homes is just one of many impoverished neighborhoods in a city with one of the
worst murder rates in the country.
“It’s
usually useful to think about gun violence as a phenomenon of grievances and
altercations,” Webster continued. “And these things can lead to multiple people
shot rather than one, simply because July 4 brings people together.”
Held during
a time of year that sees historically elevated homicide rates along with higher
temperatures – another driver of homicide – it’s easy for disputes to boil over
at Independence Day celebrations, said Jaclyn Schildkraut, executive director
of the Regional Gun Violence Research Consortium at the Rockefeller Institute
of Government.
“We know
that homicide tends to spike in summer months to begin with, and they’re
usually highest around July and August,” Schildkraut said. “There’s a lot of
people who are gathered in large groups in typically open spaces, which we know
tend to be characteristic of mass shootings, as well. We also know, of course,
when you add in things like alcohol and other potential influences … all
together, it kind of creates a perfect storm where things are going to go bad
pretty quickly.”
After 4
July, Fox found that the day with the second highest number of mass shootings
over the past decade was 5 July, which had 44. Fox attributes the 5 July
shootings to late-night parties, or years when people are given the day off
because Independence Day falls on a Sunday. Ranking third was New Year’s Day,
another traditional party time.
Mass
shootings on 4 July have become more common in recent years, according to
researchers. Last year, Schildkraut co-authored a study that found mass
shootings surged after the Covid-19 public health emergency was declared in
March 2020, and peaked on Independence Day before declining. Fox’s analysis,
meanwhile, found that there were four mass shootings on 4 July 2019, then nine
in 2020, 11 in 2021 and 10 in 2022.
“I think
one of the challenges in this space is people think that those events can never
happen where they are,” said Schildkraut, who grew up near Parkland, Florida,
and studied in Orlando, both cities that have suffered terrible mass shootings.
“There is a
mentality that it doesn’t matter what variant of mass shooting you’re talking
about, that people still are resigned to seeing it as everyone else’s problem
but their own and as something that we respond to, but we don’t as a nation, on
a very aggregate level, work as effectively to prevent it from happening in the
first place.”

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