Unintended Consequences
Pro-Handgun Experts Prove That Handguns Are a Dangerous Choice for
Self-Defense
Chapter Two: Safety Last
Every handgun is
inherently deadly. None can ever be considered safe. Therefore, safety
issues begin to multiply from the moment a person accepts the industry's
arguments and brings home a handgun for self-defense.h
Even if the handgun
is never called to use for self-defense, the owner must recognize and
deal properly with a host of questions. Does he know how to load, unload,
clean, and carry the handgun safely? Where and how will the gun be stored?
What other persons will have access to the handgun, authorized or not,
and at what risk to themselves or others? Are there special factors
at home that increase the risk of inappropriate usage?
The handgun industry
and the gun lobby often gloss over these questions by rhapsodizing about
"responsible" handgun owners. But handgun self-defense experts shudder
when they write about what they see in real life. Starting from the
initial decision to buy a handgun, through general safety knowledge,
to home storage and the effects of carrying a gun on one's personality,
the real world in which the experts teach and train differs dramatically
from the idyllic glossy centerfolds of the handgun business and the
NRA's ideologues.
Who Should Own and Carry a Handgun?
Who ought
we allow to own and carry a handgun? Expert Ayoob takes a surprisingly
cautious view that emphasizes "privilege" over "right," stating that:
...the license
to carry concealed, deadly weapons in public is not a right but a
privilege. To be worthy of this privilege, one must be both discreet
and competent with the weapon. The gun-carrying man who lacks either
attribute is a walking time bomb.41
Hotheads and
Racists? As will be seen throughout this study, useful insight can
be drawn from the training and experience of law enforcement officers,
most of whom carry handguns daily. One handgun expert aptly compared
the even temperament that we justifiably demand of police officers with
that of civilians who carry handguns:
Clearly, a police
officer who flies off the handle easily will generate, rather than
solve, problems, and the same is true for other citizens. A hothead
should not carry a gun.42 [emphasis in original]
Ayoob opines similarly
that "there is no place for racist paranoids with guns on an integrated
American street."43 This is no mere theoretical observation, given the
number of recent handgun murders in public places allegedly inspired
by racist motives.i
These common sense
observations are fine advice. But they raise a profound question: How
do we detect the "hothead," the racist paranoid, or other inherently
dangerous persons who "should not carry a gun?" Unfortunately, the answer
is that in America we try only weakly—and ineffectively at that. Like
the emperor's absent clothes, this problem is studiously ignored by
many, even by gun control advocates who should know better.
Candidates for the
police force are now often screened by psychological testing and observation
during training—before they are set loose on the street with
a handgun. "It used to be that people became cops because they wanted
to hit somebody upside the head," said Dr. Ellen Kirschman, a psychologist
and author on police families. "We screen them out now."44
But we find out
about civilian hotheads and other loose cannons only after they
shoot one or (increasingly) more of us in moments of jealousy, rage,
hatred, or mental imbalance. Although the Brady Law and a few state
licensing laws screen out certain classes of persons presumed by law
to be too dangerous to possess firearms, such as convicted felons and
persons already adjudicated as mentally ill, neither they nor
any screening procedure imaginable can detect the kind of dangerous
hotheads who are "walking time bombs" if allowed to own a concealable,
portable handgun.j
The "Make My
Day" Effect. The problem is compounded by the potential changes
in one's personality when carrying a handgun, described by expert Chris
Bird:
[B]e aware that
when you start carrying a gun, your personality may change. You may
become more confident but also more aggressive. You may go to places
that you would not have gone before simply because you are armed.
You may think you are invincible, but you're not.45
This might be called
the "Make My Day" effect. As Bird says, "most police officers and probably
civilians who carry guns fantasize at some time or other about winning
a gunfight."46 Ayoob also warns, "Civilians who buy guns for street defense
tend to think that their very possession will alleviate the dangers,"
and may thus unwisely stroll into situations where it may later appear
"he was looking for trouble." If the gun owner does end up shooting
someone, a prosecutor may ask, "But what were you doing there at that
ungodly hour? Were you looking for a legal excuse to shoot somebody?"47
High on Cocaine,
Drinking Champagne? The problem gets worse if one is under the influence
of alcohol or drugs. "People tend to do stupid things after a few drinks,
so if you know you are going to a party or function where you are going
to drink, leave your gun at home," advises expert Bird.48
In a training video,
expert Ayoob addressed the same point in what appears to be a jaded
or highly skeptical manner. At the very moment Ayoob says, "The next
time you all are at a party and really juiced...with your guns safely
locked up at home, of course," he rolls his eyes in an exaggerated way
and looks up at the ceiling.49 His remarkable facial gesture appears to
acknowledge, if not condone, an open secret, which is that most people
who feel the need to carry a handgun are not likely to leave it locked
up at home if they are going out to party—and perhaps planning on getting
"really juiced."k
The use of drugs,
illegal and legal alike, has become commonplace in our society. It is
silly to think otherwise. Bird tackles the interaction of handguns and
drugs in this casual way:
Some people are
permanently on drugs for medicinal purposes. There is no reason they
can't enjoy shooting. Just don't shoot or handle firearms when you
are impaired.50
The Cumulative
Effect on Public Safety. It is sobering to think about the cumulative
effect of just the four factors these experts warn about: a "hothead"
or "racist paranoid," whose personality has become "more aggressive"
because he is carrying a gun, decides to have "a few drinks" or is "permanently
on drugs." Society's only defense against this deadly mix is that person's
self-restraint, which by definition is already impaired. Motor vehicle
codes prohibit driving while under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
But there is no such offense as "armed while an impaired-aggressive-racist
hothead." And, if there were, how would we enforce it?
In the end, we trust
a self-selected class of barely screened handgun owners not to take
their guns to town when they are angry, aggressive, drunk, drug impaired,
or all four.
What Basic Skills?
A person who buys
a handgun in America today is on his own when it comes to learning how
to safely use it.
Safe Handling?
Gun manufacturers include only cursory cautionary information about
basic safe-handling procedures in their product packaging. If the gun
is bought from a licensed dealer, the dealer's interest is to make the
sale. Few, if any, dealers are likely to limit their gun sales to persons
who demonstrate gun-handling skills.l No federal law, and very few state
or local laws, require that a handgun owner show any competence in how
to safely handle, store, or use the gun. The result is predictable.
"Unfortunately, many new shooters are unaware of basic firearms safety,
and many trained shooters become complacent in their application," according
to Dave Lauck of Tactical Shooter magazine.51
That Lauck's observation
is of real-life concern is confirmed by the litany of "unintentional
shootings" among handgun owners regularly reported in the news media.
A brief survey of examples from the endless annual toll include shootings
that occurred while unloading the handgun,52 while moving a pile of laundry
in which a handgun was concealed,53 while cleaning the handgun,54 while
showing off the "unloaded" handgun,55 while explaining gun safety,56 and
"a combination of horseplay and unfamiliarity" with a .357 Magnum revolver.57
Effects of Stress
on Gun Safety. If gun owners don't know, or choose not to follow,
basic safe handling rules in the best of times—when they are simply
cleaning or "showing off" their handguns—how can they be expected to
follow rules for the safe use of guns in highly stressful self-defense
situations?
Let us examine,
for example, a prime rule frequently stressed by handgun safety experts:
keeping one's finger off of the trigger until ready to fire. Here is
the ideal, as explained by expert Bill Clede:
...let's suppose....Your
assailant's movements require you to move around. What's the safest
way to do that? First, remember that your adrenaline is already flowing.
What if a family member suddenly comes on the scene and startles you?
Keep the gun pointed in a safe direction—usually downward at
a 45 degree angle—and keep your finger off the trigger.58
Later chapters discuss
in detail the problems of moving assailants, random family members and
other innocent bystanders, and the effects of adrenaline. Here the question
is simply whether frightened people are likely to act in this ideal
way. Expert Duane Thomas clearly thinks not. He writes:
...in the real
world, people with less-than-expert skill levels often do wind up
carrying and using handguns, and to base your attitude toward firearms
safety on the way you think the world should be, instead of
the way the world is, strikes me as more than a little stupid....
And, yes, it is
true that keeping your finger outside the trigger guard unless you're
actually firing or about to fire the piece is a mandatory habit for
the well-trained shooter. However, again, in the real world, the majority
of people carrying and using guns are not well-trained (although it
would be surely nice if they were). When most people feel threatened
by a criminal, so much so they wind up pointing a gun at their potential
robber, mugger, rapist, or murderer, trigger fingers do have a tendency
to gravitate toward triggers.59
In fact, even highly
trained police officers sometimes, to their later regret, forget that
rule, as in the case of a Salt Lake City officer who was found to have
broken it when he unintentionally shot an unarmed man in a traffic stop.
"That's the most commonly taught rule, but it's also the most commonly
violated," an assistant chief said of the incident.60
Conflicting Priorities—Storing the "Self-Defense" Handgun in the
Home
The new handgun
owner gets safely home with his "self-defense" gun. Now what? Well,
if he has kids, he immediately faces a dilemma:
If you intend
to keep a gun or guns ready for self defense and you have children
in your house, you have a problem. You have two conflicting priorities.
You don't want your children or their friends to hurt themselves or
anyone else with your guns. But a gun kept for self defense must be
kept easily accessible and ready to shoot at a moment's notice.61
The Training
"Cop Out." Suppose our new handgun owner has taken a basic firearms
course. Is he or she likely to have gotten good advice on this issue
from the instructor? Not according to expert Jim Cirillo:
Another important
aspect of safety concerns the student's weapon and the immediate family.
This is a facet of weapons safety that is rarely mentioned or only
touched upon. There are many serious implications if the wrong information
is given, so many firearms instructors cop out and simply tell students
that they must safeguard their weapons from family members and leave
it at that. This minimal advice could lead to a tragedy.62
It is no wonder
that firearms instructors "cop out" on the question of how to safely
store a self-defense handgun, because there is no way to both
safely store a handgun and yet keep it ready for instant use to defend
oneself. "There is no such thing as a childproof firearm," warns Ayoob,
while also observing that "the achingly long fumbling for the locked
up gun and cartridges can be a nightmarish experience when the invader's
footsteps are rapidly ascending the stairs."63
Children: Little
Gun-Finding Machines. Expert Bird proffers this platitudinous and
curiously contradictory advice about home gun security:
The best way to
keep your self-defense handgun out of the hands of children and others
is to wear it. If you are not wearing it and it isn't under your direct
control, it must be made secure. Putting the gun on a high shelf will
keep it out of reach of a toddler but not from a teen. Hiding it is
also not a good approach. Remember when you were a kid? Was there
anywhere in your house that you hadn't explored? As a kid, I remember
finding a .32 semi-automatic and ammunition in a drawer in my father's
dressing room.64
Ayoob puts the problem
of the child's curiosity more bluntly and candidly. He states:
Do not believe
for a moment that you can keep a gun in an accessible place without
his knowledge. There are few items in your house that your children
have not found and curiously examined, with or without your knowledge.65
Gun Week,
published by the Second Amendment Foundation, recently reported the
case of a five-year-old child who got his mother's handgun, pointed
it at playmates and then fired it into the ground. Police declined to
prosecute the mother because the gun was "properly stored," i.e., unloaded
and on a high shelf. But the boy nonetheless found the gun and ammunition.
He told police that he had learned how to load and fire the gun from
watching television.66
If keeping the handgun
away from one's own teens and toddlers is hard, what about burglars
and the neighbor's kids?
When burglars
break into a house, the first place they look for a gun is in the
bedside stand. If you have children, they will quickly learn that's
where you keep your gun. Think about it. Is the bedside stand a good
place to keep a gun? Of course not....
Even if you have
no children, can you guarantee that none will ever come into your
house? Probably not.67
So, strapping on
your shooting iron is impractical (not to mention embarrassingly foolish)
for most people. Sticking the self-defense handgun in the nightstand
is an invitation to theft. And "hiding it is not a good approach" to
keep it away from children, as hundreds of unintentional shootings of
children every year testify to. But even all this is not the end of
the new handgun owner's worries.
Other Problems
Mental or Medical
Problems in the Home. Children and burglars are obvious problems.
A more subtle problem is that of gauging and dealing with the states
of mind of other adults in the household, a ticklish third-party variant
of the "hothead" problem discussed above:
If someone in
your family is under medical care, is taking medication or drugs,
or has some psychological problem, the weapon must be safeguarded.
There is no way to predict how someone's mind is working when, for
example, they know they have a dreaded terminal disease.68
If there is "no
way to predict" how another's mind will work, how can the self-defense
handgun be "safeguarded?"
Ammunition Selection.
Given the general level of ignorance about firearms that is apparently
prevalent among handgun owners, it is safe to infer that most have no
idea that their choice of ammunition will have a direct effect on the
safety of their families, neighbors, and innocent bystanders.
Two factors are
at work here: the physical shape of the bullet, and the power with which
it is propelled (usually a function of the amount of powder, or propellant,
in the round). Simply put, bullets with hard round noses (known as "ball")
tend to go through objects, as opposed to expanding (hollow-point) bullets,
which tend to break up or stop within the object. Similarly, higher
powered rounds tend to go through whatever they hit. In a practical
sense, this means that hard, high-powered bullets may have a tendency
to go through walls and human beings alike, and hit whatever is on the
other side.
Writer Jim Williamson
discussed the power issue recently in the Second Amendment Foundation's
Gun Week, warning his readers that the powerful .44 Magnum handgun
was best used with "moderate loads." He states, "Full-power rounds slam
though humans, wasting much of their great power beyond the target,
possibly wounding or killing innocent bystanders."69
Expert Ayoob recently
discussed the merits of hollow-point over ball ammunition in Shooting
Industry. He described several incidents in which law enforcement
officers were killed by ball rounds fired by another officer that hit
but went through the target and struck the unfortunate partner:
It happens with
civilians, too. In the Midwest, a citizen shot an armed robber with
a non-expanding .357 Magnum slug. It went through the perpetrator,
who lived. It continued into a bystander, who died. The man who fired
was charged with murder in the death of the bystander.70
Ayoob constructs
this harrowing potential scenario in which the wrong ammunition choice
could have deadly consequences for the family:
If the customer
doesn't think bullet type and penetration matter.... Remind them that
they might be down on their back, about to be stabbed by the attacker
who is straddling them....Their oldest son runs up behind the attacker
to pull him off the parent, but can't be seen. The parent fires the
gun into the chest of the attacker with the boy directly in line with
him. Ask them if they really want that bullet to be a 9mm or .45 ball
that can pierce more than two feet of solid muscle!71
Expert Bird, however,
demonstrates that the question of ammunition selection can turn out
to be a Hobson's choice, with no ultimately good option:
Firing a hollow-point
bullet through sheetrock increases its penetration because the sheetrock
will fill the hollow point and make it act like a round-nosed bullet.
In other words, it will penetrate rather than expand. This is something
to remember if you have to shoot someone in an apartment with neighbors
just the other side of a sheetrock wall.72
These expert warnings
are not merely hypothetical. A Boston police officer shot and killed
her only son when a round she unintentionally fired during a violent
argument with a former boyfriend pierced a wall and struck the 15-year-old
in the temple.73 In Palmdale, California, a man shot his wife while he
was cleaning a 45-caliber pistol. The bullet "went through the kitchen
wall into the family room and struck his wife in the back," according
to police.74 A Minneapolis police officer shot his neighbor when his service
pistol went off unintentionally and the round went through a wall separating
their apartments.75 The New York City Police Department found in a study
of unintentional police shootings in 1995 and 1996 that 19 officers
were hit by ball rounds that passed through people (17) or objects (two).
Only four officers were hit by hollow-points, and of these only one
passed through another person.76
Dangerous Misconceptions
About Armed Confrontations in the Home. In spite of all these safety
problems that mere ownership of a handgun involves, and the clinical
evidence that bringing a handgun into the home dramatically increases
the risk of suicide or homicide within the family, some people still
believe they are safer owning a handgun for self-defense than living
without. In fact, some pro-gun advocates argue that the more guns a
society has, the safer it is. Here, however, is how gun-defense expert
Massad Ayoob assesses the reality of the preparation of most home-defense
gun owners:
Everyone who keeps
guns has considered, however briefly, the possibility of an armed
confrontation in the home. And herein lies the problem: the only thought
most people have given to the use of a defense gun has been cursory
at best....
The average American
has more misconceptions about lethal force in the home than in any
other self-defense situation. He not only has little understanding
of his legal position under these circumstances; he has no idea of
how to conduct himself if, by infinitesimal chance, the day comes
when his home actually is turned into a battleground he must defend
against armed criminals.77
Should that "infinitesimal"
event occur, here is what Ayoob opines awaits most gun owners:
[There] are few
situations where you will be on even an equal footing with an armed
intruder....In almost any intrusion situation, be it in the depths
of night or during waking hours, the intruder will have surprise in
his favor, and this is an almost insurmountable advantage to him....
You, the head
of the family, are awakened out of a sound slumber. It will be at
least a few minutes, if you're the average man, before your reflexes
and the acuteness of your sensory perception reach full capacity....
Altogether, you
are not in ideal shape to be fighting for your or your family's lives....
He is better prepared
than you are.78
Nothing in this
scenario addresses the powerful effects of mortal fear (discussed in
detail in Chapter Four) on the defender's abilities, which are likely
to be rudimentary at best. The experts agree that these effects will
enormously complicate the gun owner's ability to respond to whatever
has alarmed him. Yet the owner's problem has just begun. What if the
noise that woke him from his sound slumber is innocent? Ayoob writes:
It is entirely
possible that someone has gone downstairs for a midnight snack, or
maybe your teenage son, whom you didn't wait up for, brought home
an intoxicated buddy to sleep it off on the living room sofa. Some
hideous tragedies have occurred this way; not as many as implied by
[those] who advocate disarming the public, but enough to teach a lesson
of caution.79
h) Safety
issues actually begin even before the new owner takes possession. Buyers
and sellers alike have unintentionally shot each other. See, e.g., "Man
kills himself after accidentally shooting friend in gun store," Associated
Press, 6 November 1999. A 1994 article in the industry magazine
SHOT Business, for example, described several incidents that
resulted in dealers being held liable to customers, including the case
of a retailer "30 years in the business" who "shot the customer without
realizing there was a round in the chamber." Tim Goral, "A Lesson on
Liability," SHOT Business, July/August 1994, 22.
i) For one example,
on August 10, 1999, self-proclaimed white supremacist Buford O. Furrow,
Jr., shot up the North Valley Jewish Community Center in Granada Hills,
California, and shortly thereafter killed postal employee Joseph Santos
Ileto. Furrow reportedly confessed that he killed Ileto, a Filipino-American,
as a "target of opportunity." "Alejandro Mayorkas Holds Briefing With
Others on the Furrow Case," FDCH Political Transcripts, August
12, 1999.
j) In any case,
the Brady Law suffers several other serious defects: It covers only
sales by licensed gun dealers. It does not cover the 40 percent of gun
transfers made in the so-called secondary market between private individuals,
at gun shows, though newspaper ads, and across backyard fences. And
it misses most records of serious mental illness. Fox Butterfield, "Hole
in Gun Control Law Lets Mentally Ill Through," The New York Times,
11 April 2000, p. A1.
k) It must also
be noted in fairness that Ayoob advises in one of his books that one
should: "Never touch a firearm while under the influence of alcohol,
or display one at an occasion when liquor is flowing, (never
take a gun into a bar or cocktail party)." Massad F. Ayoob, In the
Gravest Extreme: The Role of the Firearm in Personal Protection
(Massad F. and Dorothy A. Ayoob, 1980), p. 121.
l) In over 20 years
of frequently hanging around gun stores and buying and selling firearms
of all types through licensed dealers, the author never witnessed a
single instance of a dealer questioning his or any other potential buyer's
skill level.
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All contents © 2001 Violence Policy Center
The Violence Policy Center is a national non-profit educational foundation
that conducts research on violence in America and works to develop violence-reduction
policies and proposals. The Center examines the role of firearms in America,
conducts research on firearms violence, and explores new ways to decrease
firearm-related death and injury. |