More U.S. children die in mass shootings at home than at school: study
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[November 21, 2019]
By Brad Brooks
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Three out of four
U.S. children and teens killed in mass shootings over the past decade
were victims of domestic violence and generally died in their homes,
according to a study released on Thursday by the gun control group
Everytown.
While the specter of school shootings looms darkly in the minds of
American parents who remember massacres in Newtown, Connecticut;
Parkland, Florida, and around the country, the group's review of
shootings from 2009 through 2018 found far more children are killed in
their own homes.
"These are not random acts of violence, yet people have the perception
that the killings come out of nowhere," said Sarah Burd-Sharps,
Everytown's research director. "That is simply not the truth."
The Everytown report, based on police and court records, as well as
media reports, found that 54% of mass shootings involved the shooter
killing a family member or intimate partner.
A total of 1,121 people were killed in 194 mass shootings in the decade
examined - one-third of whom were children or teens.
Nearly two-thirds of all mass shootings took place entirely inside
homes, the study found.
Burd-Sharps said Everytown hopes that its report helps the public gain
more understanding about the statistical realities of mass shootings,
which it defines as an incident that kills at least four people,
excluding the shooter.
The federal government and other groups set a lower threshold for what
constitutes a mass shooting. Those definitions can result in higher
totals than Everytown's count.
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Visitors who asked to not be identified walk past a memorial on the
one year anniversary of the shooting that claimed 17 lives at
Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, U.S.,
February 14, 2019. REUTERS/Joe Skipper/File Photo
Only 1% of the nearly 35,000 gun deaths averaged in the United
States each year in the past decade involved mass shootings, but
Burd-Sharps said she believes public interest in them can help
propel gun-safety legislation that could cut gun deaths across the
board.
At the top of Everytown's wish list is a "red flag" law that would
allow family members or law enforcement officers to petition a judge
to seize firearms from a person they think is a threat to themselves
or others.
The group also believes a comprehensive federal law requiring
background checks on all gun sales would quickly be effective in
decreasing gun deaths.
The link between domestic violence in mass shootings was seen this
week in San Diego, when a man who had a restraining order against
him killed his wife and three of their four young sons before taking
his own life.
"When you look at all these cases of kids who lost their lives, if
some family member had been able to heed the warning signs and
temporarily had guns removed from the home, many of those children
would still be alive," Burd-Sharps said.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in New York; Editing by Scott Malone and
Bill Berkrot)
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