From: [b--o--h] at [mdd.comm.mot.com] (Greg Booth)
Newsgroups: talk.politics.guns
Subject: Waiting Periods
Date: 3 Jan 1994 08:59:58 -0800


18.	Waiting Periods

o	A study by the U.S. Center for Disease Control conducted in 
April 1985 showed that "waiting periods have no effect on 
suicides."

o	 The concept of a "cooling off" period has no basis in fact. 
A Kansas City study showed that in 90% of domestic violence 
cases, police had been called to the scene several times 
before. A Police Foundation study showed that only 2% of all 
handguns traced to crimes were less than a month old.

o	From talk.politics.guns Thu Jan 23 17:54:57 1992 Newsgroups: 
talk.politics.guns Path: mdivax1!mdisea!uw-coco!uw-
beaver!cornell!batcomputer!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-
state.edu!wupost!uwm.edu!linac!att!cbnews!lvc From: 
[l v c] at [cbnews.cb.att.com] (Larry Cipriani) Subject: Re: waiting 
period Organization: Ideology Busters, Inc. Date: Thu, 23 Jan 
1992 23:19:00 GMT Message-ID: 
<[1992 Jan 23 231900 14183] at [cbnews.cb.att.com]> References: 
<[farenebt 696127406] at [craft.camp.clarkson.edu]> 
<[1992 Jan 23 172708 15867] at [bluemoon.rn.com]> Lines: 128

o	                IN THE HEAT OF THE MOMENT

o	                  By James D. Wright

o	   Bob and Jim are good drinking buddies.  After a night at 
their favorite bar, they head back to Jim's trailer for some 
whiskey.  Jim begins praising his new girlfriend.  Bob 
questions her fidelity and claims that he has slept with her.  
Seized by uncontrollable rage, Jim grabs a loaded .44 from the 
kitchen drawer and ends the conversation with a bang.

o	   This is the sort of scenario that most people probably 
imagine when they hear that the majority of murders involve 
individuals who knew each other before the crime.  Based on 
this impression, gun-control advocates argue that most 
homicides do not involve murderous intent.  Rather, they are 
committed in the heat of the moment, in disputes or 
altercations among loved ones or close associates that 
escalate into rage -- disputes that turn fatal not so much 
because anyone intended to kill but because, in that 
lamentable fit of anger, a gun was at hand.  And if that is 
really how most murders happen, it follows that if fewer guns 
were "at hand," fewer murders would be committed.

o	  But the data on relationships between homicide victims and 
their killers tell a different story.  The conclusion in favor 
of gun control simply does not follow from the evidence.

o	  FBI figures for 1987 and 1988 reveal that murders by 
strangers -- for example, in the course of a robbery -- are 
rare.  They account for only about one in eight homicides 
(12.6 percent).  But this does not imply that the remaining 
seven in every eight homicides involve loved ones slaying one 
another.  After all, very few people love everyone they meet.  
Just how close is the relationship between victim and killer 
in the typical murder?

o	  In many cases -- nearly a third of the total -- the 
authorities simply cannot determine the relationship.  Next 
to "unknown," the largest relationship category is 
"acquaintance,"  accounting for approximately one additional 
third of the murders.  You might think that "acquaintance" 
refers to fairly close associates, but the FBI tallies 
neighbors, friends, boyfriends, girlfriends, and all types of 
relatives in their own separate categories.  It there were any 
degree of intimacy or closeness between acquaintances, the FBI 
would almost certainly classify the homicide under another 
heading.  In this context, "acquaintance" means only that the 
victim and killer had some idea of each other's identities 
before the murder.

o	  All categories of relatives combined account for about one 
in six murders (15.9 percent o average).  About half of these 
are slayings of spouses by spouses.  Friends and neighbors add 
an average of 9.8 percent to the homicide total.  Altogether, 
then, relatives, friends, and neighbors commit only about a 
quarter (25.7 percent) of murders.  So it's not true that 
"most" murders involve persons who share some degree of 
intimacy or closeness.  Most murders -- some three-quarters 
of them -- are committed by casual acquaintances (30.2 
percent), perfect strangers (12.8 percent), or persons 
unknown (31.2 percent).

o	  Gun control advocates, however, can easily convey the 
opposite impression of these data.  By simply omitting the 
unknown relationships from the calculation and including 
casual acquaintances within the category of intimates, they 
can make it seem as if every murder other than those by perfect 
strangers involve intimates.  But given what the category of 
acquaintance specifically omits, this would be an 
irresponsible misrepresentation.

o	  That most murder victims know their killers prior to the 
crime is scarcely a surprise.  That people know one another 
is not in itself evidence that they like one another.  
Ordinarily, the only people a murderer would have good reasons 
to kill would be people he or she knows. Indeed, slayings in 
the course of some other felony are the only obvious 
exception;  random killings are understandably quite rare.  So 
contrary to the common assumption, some degree of prior 
acquaintance between victim and offender definitely does not 
rule out murderous intent.

o	  Cases of family members slaying one another figure 
prominently in the gun control debate but represent fewer than 
one-sixth of all murders. Studies of family homicide have 
shown that most of these families (about 85 percent of them) 
have had previous domestic quarrels serious enough to bring 
the police to the residence: in nearly half of the cases, the 
police had been called to the residence five or more times 
before the killing occurred.  Indeed, most of the families in 
which such homicides occur have histories of abuse and 
violence going back years or even decades.  These slayings are 
generally not isolated outbursts of rage between normally 
placid and loving couples.  They are, instead, the culminating 
episodes in long, violent, abusive family relations.

o	  At least some family homicides probably do result from the 
stereo- typical "moment of rage."  Others result from a 
thoroughly willful intention to kill.  Knowing only that 
victim and killer are related by blood or marriage does not 
in itself tell us which explanation is correct for a given 
homicide.

o	  Consider the bizarre case of Theron and Leila Morris, a 
Florida couple recently accused of killing their son, 
Christopher.  Police say the Morrises were plotting with their 
son to murder his ex-wife for her insurance money.  Then the 
conspirators learned that the ex-wife's insurance policy had 
lapsed, so there was nothing to be gained in killing her.  
Evidently annoyed by this turn of events, the Morrises then 
allegedly plotted between themselves to kill Christopher in 
order to collect on HIS insurance policy, which was still in 
force and worth twice what his ex-wife's policy was worth.  
The Associated Press reported that the parents were also angry 
with Morris because he had "sold them bogus cocaine for $1,000 
that they had intended to resell."

o	  Morris's killing will appear in the FBI's 1990 Uniform Crime 
Report tabulation as a family homicide;  having been slain by 
his own parents, he will be included in the category "son."  
What, then, will we know about the circumstances of his death, 
given that he was the child of his killers?  Nothing at all.

o	  How many murders are committed in a moment of rage, brought 
to fruition largely because a gun was available, and how many 
result from an unambiguous intention to kill?  The fact is, 
nobody knows the answer to this question.  An adequate answer 
would require getting inside the heads of murders as they 
contemplate and commit their crimes.

o	  Clearly, though, the assumption that heat-of-the-moment 
murders far outnumber willful murders cannot be justified by 
evidence on prior victim-offender relationships.  Such 
information does not support conclusions about homicidal 
motives or about the number of slayings that might be 
prevented if fewer guns were available.

o		James D. Wright is Favrot Professor of Human 
Relations 	at Tulane University.  He is the author of "Under the 
Gun: 	Weapons, Crime, and Violence in America" and "Armed and 	
Considered Dangerous: Felons and Their Firearms." 

o	

-- 
Greg Booth BSc                          />_________________________________
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