I. INTRODUCTION
Crime victims used to be ignored by criminologists. Then,
beginning slowly in the 1940s and more rapidly in the 1970s,
interest in the victim's role in crime grew. Yet a tendency to treat
the victim as either a passive target of another person's wrongdoing
or as a virtual accomplice of the criminal limited this interest.
The concept of the victim-precipitated homicide[1] highlighted the
possibility that victims were not always blameless and passive
targets, but that they sometimes initiated or contributed to the
escalation of a violent interaction through their own actions, which
they often claimed were defensive.
Perhaps due to an unduly narrow focus on lower-class male-on-male
violence, scholars. have shown little openness to the possibility
that a good deal of "defensive" violence by persons claiming the
moral status of a victim may be just that. Thus, many scholars
routinely assumed that a large share of violent inter-actions are
"mutual combat" involving two blameworthy parties who each may be
regarded as both offender and victim. The notion that much violence
is one-sided and that many victims of violence are largely blameless
is dismissed as naive.
A few criminologists have rejected the simplistic mutual combat
model of violence, though they sometimes limit its rejection to a
few special subtypes of violence, especially family violence, rape,
and, more generally, violence of men against women and of adults
against children.[2] However, the more one looks, the more
exceptions become evident, such as felony killings linked with
robberies, burglaries, or sexual assaults, contract killings, mass
killings, serial murders, and homicides where the violence is
one-sided. Indeed, it may be more accurate to see the mutual combat
common among lower-class males to be the exception rather than the
rule. If this is so, then forceful actions taken by victims are
easier to see as genuinely and largely defensive.
Once one turns to defensive actions taken by the victims of
property crimes, it is even easier to take this view. There are few
robberies, burglaries, larcenies, or auto thefts where it is hard to
distinguish offender from victim or to identify one of the parties
as the clear initiator of a criminal action and another party as a
relatively legitimate responder to those initiatives. The
traditional conceptualization of victims as either passive targets
or active collaborators overlooks another possible victim role, that
of the active resister who does not initiate or accelerate any
illegitimate activity, but uses various means of resistance for
legitimate purposes, such as avoiding injury or property loss.
Victim resistance can be passive or verbal, but much of it is
active and forceful. Potentially, the most consequential form of
forceful resistance is armed resistance, especially resistance with
a gun. This form of resistance is worthy of special attention for
many reasons, both policy-related and scientific. The policy-related
reasons are obvious: if self-protection with a gun is commonplace,
it means that any form of gun control that disarms large numbers of
prospective victims, either altogether, or only in certain times and
places where victimization might occur, will carry significant
social costs in terms of lost opportunities for self-protection.
On the other hand, the scientific reasons are likely to be
familiar only to the relatively small community of scholars who
study the consequences of victim self-protection: the defensive
actions of crime victims have significant effects on the outcomes of
crimes, and the effects of armed resistance differ from those of
unarmed resistance. Previous research has consistently indicated
that victims who resist with a gun or other weapon are less likely
than other victims to lose their property in robberies[3] and in
burglaries.[4] Consistently, research also has indicated that
victims who resist by using guns or other weapons are less likely to
be injured compared to victims who do not resist or to those who
resist without weapons. This is true whether the research relied on
victim surveys or on police records, and whether the data analysis
consisted of simple cross-tabulations or more complex multivariate
analyses. These findings have been obtained with respect to
robberies[5] and to assaults.[6] Cook[7] offers his unsupported
personal opinion concerning robbery victims that resisting with a
gun is only prudent if the robber does not have a gun. The primary
data source on which Cook relies flatly contradicts this opinion.
National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) data indicate that even
in the very disadvantageous situation where the robber has a gun,
victims who resist with guns are still substantially less likely to
be injured than those who resist in other ways, and even slightly
less likely to be hurt than those who do not resist at all.[8]
With regard to studies of rape, although samples typically
include too few cases of self-defense with a gun for separate
analysis, McDermott,[9] Quinsey and Upfold,[10] Lizotte,[11] and
Kleck and Sayles[12] all found that victims who resisted with some
kind of weapon were less likely to have the rape attempt completed
against them. Findings concerning the impact of armed resistance on
whether rape victims suffer additional injuries beyond the rape
itself are less clear, due to a lack of information on whether acts
of resistance preceded or followed the rapist's attack. The only two
rape studies with the necessary sequence information found that
forceful resistance by rape victims usually follows, rather than
precedes, rapist attacks inflicting additional injury, undercutting
the proposition that victim resistance increases the likelihood that
the victim will be hurt.[13] This is consistent with findings on
robbery and assault.[14]
II. THE
PREVALENCE OF DEFENSIVE
GUN USE
(DGU) IN PREVIOUS
SURVEYS
A. THE NATIONAL CRIME VICTIMIZATION
SURVEY (NCVS)
However consistent the evidence may be concerning the
effectiveness of armed victim resistance, there are some who
minimize its significance by insisting that it is rare.[15] This
assertion is invariably based entirely on a single source of
information, the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS).
Data from the NCVS imply that each year there are only about
68,000 defensive uses of guns in connection with assaults and
robberies,[16] or about 80,000 to 82,000 if one adds in uses linked
with household burglaries.[17] These figures are less than one ninth
of the estimates implied by the results of at least thirteen other
surveys, summarized in Table 1, most of which have been previously
reported.[18] The NCVS estimates imply that about 0.09 of 1% of U.S.
households experience a defensive gun use (DGU) in any one year,
compared to the Mauser survey's estimate of 3.79% of households over
a five year period, or about 0.76% in any one year, assuming an even
distribution over the five year period, and no repeat uses.[19]
The strongest evidence that a measurement is inaccurate is that
it is inconsistent with many other independent measurements or
observations of the same phenomenon; indeed, some would argue that
this is ultimately the only way of knowing that a measurement
is wrong. Therefore, one might suppose that the gross inconsistency
of the NCVS-based estimates with all other known estimates, each
derived from sources with no known flaws even remotely substantial
enough to account for nine-to-one, or more, discrepancies, would be
sufficient to persuade any serious scholar that the NCVS estimates
are unreliable.
Apparently it is not, since the Bureau of Justice Statistics
continues to disseminate their DGU estimates as if they were
valid,[20] and scholars continue to cite the NCVS estimates as being
at least as reasonable as those from the gun surveys.[21] Similarly,
the editors of a report on violence conducted for the prestigious
National Academy of Sciences have uncritically accepted the validity
of the NCVS estimate as being at least equal to that of all of the
alternative estimates.[22] In effect, even the National Academy of
Sciences gives no more weight to estimates from numerous independent
sources than to an estimate derived from a single source which is,
as explained below, singularly ill-suited to the task of estimating
DGU frequency.
This sort of bland and spurious even-handedness is misleading.
For example, Reiss and Roth withheld from their readers that there
were at least nine other estimates contradicting the
NCVS-based estimate; instead they vaguely alluded only to "a number
of surveys,"[23] as did Cook,[24] and they down played the estimates
from the other surveys on the basis of flaws which they only
speculated those surveys might have. Even as speculations,
these scholars' conjectures were conspicuously one-sided, focusing
solely on possible flaws whose correction would bring the estimate
down, while ignoring obvious flaws, such as respondents (Rs)
forgetting or intentionally concealing DGUs, whose correction would
push the estimate up. Further, die speculations, even if true, would
be wholly inadequate to account for more than a small share of the
enormous nine-to-one or more discrepancy between the NCVS-based
estimates and all other estimates. For example, the effects of
telescoping can be completely cancelled out by the effects of memory
loss and other recall failure, and even if they are not, they cannot
account for more than a tiny share of a discrepancy of nine-to-one
or more.
Equally important, those who take the NCVS-based estimates
seriously have consistently ignored the most pronounced limitations
of the NCVS for estimating DGU frequency. The NCVS is a non
anonymous national survey conducted by a branch of the federal
government, the U.S. Bureau of the Census. Interviewers identify
themselves to Rs as federal government employees, even displaying,
in face-to-face contacts, an identification card with a badge. Rs
are told that the interviews are being conducted on behalf of the
U.S. Department of justice, the law enforcement branch of the
federal government. As a preliminary to asking questions about crime
victimization experiences, interviewers establish the address,
telephone number, and full names of all occupants, age twelve and
over, in each household they contact.[25] In short, it is made very
clear to Rs that they are, in effect, speaking to a law enforcement
arm of the federal government, whose employees know exactly who the
Rs and their family members are, where they live, and how they can
be re contacted.
Even under the best of circumstances, reporting the use of a gun
for self-protection would be an extremely sensitive and legally
controversial matter for either of two reasons. As with other forms
of forceful resistance, the defensive act itself, regardless of the
characteristics of any weapon used, might constitute an unlawful
assault or at least the R might believe that others, including
either legal authorities or the researchers, could regard it that
way. Resistance with a gun also involves additional elements of
sensitivity. Because guns are legally regulated, a victim's
possession of the weapon, either in general or at the time of the
DGU, might itself be unlawful, either in fact or in the mind of a
crime victim who used one. More likely, lay persons with a limited
knowledge of the extremely complicated law of either self-defense or
firearms regulation are unlikely to know for sure whether their
defensive actions or their gun possession was lawful.
It is not hard for gun-using victims interviewed in the NCVS to
withhold information about their use of a gun, especially since they
are never directly asked whether they used a gun for
self-protection. They are asked only general questions about
whether they did anything to protect themselves.[26] In short, Rs
are merely given the opportunity to volunteer the information that
they have used a gun defensively. All it takes for an R to conceal a
DGU is to simply refrain from mentioning it, i.e., to leave it out
of what may be an otherwise accurate and complete account of the
crime incident.
Further, Rs in the NCVS are not even asked the general
self-protection question unless they already independently indicated
that they had been a victim of a crime. This means that any DGUs
associated with crimes the Rs did not want to talk about would
remain hidden. It has been estimated that the NCVS may catch less
than one-twelfth of spousal assaults and one-thirty-third of
rapes,[27] thereby missing nearly all DGUs associated with such
crimes.
In the context of a non anonymous survey conducted by the federal
government, an R who reports a DGU may believe that he is placing
himself in serious legal jeopardy. For example, consider the issue
of the location of crimes. For all but a handful of gun owners with
a permit to carry a weapon in public places (under 4% of the adult
population even in states like Florida, where carry permits are
relatively easy to get)[28], the mere possession of a gun in a place
other than their home, place of business, or in some states, their
vehicle, is a crime, often a felony. In at least ten states, it is
punishable by a punitively mandatory minimum prison sentence.[29]
Yet, 88% of the violent crimes which Rs reported to NCVS
interviewers in 1992 were committed away from the victim's home,[30]
i.e., in a location where it would ordinarily be a crime for the
victim to even possess a gun, never mind use it defensively. Because
the question about location is asked before the self-protection
questions,[31] the typical violent crime victim R has already
committed himself to having been victimized in a public place before
being asked what he or she did for self-protection. In short, Rs
usually could not mention their defensive use of a gun without, in
effect, confessing to a crime to a federal government employee.
Even for crimes that occurred in the victim's home, such as a
burglary, possession of a gun would still often be unlawful or of
unknown legal status; because the R had not complied with or could
not be sure he had complied with all legal requirements concerning
registration of the gun's acquisition or possession, permits for
purchase, licensing of home possession, storage requirements, and so
on. In light of all these considerations, it may be unrealistic to
assume that more than a fraction of Rs who have used a gun
defensively would be willing to report it to NCVS interviewers.
The NCVS was not designed to estimate how often people resist
crime using a gun. It was designed primarily to estimate national
victimization levels; it incidentally happens to include a few
self-protection questions which include response categories covering
resistance with a gun. Its survey instrument has been carefully
refined and evaluated over the years to do as good a job as possible
in getting people to report illegal things which other people
have done to them. This is the exact opposite of the task
which faces anyone trying to get good DGU estimates--to get people
to admit controversial and possibly illegal things which the Rs
themselves have done. Therefore, it is neither surprising, nor a
reflection on the survey's designers, to note that the NCVS is
singularly ill-suited for estimating the prevalence or incidence of
DGU. It is not credible to regard this survey as an acceptable basis
for establishing, in even the roughest way, how often Americans use
guns for self-protection.
B. THE GUN SURVEYS
At least thirteen previous surveys have given a radically
different picture of the frequency of DGUs. The surveys, summarized
in Table 1, can be labelled the "gun surveys" because they were all,
at least to some extent, concerned with the ownership and use of
guns. Some were primarily devoted to this subject, while others were
general purpose opinion surveys which happened to include some
questions pertaining to guns. They are an extremely heterogeneous
collection, some conducted by academic researchers for scholarly
purposes, others by commercial polling firms. Moreover, their
sponsors differed; some were sponsored by pro-gun control
organizations (Cambridge Reports, Hart), others were sponsored by
anti-control organizations (DMIa, DMIb), while still others were
paid for by news media organizations, governments, or by research
grants awarded to independent academics.
None of the surveys were meant as exclusive studies of DGU.
Indeed, they each contained only one or two questions on the
subject. Consequently, none of them are very thorough or
satisfactory for estimating DGU frequency, even though they
otherwise seem to have been conducted quite professionally. Some of
the surveys were flawed by asking questions that used a lifetime
recall period ("Have you ever .. ?"), making it impossible to
estimate uses within any specified time span.[32] Some surveys
limited coverage to registered voters, while others failed to
exclude defensive uses against animals, or occupational uses by
police officers, military personnel, or private security guards.[33]
Some asked the key questions with reference only to the R, while
others asked Rs to report on the experiences of all of the members
of their households, relying on second-hand reports.[34]
Methodological research on the NCVS indicates that substantially
fewer crime incidents are reported when one household member reports
for all household members than when each person is interviewed
separately about their own experiences.[35] The same should also be
true of those crime incidents that involve victims using guns.
The least useful of the surveys did not even ask the defensive
use question of all Rs, instead it asked it only of gun owners, or,
even more narrowly, of just handgun owners or just those who owned
handguns for protection purposes.[36] This procedure was apparently
based on the dubious assumption that people who used a gun
defensively no longer owned the gun by the time of the survey, or
that the gun belonged to someone else, or that the R owned the gun
for a reason other than protection or kept it outside the home.
Most importantly, the surveys did not ask enough questions to
establish exactly what was done with the guns in reported defensive
use incidents. At best, some of the surveys only established whether
the gun was fired. The lack of such detail raises the possibility
that the guns were not actually "used" in any meaningful way.
Instead, Rs might be remembering occasions on which they merely
carried a gun for protection "just in case" or investigated a
suspicious noise in their backyard, only to find nothing.
Nevertheless, among these imperfect surveys, two were relatively
good for present purposes. Both the Hart survey in 1981 and the
Mauser survey in 1990 were national surveys which asked carefully
worded questions directed at all Rs in their samples. Both surveys
excluded uses against animals and occupational uses. The two also
nicely complemented each other in that the Hart survey asked only
about uses of handguns, while the Mauser survey asked about uses of
all gun types. The Hart survey results implied a minimum of about
640,000 annual DGUs involving handguns, while the Mauser results
implied about 700,000 involving any type of gun.[37] It should be
stressed, contrary to the claims of Reiss and Roth,[38] that neither
of these estimates entailed the use of "dubious adjustment
procedures." The percent of sample households reporting a DGU was
simply multiplied by the total number of U.S. households, resulting
in an estimate of DGU-involved households. This figure, compiled for
a five year period, was then divided by five to yield a per-year
figure.
In effect, each of the surveys summarized in Table 1 was
measuring something different; simple estimates derived from each of
them is not comparable in any straight-forward way. The figures in
the bottom row reflect adjustments designed to produce estimates
which are roughly comparable across surveys. The adjustments were
based on a single standard, the Mauser survey. That is, all survey
results were adjusted to approximate what they would have been had
the surveys all been, like the Mauser survey, national surveys of
non institutionalized U.S. adult residents in 1990, using the same
question Mauser used. The question was addressed to all Rs; it
concerned the experiences of all household members; it pertained to
the use of any type of gun; and it excluded uses against animals.
The full set of adjustments is explained in detail elsewhere.[39]
Eleven of the surveys permitted the computation of a reasonable
adjusted estimate of DGU frequency. Two surveys for which estimates
could not be produced were the Cambridge Reports and the Time/CNN.
Neither asked the DGU question of all Rs; thus, it would be sheer
speculation what the responses would have been among those Rs not
asked the DGU question. All of the eleven surveys yielded results
that implied over 700,000 uses per year. None of the surveys implied
estimates even remotely like the 65,000 to 82,000 figures derived
from the NCVS. To date, there has been no confirmation of even the
most approximate sort of the NCVS estimates. Indeed, no survey has
ever yielded an estimate which is of the same magnitude as those
derived from the NCVS.
However, even the best of the gun surveys had serious problems.
First, none of them established how many times Rs used a gun
defensively within the recall period. It was necessary to
conservatively assume that each DGU-involved person or household
experienced only one DGU in the period, a figure which is likely to
be an underestimation. Second, although the Mauser and Hart surveys
were the best available surveys in other respects, they asked Rs to
report for their entire households, rather than speaking only for
themselves. Third, while these two surveys did use a specific recall
period, it was five years, which encouraged a greater amount of both
memory loss and telescoping. The longer the recall period, the more
memory loss predominates over telescoping as a source of response
error,[40] supporting the conclusion that a five year recall period
probably produces a net under reporting of DGUs. Fourth, while the
surveys all had acceptably large samples by the standards of
ordinary national surveys, mostly in the 600 to 1500 range, they
were still smaller than one would prefer for estimating a phenomenon
which is fairly rare. While on average the sample size has no effect
on the point estimate of DGU frequency, it will affect the amount of
sampling error. Finally, none of the surveys established exactly
what Rs did with their guns in reported DGUs, making it impossible
to be certain that they were actually used in any meaningful way. In
sum, while the gun surveys are clearly far superior to the NCVS for
estimating DGU frequency, they have significant shortcomings. These
are discussed in greater detail elsewhere.[41]
It was the goal of the research reported here to remedy those
flaws, to develop a credible estimate of DGU frequency, and to learn
something about the nature of DGU incidents and the people who
defend themselves with guns.
C. THE NATIONAL SELF-DEFENSE SURVEY
1. Methods
The present survey is the first survey ever devoted to the
subject of armed self-defense. It was carefully designed to correct
all of the known correctable or avoidable flaws of previous surveys
which critics have identified. We use the most anonymous possible
national survey format, the anonymous random digit dialed telephone
survey. We did not know the identities of those who were
interviewed, and made this fact clear to the Rs. We interviewed a
large nationally representative sample covering all adults, age
eighteen and over, in the lower forty-eight states and living in
households with telephones.[42] We asked DGU questions of all Rs in
our sample, asking them separately about both their own DGU
experiences and those of other members of their households. We used
both a five year recall period and a one year recall period. We
inquired about uses of both handguns and other types of guns, and
excluded occupational uses of guns and uses against animals.
Finally, we asked a long series of detailed questions designed to
establish exactly what Rs did with their guns; for example, if they
had confronted other humans, and how had each DGU connected to a
specific crime or crimes.
We consulted with North America's most experienced experts on
gun-related surveys, David Bordua, James Wright, and Gary Mauser,
along with survey expert Seymour Sudman, in order to craft a
state-of-the-art survey instrument designed specifically to
establish the frequency and nature of DGUs.[43] A professional
telephone polling firm, Research Network of Tallahassee, Florida,
carried out the sampling and interviewing. Only the firm's most
experienced interviewers, who are listed in the acknowledgements,
were used on the project. Interviews were monitored at random by
survey supervisors. All interviews in which an alleged DGU was
reported by the R were validated by supervisors with call-backs,
along with a 20% random sample of all other interviews. Of all
eligible residential telephone numbers called where a person rather
than an answering machine answered, 61% resulted in a completed
interview. Interviewing was carried out from February through April
of 1993.
The quality of sampling procedures was well above the level
common in national surveys. Our sample was not only large and
nationally representative, but it was also stratified by state. That
is, forty-eight independent samples of residential telephone numbers
were drawn, one from each of the lower forty-eight states, providing
forty-eight independent, albeit often small, state samples. Given
the nature of randomly generated samples of telephone numbers, there
was no clustering of cases or multistage sampling as there is in the
NCVS;[44] consequently, there was no inflation of sampling error due
to such procedures. To gain a larger raw number of sample DGU cases,
we over sampled in the south and west regions, where previous
surveys have indicated gun ownership is higher.[45] We also over
sampled within contacted households for males, who are more likely
to own guns and to be victims of crimes in which victims might use
guns defensively.[46] Data were later weighted to adjust for over
sampling.
Each interview began with a few general "throat-clearing"
questions about problems facing the R's community and crime. The
interviewers then asked the following question: "Within the past
five years, have you yourself or another member of your
household used a gun, even if it was not fired, for
self-protection or for the protection of property at home, work, or
elsewhere? Please do not include military service, police
work, or work as a security guard." Rs who answered "yes" were then
asked: "Was this to protect against an animal or a person?" Rs who
reported a DGU against a person were asked: "How many incidents
involving defensive uses of guns against persons happened to members
of your household in the past five years?" and "Did this incident
[any of these incidents] happen in the past twelve months?"
At this point, Rs were asked "Was it you who used a gun
defensively, or did someone else in your household do this?"
All Rs reporting a DGU were asked a long, detailed series of
questions establishing exactly what happened in the DGU incident. Rs
who reported having experienced more than one DGU in the previous
five years were asked about their most recent experience. When the
original R was the one who had used a gun defensively, as was
usually the case, interviewers obtained his or her firsthand account
of the event. When the original R indicated that some other member
of the household was the one who had the, experience, interviewers
made every effort to speak directly to the involved person, either
speaking to that person immediately or obtaining times and dates to
call back. Up to three call-backs were made to contact the
DGU-involved person. We anticipated that it would sometimes prove
impossible to make contact with these persons, so interviewers were
instructed to always obtain a proxy account of the DGU from the
original R, on the assumption that a proxy account would be better
than none at all. It was rarely necessary to rely on these proxy
accounts--only six sample cases of DGUs were reported through
proxies, out of a total of 222 sample cases.
While all Rs reporting a DGU were given the full interview, only
a one-third random sample of Rs not reporting a DGU were
interviewed. The rest were simply thanked for their help. This
procedure helped keep interviewing costs down. In the end, there
were 222 completed interviews with Rs reporting DGUs, another 1,610
Rs not reporting a DGU but going through the full interview by
answering questions other than those pertaining to details of the
DGUs. There were a total of 1,832 cases with the full interview. An
additional 3,145 Rs answered only enough questions to establish that
no one in their household had experienced a DGU against a human in
the previous five years (unweighted totals). These procedures
effectively under-sampled for non-DGU Rs or, equivalently, over
sampled for DGU-involved Rs. Data were also weighted to account for
this over sampling.
Questions about the details of DGU incidents permitted us to
establish whether a given DGU met all of the following
qualifications for an incident to be treated as a genuine DGU: (1)
the incident involved defensive action against a human rather than
an animal, but not in connection with police, military, or security
guard duties; (2) the incident involved actual contact with a
person, rather than merely investigating suspicious circumstances,
etc.; (3) the defender could state a specific crime which he thought
was being committed at the time of the incident; (4) the gun was
actually used in some way--at a minimum it had to be used as part of
a threat against a person, either by verbally referring to the gun
(e.g., "get away--I've got a gun") or by pointing it at an
adversary. We made no effort to assess either the lawfulness or
morality of the Rs' defensive actions.
An additional step was taken to minimize the possibility of DGU
frequency being overstated. The senior author went through interview
sheets on every one of the interviews in which a DGU was reported,
looking for any indication that the incident might not be genuine. A
case would be coded as questionable if even just one of four
problems appeared: (1) it was not clear whether the R actually
confronted any adversary he saw; (2) the R was a police officer,
member of the military or a security guard, and thus might have been
reporting, despite instructions, an incident which occurred as part
of his occupational duties; (3) the interviewer did not properly
record exactly what the R had done with the gun, so it was possible
that he had not used it in any meaningful way; or (4) the R did not
state or the interviewer did not record a specific crime that the R
thought was being committed against him at the time of the incident.
There were a total of twenty-six cases where at least one of these
problematic indications was present. It should be emphasized that we
do not know that these cases were not genuine DGUs; we only mean to
indicate that we do not have as high a degree of confidence on the
matter as with the rest of the cases designated as DGUs. Estimates
using all of the DGU cases are labelled herein as "A" estimates,
while the more conservative estimates based only on cases devoid of
any problematic indications are labelled "B" estimates.
2. Results
Table 2 displays
a large number of estimates of how often guns are used defensively.
These estimates are not inconsistent with each other; they each
measure different things in different ways. Some estimates are based
only on incidents which Rs reported as occurring in the twelve
months preceding the interview, while others are based on incidents
reported for the preceding five years. Both telescoping and recall
failure should be lower with a one year recall period, so estimates
derived from this period should be superior to those based on the
longer recall period. Some estimates are based only on incidents
which Rs reported as involving themselves, (person-based estimates),
while others were based on all incidents which Rs reported as
involving anyone in their household (household-based estimates). The
person-based estimates should be better because of its first-hand
character. Finally, some of the figures pertain only to DGUS
involving use of handguns, while others pertain to DGUS involving
any type of gun.
The methods used to compute the
Table 2 estimates
are very simple and straight-forward. Prevalence ("% Used") figures
were computed by dividing the weighted sample frequencies in the top
two rows of numbers by the total weighted sample size of 4,977. The
estimated number of persons or households who experienced a DGU,
listed in the third and fourth rows, was then computed by
multiplying these prevalence figures by the appropriate U.S.
population base, age eighteen and over for person-based estimates,
and the total number of households for household-based estimates.
Finally, the estimated number of defensive uses was computed by
multiplying the number of DGU-involved persons or households by the
following estimates of the number of all-guns DGU incidents per
DGU-involved person or household, using a past-five-years recall
period: person-based, A--1.478; person-based, 1.472;
household-based, A--1.531; household-based, B-1.535. We did not
establish how many DGUs occurred in the past year, and for
past-five-years DGUs, we did not separately establish how many of
the DGUs involved handguns and how many involved other types of
guns. Therefore, for all past-year estimates, and for
past-five-years handgun estimates, it was necessary to
conservatively assume that there was only one DGU per DGU-involved
person or household.
The most technically sound estimates presented in
Table 2 are those
based on the shorter one-year recall peRiod that rely on Rs'
firsthand accounts of their own experiences (person-based
estimates). These estimates appear in the first two columns. They
indicate that each year in the U.S. there are about 2.2 to 2.5
million DGUs of all types by civilians against humans, with about
1.5 to 1.9 million of the incidents involving use of handguns.
These estimates are larger than those derived from the best
previous surveys, indicating that technical improvements in the
measurement procedures have, contrary to the expectations of
Cook,[47] Reiss and Roth,[48] and McDowall and Wiersema,[49]
increased rather than decreased estimates of the frequency that DGUs
occur. Defensive gun use is thus just another specific example of a
commonplace pattern in criminological survey work, which includes
victimization surveys, self-report surveys of delinquency, surveys
of illicit drug use, etc.: the better the measurement procedures,
the higher the estimates of controversial behaviors.[50]
The present estimates are higher than earlier ones primarily due
to three significant improvements in the present survey: (1) a
shorter recall period; (2) reliance on person-based information
rather than just household-based information; and (3) information on
how many household DGUs had been experienced in the recall period by
those Rs reporting any such experiences. Using a shorter recall
period undoubtedly reduced the effects of memory loss by reducing
the artificial shrinkage to which earlier estimates were subject.
Although telescoping was also undoubtedly reduced, and this would,
by itself, tend to reduce estimates, the impact of reducing
telescoping was apparently smaller than the impact of reducing case
loss due to forgetting. Evidence internal to this survey directly
indicates that a one year recall period yields larger estimates than
a five year recall period; compare figures in the right half of
Table 2 with their
counterparts in the left half. This phenomenon, where less behavior
is reported for a longer recall period than would be expected based
on results obtained when using a shorter period, also has been
observed in surveys of self-reported use of illicit drugs.[51]
Furthermore, basing estimates on Rs reports about DGUs in which
they were personally involved also increases the estimates. One of
the surprises of this survey was how few Rs were willing to report a
DGU which involved some other member of their household. Eighty-five
percent of the reports of DGUs we obtained involved the original R,
the person with whom the interviewer first spoke. Given that most
households contain more than one adult eligible to be interviewed,
it was surprising that in a DGU-involved household the person who
answered the phone would consistently turn out to be the individual
who had been involved in the DGU. Our strong suspicion is that many
Rs feel that it is not their place to tell total strangers that some
other member of their household has used a gun for self-protection.
Some of them are willing to tell strangers about an incident in
which they were themselves involved, but apparently few are willing
to "inform" on others in their household. Still others may not have
been aware of DGUs involving other household members. Evidence
internal to the present survey supports this speculation, since
person-based estimates are 66 to 77% higher than household-based
estimates; a figure that suggests that there was more complete
reporting of DGUs involving the original respondent than those
involving other household members.[52] For this reason, previous
surveys including those which yielded only household-based
estimates, four of the six gun surveys which yielded usable annual
estimates, and all of those which were national in scope, probably
substantially underestimated DGUs.
We also had information on the number of times that DGU-involved
households had experienced DGUs during the five year recall period.
While it was necessary in computing previous estimates to
conservatively assume that each DGU-involved person or household had
experienced only one DGU, our evidence indicates that repeat
experiences were not uncommon, with 29.5% of DGU-involved households
reporting more than one DGU within the previous five years. The
average number of DGUs in this time span was 1.5 per DGU-involved
household. This information alone could account for a roughly 50%
increase in DGU incidence estimates based on the five year recall
period.
Finally, our survey was superior to the NCVS in two additional
ways: it was free of the taint of being conducted by, and on behalf
of, employees of the federal government, and it was completely
anonymous.
It would be incorrect to say that the present estimates are
inconsistent with those derived from the earlier gun surveys.
Avoiding apples-and-oranges comparisons, compare figures from
Table 2 with earlier
results summarized in Table 1. The household prevalence figures from
the national Hart and Mauser surveys, which used a DGU question most
similar to the one used in the present survey, indicate that in
1990, 3.8% of households reported a DGU involving a gun of any kind
in the previous five years[53] and in 1981, 4% reported a DGU
involving a handgun in the previous five years.[54] The
past-five-years, household-based "% Used" figures in
Table 2 indicate
3.9% for all guns, and 3.0% for handguns. Where directly comparable,
the present results are within sampling error of the results of the
best two previous surveys. Indeed, the consistency is remarkable
given the substantial differences among the surveys and the twelve
year difference between the Hart survey and the current one.
Further, the only prior survey with person-based estimates and a one
year recall period, the 1976 Field poll in California, yielded a
1.4% prevalence figure for handguns,[55] compared to 1.0% in the
present survey.[56]
With a sample size of 4,977, random sampling error of the
estimates is small. For example, the all-guns prevalence percent
used A estimates, with a 95% confidence interval, are plus or minus
0.32% for past year, person; 0.35% for past year, household; 0.50%
for past five years, person; and 0.54% for past five years,
household. Given how small these are already, even increasing
samples to the size of the enormous ones in the NCVS could produce
only slight reductions in sampling error.
Are these estimates plausible? Could it really be true that
Americans use guns for self-protection as often as 2.1 to 2.5
million times a year? The estimate may seem remarkable in comparison
to expectations based on conventional wisdom, but it is not
implausibly large in comparison to various gun-related phenomena.
There are probably over 220 million guns in private hands in the
U.S.,[57] implying that only about 1% of them are used for defensive
purposes in any one year--not an impossibly high fraction. In a
December 1993 Gallup survey, 49% of U.S. households reported owning
a gun, and 31% of adults reported personally owning one.[58] These
figures indicate that there are about 47.6 million households with a
gun, with perhaps 93 million, or 49% of the adult U.S. population
living in households with guns, and about 59.1 million adults
personally owning a gun. Again, it hardly seems implausible that 3%
(2.5 million/93 million) of the people with immediate access to a
gun could have used one defensively in a given year.
Huge numbers of Americans not only have access to guns, but the
overwhelming majority of gun owners, if one can believe their
statements, are willing to use a gun defensively. In a December 1989
national survey, 78% of American gun owners stated that they would
not only be willing to use a gun defensively in some way, but would
be willing to shoot a burglar.[59] The percentage willing to
use a gun defensively in some way, though not necessarily by
shooting someone, would presumably be even higher than this.
Nevertheless, having access to a gun and being willing to use it
against criminals is not the same as actually doing so. The latter
requires experiencing a crime under circumstances in which the
victim can get to, or already possesses, a gun. We do not know how
many such opportunities for crime victims to use guns defensively
occur each year. It would be useful to know how large a fraction of
crimes with direct offender-victim contact result in a DGU.
Unfortunately, a large share of the incidents covered by our survey
are probably outside the scope of incidents that realistically are
likely to be reported to either the NCVS or police. If the DGU
incidents reported in the present survey are not entirely a subset
within the pool of cases covered by the NCVS, one cannot
meaningfully use NCVS data to estimate the share of crime incidents
which result in a DGU. Nevertheless, in a ten state sample of
incarcerated felons interviewed in 1982, 34% reported having been
"scared off, shot at, wounded or captured by an armed victim."[60]
From the criminals' standpoint, this experience was not rare.
How could such a serious thing happen so often without becoming
common knowledge? This phenomenon, regardless of how widespread it
really is, is largely an invisible one as far as governmental
statistics are concerned. Neither the defender/victim nor the
criminal ordinarily has much incentive to report this sort of event
to the police, and either or both often have strong reasons not
to do so. Consequently many of these incidents never come to the
attention of the police, while others may be reported but without
victims mentioning their use of a gun. And even when a DGU is
reported, it will not necessarily be recorded by the police, who
ordinarily do not keep statistics on matters other than DGUs
resulting in a death, since police record-keeping is largely
confined to information helpful in apprehending perpetrators and
making a legal case for convicting them. Because such statistics are
not kept, we cannot even be certain that a large number of DGUs are
not reported to the police.
The health system cannot shed much light on this phenomenon
either, since very few of these incidents involve injuries.[61] In
the rare case where someone is hurt, it is usually the criminal, who
is unlikely to seek medical attention for any but the most
life-threatening gunshot wounds, as this would ordinarily result in
a police interrogation. Physicians in many states are required by
law to report treatment of gunshot wounds to the police, making it
necessary for medically treated criminals to explain to police how
they received their wounds.
Finally, it is now clear that virtually none of the victims who
use guns defensively tell interviewers about it in the NCVS. Our
estimates imply that only about 3% of DGUs among NCVS Rs are
reported to interviewers.[62] Based on other comparisons of
alternative survey estimates of violent events with NCVS estimates,
this high level of under-reporting is eminently plausible. Loftin
and Mackenzie reported that rapes might be thirty-three times as
frequent as NCVS estimates indicate, while spousal violence could
easily be twelve times as high.[63] There is no inherent value to
knowing the exact number of DGUs any more than there is any value to
knowing the exact number of crimes which are committed each year.
The estimates in Table 2
are at best only rough approximations, which are probably too low.
It is sufficient to conclude from these numbers that DGU is very
common, far more common than has been recognized to date by
criminologists or policy makers, and certainly far more common than
one would think based on any official sources of information.
What does "very common" mean? One natural standard of comparison
by which the magnitude of these numbers could be judged is the
frequency with which guns are used for criminal purposes. The
highest annual estimate of criminal gun use for the peak year of gun
crime is the NCVS estimate for 1992, when there were an estimated
847,652 violent crime incidents in which, according to the victim,
at least one offender possessed a gun.[64] This NCVS figure is not
directly comparable with our DGU estimates because our DGU estimates
are restricted only to incidents in which the gun was actually used
by the defender, as opposed to incidents in which a victim merely
possessed a gun. Many of the "gun crimes" in the NCVS, on the other
hand, do not involve the gun actually being used by the criminal.
Thus, the NCVS estimate of "gun crimes" overstates the number of
crimes in which the offender actually used the gun. The only "gun
crimes" reported in NCVS interviews that one can be confident
involved offenders actually using guns are those in which they shot
at a victim; but these were only 16.6% of "handgun crimes" reported
in the NCVS from 1987 to 1992.[65]
Another 46.8% of the "handgun crimes" are labelled "weapon
present" cases by the Bureau of justice (BJS)[66] and an unknown
fraction of these could involve actual use of a gun in a
threat; but NCVS data do not permit us to know just how large a
fraction. For these cases, the relevant NCVS interview items are
ambiguous as to whether the gun was used to threaten a victim.
Response category four of question fourteen ("How were you
threatened?") of the NCVS Crime Incident Report reads: "Weapon
present or threatened with weapon"[67] When this category is
recorded by the interviewer, it is impossible to determine whether
the victim was actually threatened with a gun or merely reported
that the offender possessed a gun. In the remaining 36.6% of the
"handgun crimes,"[68] there is no indication at all that the gun
allegedly possessed by the offender was actually used.
Even the presence of a weapon is debatable, since victims are not
asked why they thought the offender possessed a gun or if they saw a
gun. This raises the possibility that some victims assumed that the
offender had a gun, or inferred it from a bulge in the offender's
clothing, or accepted the word of an offender who was bluffing about
having a gun.
Thus, somewhere between 16.6% and 63.4%[69] of NCVS-defined
"handgun crime" victimizations involve the gun actually being used
in an attack or threat. Applying these figures to the estimates of
847,652 gun crime incidents and 689,652 handgun crime incidents, we
can be confident that in 1992 there were at least 140,710 nonfatal
crime incidents in which offenders used guns, 114,482 with handguns
or about 157,000 total gun crime incidents, and 129,000 with
handguns, when one includes gun homicides.[70] Or, generously
assuming that all of the ambiguous "weapon present" cases involved
guns being used to threaten die victim, estimates of 554,000 total,
fatal and nonfatal, gun crime incidents and 451,000 handgun crime
incidents are obtained.
All of these estimates are well short of even the most
conservative estimates of DGUs in
Table 2. The best
estimates of DGUs (first two columns), even if compared to the more
generous estimates of gun crimes, are 4.6 times higher than the
crime counts for all guns, and 4.2 times higher for handguns, or 3.9
and 3.4, respectively, if the more conservative B estimates of DGU
are used. In sum, DGUs are about three to five times as common as
criminal uses, even using generous estimates of gun crimes.
There is good reason to believe that survey estimates of both
criminal and defensive gun uses, including the DGU estimates
presented here, are too low. Cook has shown that NCVS estimates of
gunshot wounds are far too.[71] Our estimates of DGUs are probably
also too low, partly because, unlike the NCVS, our survey did not
cover adolescents, the age group most frequently victimized in
violence. Furthermore, our use of telephone surveying excludes the
5% of the nation's households without telephones, households which
are disproportionately poor and/or rural. Low income persons are
more likely to be crime victims,[72] while rural persons are more
likely to own guns and to be geographically distant from the nearest
police officer.[73] Both groups therefore may have more
opportunities to use guns for self-protection and excluding them
from the sample could contribute to an under estimation of DGU.
Both parameters also are subject to underestimation due to
intentional respondent under reporting. It is also probable that
typical survey Rs are more reluctant to tell interviewers about
questionable acts that they themselves have committed, such as
threatening another person with a gun for purportedly defensive
reasons, than they are to report criminal acts that other people
have committed against them. Assuming this is correct, it
would imply that DGUs, even in the best surveys, are under reported
more than gun crime victimizations, and that correcting for under
reporting would only increase the degree to which DGUs outnumber gun
crimes.
The only known significant source of overestimation of DGUs in
this survey is "telescoping," the tendency of Rs to report incidents
which actually happened earlier than the recall period, such as
reporting a six year old incident as having happened in the past
five years. It is likely that telescoping effects are more than
counterbalanced by Rs who actually experienced DGUs failing to
report them. Nevertheless, it is worth discussing how much effect
telescoping could have on these estimates. In evaluating the ability
of crime victims to recall crime events in victim surveys, the U.S.
Census Bureau selected a sample of crimes that were reported to the
police, and then interviewed the victims of these known crime
events. Using a twelve month recall period (the same as we used in
the present survey), they surveyed victims who had been involved in
crimes which had actually occurred thirteen to fourteen
months before the interview, i.e., one or two months before the
recall period. Of these ineligible crimes, 21% were telescoped
forward--wrongly reported as having occurred in the twelve month
recall period.[74]
Since the months just before the start of the recall period will
show the highest rates of telescoping, the rate should be even
smaller for crimes which occurred earlier. Nevertheless, even if it
is assumed that the 21% rate applied to events that occurred as much
as one year earlier, thirteen to twenty-four months before the
interview, telescoping could inflate the DGU estimates for a one
year recall period by only 21%. Adjusting the 2.5 million DGU
estimate downward for telescoping effects of this magnitude would
reduce it to about 2.1 million (2.5 million/1.21=2.1 million), an
adjustment which would have no effect on any of our conclusions.
Telescoping would inflate estimates based on the five year recall
period even less, since the ratio of memory loss errors over
telescoping errors increases as the recall period lengthens.[75]
Nevertheless, it should be stressed that this is just a numerical
demonstration. There is no reason to believe that these modest
telescoping effects outweigh the effects of Rs failing to report
DGUs, and therefore, no reason to believe that these estimates are
even slightly too high.
III. THE
NATURE OF DEFENSIVE
GUN USE
A total of 222 sample cases of DGUs against humans were obtained.
For nine of these, the R broke off discussion of the incident before
any significant amount of detail could be obtained, other than that
the use was against a human. This left 213 cases with fairly
complete information. Although this dataset constitutes the most
detailed body of information available on DGU, the sample size is
nevertheless fairly modest. While estimates of DGU frequency are
reliable because they are based on a very large sample of 4,977
cases, results pertaining to the details of DGU incidents are based
on 213 or fewer sample cases, and readers should treat these results
with appropriate caution.
Apart from the sample size, the results of this survey also are
affected by sample censoring. Beyond the incidents our interviewers
were told about, there were almost certainly other DGUs which
occurred within the recall period but which Rs did not mention to
interviewers. In debriefings by the authors, almost all of our
interviewers reported that they had experienced something like the
following: they asked the key DGU question, which was followed by a
long silence on the other end of the line, and/or the R asking
something like "Who wants to know?" or "Why do you want to know?" or
some similarly suspicious remark, followed by a "no" answer. In
contrast, only one interviewer spoke with a person he thought was
inventing a nonexistent incident. One obvious implication is that
the true frequency of DGU is probably even higher than our estimates
indicate. Another is that the incidents which were reported might
differ from those that were not.
We believe that there are two rather different kinds of incidents
that are especially likely to go unreported: (1) cases that Rs do
not want to tell strangers on the phone, because the Rs deem them
legally or morally dubious or they think the interviewer would
regard them that way; and (2) relatively minor cases that Rs
honestly forget about or did not think were serious enough to
qualify as relevant to our inquiries. Thus, in addition to the
mostly legitimate and serious cases covered in our sample, there are
still other, less legitimate or serious DGU incidents that this or
any other survey are likely to miss. This supposition would imply
two kinds of bias in our descriptive results: (1) our DGUs would
look more consistently "legitimate" than the entire set of all DGUs
actually are; and (2) our DGUs would look more serious, on average,
than the entire set of DGUs really are. These possibilities should
be kept in mind when considering the following descriptive
information.
Table 3
summarizes what our sample DGU incidents were like. The data support
a number of broad generalizations. First, much like the typical gun
crime, many of these cases were relatively undramatic and minor
compared to fictional portrayals of gun use. Only 24% of the gun
defenders in the present study reported firing the gun, and only 8%
report wounding an adversary.[76] This parallels the fact that only
17% of the gun crimes reported in the NCVS involve the offender
shooting at the victim, and only 3% involve the victim suffering a
gunshot wound.[77]
Low as it is, even an 8% wounding rate is probably too high, both
because of the censoring of less serious cases, which in this
context would be cases without a wounding, and because the survey
did not establish how Rs knew they had wounded someone. We suspect
that in incidents where the offender left without being captured,
some Rs remembered with favor" their marksmanship and assumed they
had hit their adversaries. If 8.3% really hit their adversaries, and
a total of 15.6% fired at their adversaries, this would imply a 53%
(8.3/15.6) "incident hit rate," a level of combat marksmanship far
exceeding that typically observed even among police officers. In a
review of fifteen reports, police officers inflicted at least one
gunshot wound on at least one adversary in 37% of the incidents in
which they intentionally fired at someone.[78] A 53% hit rate would
also be triple the 18% hit rate of criminals shooting at crime
victims.[79] Therefore, we believe that even the rather modest 8.3%
wounding rate we found is probably too high, and that typical DGUs
are less serious or dramatic in their consequences than our data
suggest. In any case, the 8.3% figure was produced by just seventeen
sample cases in which Rs reported that they wounded an offender.
About 37% of these incidents occurred in the defender's home,
with another 36% near the defender's home.[80] This implies that the
remaining 27% occurred in locations where the defender must have
carried a gun through public spaces. Adding in the 36% which
occurred near the defender's home and which may or may not have
entailed public carrying, 36 to 63% of the DGUs entailed gun
carrying.
Guns were most commonly used for defense against burglary,
assault, and robbery.[81] Cases of "mutual combat," where it would
be hard to tell who is the aggressor or where both parties are
aggressors, would be a subset of the 30% of cases where assault was
the crime involved. However, only 19% of all DGU cases involved
only assault and no other crime where victim and offender could
be more easily distinguished. Further, only 11% of all DGU cases
involved only assault and a male defender--we had no information on
gender of offenders--some subset of these could have been
male-on-male fights. Thus, very few of these cases fit the classic
mutual combat model of a fight between two males. This is not to say
that such crimes where a gun-using combatant might claim that his
use was defensive are rare, but rather that few of them are in this
sample. Instead, cases where it is hard to say who is victim and who
is aggressor apparently constitute an additional set of questionable
DGUs lying largely outside of the universe of more one-sided events
that our survey methods could effectively reach.
This survey did not attempt to compare the effectiveness of armed
resistance with other forms of victim self-protection, since this
sort of work has already been done and reviewed earlier in this
paper. Panels D and E nevertheless confirm previous research on the
effectiveness of self-defense with a gun--crime victims who use this
form of self-protection rarely lose property and rarely provoke the
offender into hurting them. In property crime incidents where
burglary, robbery, or other thefts were attempted, victims lost
property in just 11% of the cases. Gun defenders were injured in
just 5.5% of all DGU incidents. Further, in 84% of the incidents
where the defender was threatened or attacked, it was the offender
who first threatened or used force. In none of the eleven
sample cases where gun defenders were injured was the defender the
first to use or to threaten force. The victim used a gun to threaten
or attack the offender only after the offender had already
attacked or threatened them and usually after the offender had
inflicted the injury. There is no support in this sample for the
hypothesis that armed resistance provokes criminals into attacking
victims; this confirms the findings of prior research.[82]
While only 14% of all violent crime victims face offenders
armed with guns,[83] 18% of the gun-using victims in our sample
faced adversaries with guns.[84] Although the gun defenders usually
faced unarmed offenders or offenders with lesser weapons, they were
more likely than other victims to face gun-armed criminals. This is
consistent with the perception that more desperate circumstances
call forth more desperate defensive measures. The findings undercut
the view that victims are prone to use guns in "easy" circumstances
which are likely to produce favorable outcomes for the victim
regardless of their gun use.[85] Instead, gun defenders appear to
face more difficult circumstances than other crime victims, not
easier ones.
Nevertheless, one reason crime victims are willing to take the
risks of forcefully resisting the offender is that most offenders
faced by victims choosing such an action are unarmed, or armed only
with less lethal weapons. Relatively few victims try to use a gun
against adversaries who are themselves armed with guns. According to
this survey, offenders were armed with some kind of weapon in 48% of
DGU incidents but had guns in only 18% of them.[86]
The distribution of guns by type in DGUs is similar to that of
guns used by criminals. NCVS and police-based data indicate that
about 80% of guns used in crime are handguns,[87] and the present
study indicates that 80% of the guns used by victims are
handguns.[88]
Incidents where victims use a gun defensively are almost never
gunfights where both parties shoot at one another. Only 24% of the
incidents involved the defender firing their gun, and only 16%
involved the defender shooting at their adversary.[89] In only 4.5%
of the cases did the offender shoot at the defender.[90]
Consequently, it is not surprising that only 3% of all the incidents
involved both parties shooting at each other.
Among our sample cases, the offenders were strangers to the
defender in nearly three quarters of the incidents.[91] We suspect
that this again reflects the effects of sample censoring. Just as
the NCVS appears to detect less than a tenth of domestic violence
incidents,[92] our survey is probably missing many cases of DGU
against family members and other intimates.
While victims face multiple offenders in only about 24% of all
violent crimes,[93] the victims in our sample who used guns faced
multiple offenders in 53% of the incidents.[94] This mirrors the
observation that criminals who use guns are also more likely than
unarmed criminals to face multiple victims.[95] A gun allows either
criminals or victims to handle a larger number of adversaries. Many
victims facing multiple offenders probably would not resist at all
if they were without a gun or some other weapon. Another possible
interpretation is that some victims will resort to a defensive
measure as serious as wielding a gun only if they face the most
desperate circumstances. Again, this finding contradicts a view that
gun defenders face easier circumstances than other crime victims.
Another way of assessing how serious these incidents appeared to
the victims is to ask them how potentially fatal the encounter was.
We asked Rs: "If you had not used a gun for protection in
this incident, how likely do you think it is that you or someone
else would have been killed? Would you say almost certainly
not, probably not, might have, probably would have, or almost
certainly would have been killed?" Panel K indicates that 15.7% of
the Rs stated that they or someone else "almost certainly would
have" been killed, with another 14.2% responding "probably would
have" and 16.2% responding "might have."[96] Thus, nearly half
claimed that they perceived some significant chance of someone being
killed in the incident if they had not used a gun defensively.
It should be emphasized that these are just stated perceptions of
participants, not objective assessments of actual probabilities.
Some defenders might have been bolstering the justification for
their actions by exaggerating the seriousness of the threat they
faced. Our cautions about sample censoring should also be kept in
mind-minor, less life-threatening events are likely to have been
left out of this sample, either because Rs forgot them or because
they did not think them important enough to qualify as relevant to
our inquiries.
If we consider only the 15.7% who believed someone almost
certainly would have been killed had they not used a gun, and apply
this figure to estimates in the first two columns of
Table 2, it yields
national annual estimates of 340,000 to 400,000 DGUs of any kind,
and 240,000 to 300,000 uses of handguns, where defenders stated, if
asked, that they believed they almost certainly had saved a life by
using the gun. Just how many of these were truly life-saving gun
uses is impossible to know. As a point of comparison, the largest
number of deaths involving guns, including homicides, suicides, and
accidental deaths in any one year in U.S. history was 38,323 in
1991.[97]
Finally, we asked if Rs had reported these incidents to the
police, or if the police otherwise found out about them; 64% of the
gun-using victims claimed that the incidents had become known to the
police. This figure should be interpreted with caution, since
victims presumably want to present their use of guns as legitimate
and a willingness to report the incident to the police would help
support an impression of legitimacy. Rs who had in fact not reported
the incident to the police might have wondered whether a "no"" reply
might not lead to discomforting follow-up questions like "why not?"
(as indeed it does in the NCVS). Further, it is likely that some Rs
reported these incidents but did not mention their use of a gun.
IV. WHO
IS INVOLVED IN DEFENSIVE
GUN USE?
Finally, this Article will consider what sorts of people use guns
defensively, and how they might differ from other people.
Table 4 presents
comparisons of five groups: (1) "defenders," i.e., people who
reported using a gun for defense; (2) people who personally own guns
but did not report a DGU; (3) people who do not personally own a
gun; (4) people who did not report a DGU, regardless of whether they
own guns; and (5) all people who completed the full interview.
Some of the earlier gun surveys asked the DGU question only of Rs
who reported owning a gun. The cost of this limitation is evident
from the first two rows of
Table 4. Nearly 40%
of the people reporting a DGU did not report personally owning a gun
at the time of the interview. They either used someone else's gun,
got rid of the gun since the DGU incident, or inaccurately denied
personally owning a gun. About a quarter of the defenders reported
that they did not even have a gun in their household at the time of
the interview. Another possibility is that many gun owners were
falsely denying their ownership of the "incriminating evidence" of
their DGU.
Many of the findings in
Table 4 are
unsurprising. Gun defenders are more likely to carry a gun for
self-protection, consistent with the large share of DGUs which
occurred away from the defender's home. Obviously, they were more
likely to have been a victim of a burglary or robbery in the past
year, a finding which is a tautology for those Rs whose DGU was in
connection with a robbery or burglary committed against them in the
preceding year. They were also more likely to have been a victim of
an assault since becoming an adult.
Defenders are more likely to believe that a person must be
prepared to defend their homes against crime and violence rather
than letting the police take care of it compared to either gun
owners without a DGU and nonowners. Whether this is cause or
consequence of defenders' defensive actions is impossible to say
with these data.
Some might suspect that DGUs were actually the aggressive acts of
vengeful vigilantes intent on punishing criminals. If this were true
of gun defenders as a group, one might expect them to be more
supportive of punitive measures like the death penalty. In fact,
those who reported a DGU were no more likely to support the death
penalty than those without such an experience, and were somewhat
less likely to do so compared with gun owners as a group.
Similarly, gun defenders were no more likely than other people to
endorse the view that the courts do not deal harshly enough with
criminals.
Perhaps the most surprising finding of the survey was the large
share of reported DGUs that involved women. Because of their lower
victimization rates and lower gun ownership rates, one would expect
women to account for far less than half of DGUs. Nevertheless, 46%
of our sample DGUs involved women. This finding could be due to
males reporting a lower fraction of actual DGUs than women. If a
larger share of men's allegedly DGUs were partly aggressive actions,
a larger share would be at the "illegitimate" end of the scale and
thus less likely to be reported to interviewers. Further, women may
be more likely than men to report their DGUs because they are less
afraid of prosecution. Consequently, although there is no reason to
doubt that women use guns defensively as often as this survey
indicates, it is probable that males account for a larger number and
share of DGUs than these data indicate.
A disproportionate share of defenders are African-American or
Hispanic compared to the general population and especially compared
to gun owners. Additionally, defenders are disproportionately likely
to reside in big cities compared to other people, and particularly
when compared to gun owners, who reside disproportionately in rural
areas and small towns. Finally, defenders are disproportionately
likely to be single. These patterns are all presumably due to the
higher rates of crime victimization among minorities, big city
dwellers, and single persons.[98] On the other hand, defenders are
not likely to be poor. The effect of higher victimization among poor
people may be cancelled out by the lower gun ownership levels among
the poor.[99]
One might suspect that, despite instructions not to report such
events, some of the Rs reporting a DGU might have been describing an
event which occurred as part of their occupational activities as a
police officer, a member of the military, or a security guard. This
could not have been true for more than a handful of our DGU cases,
since only 2.4% (five sample cases) involved a person who had this
type of occupation. Even these few cases may have occurred off-duty
and thus would not necessarily be occupational DGUs. Gun defenders
were in fact somewhat less likely to have a gun-related
occupation than other gun owners.
V. CONCLUSION
If one were committed to rejecting the seemingly overwhelming
survey evidence on the frequency of DGU, one could speculate, albeit
without any empirical foundation whatsoever, that nearly all of the
people reporting such experiences are simply making them up. We feel
this is implausible. An R who had actually experienced a DGU would
have no difficulty responding with a "no" answer to our DGU question
because a "no" response was not followed up by further questioning.
On the other hand, lying with a false "yes" answer required a good
deal more imagination and energy. Since we asked as many as nineteen
questions on the topic, this would entail spontaneously inventing as
many as nineteen plausible and internally consistent bits of false
information and doing so in a way that gave no hint to experienced
interviewers that they were being deceived.
Suppose someone persisted in believing in the anomalous NCVS
estimates of DGU frequency and wanted to use a "dishonest
respondent" hypothesis to account for estimates from the present
survey that are as much as thirty times higher. In order to do this,
one would have to suppose that twenty-nine out of every thirty
people reporting a DGU in the present survey were lying. There is no
precedent in criminological survey research for such an enormous
level of intentional and sustained falsification.
The banal and undramatic nature of the reported incidents also
undercuts the dishonest respondent speculation. While all the
incidents involved a crime, and usually a fairly serious one, only
8% of the alleged gun defenders claimed to have shot their
adversaries, and only 24% claim to have fired their gun. If large
numbers of Rs were inventing their accounts, one would think they
would have created more exciting scenarios.
By this time there seems little legitimate scholarly reason to
doubt that defensive gun use is very common in the U.S., and that it
probably is substantially more common than criminal gun use. This
should not come as a surprise, given that there are far more
gun-owning crime victims than there are gun-owning criminals and
that victimization is spread out over many different victims, while
offending is more concentrated among a relatively small number of
offenders.
There is little legitimate reason to continue accepting the NCVS
estimates of DGU frequency as even approximately valid. The gross
inconsistencies between the NCVS and all other sources of
information make it reasonable to suppose that all but a handful of
NCVS victims who had used a gun for protection in the reported
incidents refrained from mentioning this gun use. In light of
evidence on the injury-preventing effectiveness of victim gun use,
in some cases where the absence of victim injury is credited to
either nonresistance or some unarmed form of resistance, the absence
of injury may have actually been due to resistance with a gun, which
the victim failed to mention to the interviewer.
The policy implications of these results are straightforward.
These findings do not imply anything about whether moderate
regulatory measures such as background checks or purchase permits
would be desirable. Regulatory measures which do not disarm large
shares of the general population would not significantly reduce
beneficial defensive uses of firearms by noncriminals. On the other
hand, prohibitionist measures, whether aimed at all guns or just at
handguns, are aimed at disarming criminals and noncriminals alike.
They would therefore discourage and presumably decrease the
frequency of DGU among noncriminal crime victims because even
minimally effective gun bans would disarm at least some
noncriminals. The same would be true of laws which ban gun carrying.
In sum, measures that effectively reduce gun availability among the
noncriminal majority also would reduce DGUs that otherwise would
have saved lives, prevented injuries, thwarted rape attempts, driven
off burglars, and helped victims retain their property.
Since as many as 400,000 people a year use guns in situations
where the defenders claim that they "almost certainly" saved a life
by doing so, this result cannot be dismissed as trivial. If even
one-tenth of these people are accurate in their stated perceptions,
the number of lives saved by victim use of guns would still exceed
the total number of lives taken with guns. It is not possible to
know how many lives are actually saved this way, for the simple
reason that no one can be certain how crime incidents would have
turned out had the participants acted differently than they actually
did. But surely this is too serious a matter to simply assume that
practically everyone who says he believes he saved a life by using a
gun was wrong.
This is also too serious a matter to base conclusions on silly
statistics comparing the number of lives taken with guns with the
number of criminals killed by victims.[100] Killing a
criminal is not a benefit to the victim, but rather a nightmare to
be suffered for years afterward. Saving a life through DGU would be
a benefit, but this almost never involves killing the criminal;
probably fewer than 3,000 criminals are lawfully killed by
gun-wielding victims each year,[101] representing only about 1/1000
of the number of DGUs, and less than 1% of the number of purportedly
life-saving DGUs. Therefore, the number of justifiable homicides
cannot serve as even a rough index of life-saving gun uses. Since
this comparison does not involve any measured benefit, it can shed
no light on the benefits and costs of keeping guns in the home for
protection.[102]
(*) The authors wish to thank David Bordua, Gary Mauser, Seymour
Sudman, and James Wright for their help in designing the survey
instrument. The authors also wish to thank the highly skilled staff
responsible for the interviewing: Michael Trapp (Supervisor), David
Antonacci, James Belcher, Robert Bunting, Melissa Cross, Sandy
Hawker, Dana R. Jones, Harvey Langford, Jr., Susannah R. Maher, Nia
Mastin-Walker, Brian Murray, Miranda Ross, Dale Sellers, Esty
[1] Marvin E. Wolfgang, Patterns in Criminal Homicide 245 (1958).
[2] Richard A. Berk et al., Mutual Combat and Other Family Violence
Myths, in The Dark Side of Families 197 (David Finkelhor et al.
eds., 1983).
[3] See generally Michael J. Hindelang, Criminal Victimization in
Eight American Cities (1976); Gary Kleck, Crime Control Through the
Private Use of Armed Force, 35 Soc. Probs. 1 (1988); Gary Kleck &
Miriam & DeLone, Victim Resistance and Offender Weapon Effects in
Robbery, 9 J. Quantitive Criminology 55 (1993); Eduard A.
Ziegenhagen & Dolores Brosnan, Victim Responses to Robbery and Crime
Control Polity, 23 Criminology 675 (1985).
[4] See generally Philip J. Cook, The Technology of personal
Violence, 14 Crime & Just: Ann. Rev. Res. 1, 57 (1991).
[5] Ziegenhagen & Brosnan, supra note 3; Kleck supra
note 3; Kleck & Delone, supra note 3.
[6] Kleck, supra note 3.
[7) Cook, supra note 4, at 58.
[8] Kleck & Delone, supra note 3, at 75.
[9] Joan M. Mcdermott, Rape Victimization in 26 American Cities
(1979).
[10] Quinsey & Upfold, Rape Completion and Victim Injury as a
Function of Female Resistance Strategy, 17 Can. J. Behav. Sci. 40
(1985).
[11] Alan J. Lizotte, Determinants of Completing Rape and Assault, 2
J. Quantitative Criminology 203 (1986).
[12] Gary Kleck & Susan Sayles, Rape and Resistance, 37 Soc. Probs.
149 (1990).
[13] Quinsey & Upfold, supra note 10, at 46-47. See generally
Sarah E. Ullman & Raymond A. Knight, Fighting Back: Women's
Resistance to Rape, 7 J. Interpersonal Violence 31 (1992).
[14] See Kleck, supra note 3, at 9.
[15] Cook, supra note 4; David McDowall & Brian Wiersema, The
Incidence of defensive Firearm Use by U.S. Crime Victims, 1987
Through 1990, 84 Am. J. Pub. Health 1982 (1994); Understanding and
Preventing Violence 265 (Albert J. Reiss & Jeffrey A. Roth eds.,
1993).
[16] Kleck, supra note 3, at 8.
[17] Cook, supra note 4, at 56; Michael R. Rand, Bureau of
Justice Statistics, Guns and Crime (Crime Data Brief) (1994).
[18] See Kleck, supra note 3, at 3; Gary Kleck, Point Blank:
Guns and Violence in America 146 (1991).
[19] Gary A. Mauser, Firearms and Self-defense: The Canadian Case,
Presented at the Annual Meetings of the American Society of
Criminology (Oct. 28, 1993).
[20] Rand, supra note 17.
[21] Cook, supra note 4, at 56; McDowall & Wiersema, supra
note 15.
[22] Understanding and Preventing Violence, supra note 15, at
265-66.
[23] Id. at 265.
[24] Cook, supra note 4, at 54.
[25] U.S. Bureau of the Census, National Crime Survey: Interviewer's
Manual, NCS-550, Part D -- How to Enumerate NCS (1986).
[26] U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, Criminal Victimization in
the United States 1992, at 128 (1994).
[27] Colin Loftin & Ellen J. MacKenzie, Building National Estimates
of Violent Victimization 21-23 (April 1-4, 1990) (unpublished
background paper prepared for the Symposium on the Understanding and
Control of Violent Behavior, sponsored by the National Research
Council).
[28] Patrick Blackman, Carrying Handguns for Personal Protection 31
(1985) (unpublished paper presented at the annual meetings of the
American Society of Criminology) (Nov. 13-16, 1985); Kleck, supra
note 18, at 412.
[29] Kent M. Ronhovde & Gloria P. Sugars, Survey of Select State
Firearm Control Laws, in Federal Regulation of Firearms 204-05 (H.
Hogan ed., 1982) (report prepared for the U.S. Senate judiciary
Committee by the Congressional Research Service).
[30] U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, supra note 26, at 75.
[31] Id. at 124, 128.
[32] See Table 1, row labelled "Time Span of Use."
[33] Id. at row labelled "Excluded military, police uses."
[34] Id. at row labelled "Defensive question refers to."
[35] U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, supra note 26, at
144.
[36] Cambridge Reports, Inc., an Analysis of Public Attitudes
Towards Handgun Control (1978); The Ohio Statistical Analysis
Center, Ohio Citizen Attitudes Concerning Crime and Criminal Justice
(1982); H. Quinley, Memorandum reporting results from Time/CNN Poll
of Gun Owners, dated Feb. 6, 1990 (1990).
[37] Kleck, Supra note 18, at 106-07.
[38] Understanding and Preventing Violence, supra note 15, at
266.
[39] Gary Kleck, Guns and Self-Defense (1994) (unpublished
manuscript on file with the School of Criminology and Criminal
Justice, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL).
[40] Seymour Sudman & Norman M. Bradbum, Effects of Time and Memory
Factors on Response in Surveys, 68 J. Am. Stat. Ass'n 808 (1973).
[41] Kleck, supra note 39.
[42] Completed interviews, n=4,977.
[43] See, eg., David J. Bordua et al., Illinios Law Enforcement
Commission Patterns of Firearms Ownership, Regulation and Use in
Illinios (1979); Seymore Sudman & Norman Bradburn, Response Effects
in Surveys (1974); James Wright & Peter Rossi, Armed and Considered
Dangerous (1986); Alan J. Lizotte & David J. Bordua, Firearms
Ownership for Sport and Protection, 46 Am. Soc. and American
Attitudes Towards Firearm, 32 CAN. J. Criminology 573 (1990); Gary
Mauser, "Sorry, Wrong Number. Why Media Polls on Gun Control Are
Often Unreliable, 9 Pol. Comm. 69 (1992); Mauser, supra note
16.
[44] U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, supra note 26, at
14142.
[45] Kleck, supra note 18, at 57.
[46] Id. at 56.
[47] Cook, supra note 4.
[48] Understanding and Preventing Violence, supra note 15.
[49] McDowall & Wiersema, supra note 15.
[50] See, eg., Michael Hindelang et al., Measuring Delinquency
(1981).
[51] See Jerald Bachman & Patrick O'Malley, When Four Months Equal a
Year. Inconsistencies in Student Reports of Drug Use, 45 Pub.
Opinion Q. 536, 539, 543 (1981).
[52] See Table 2.
[53] Mauser, supra note 19.
[54] Peter D. Hart Research Associates, Inc., Questionnaire used in
October 1981 Violence in America Survey, with marginal frequencies
(1981).
[55] See Table 1, note A.
[56] See Table 2,
second column.
[57] Kleck, supra note 18, at 50 (extrapolating up to 1994,
from 1987 data).
[58] David W. Moore & Frank Newport, Polic Strongly Favors Strongly
Gun Control Laws, 340 The Gallup Poll Monthly 18 (1994).
[59] Quinley, supra note 36.
[60] Wright & Rossi, supra note 43, at 155.
[61] See Table 3,
Panels A, E.
[62] The 85,000 DGUs estimated from the NCVS, divided by the 2.5
million estimate derived from the presented survey equals .03.
[63] Loftin & MacKenzie, supra note 27, at 22-23. [64]
Computed from U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, supra note
26, at 82-83.
[65] Rand, supra note 17, at 2.
[66] Id.
[67] U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, supra note 26, at
126.
[68] 100%, minus the 16.6% where the victim was shot at, minus the
46.8% where the victim reported a "weapon present or threatened with
a weapon" = 36.6%.
[69] 16.6% plus the 46.8% in the ambiguous "weapon present"
category.
[70] Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Department of Justice,
Crime in the United States 1992--Uniform Crime Reports 18, 58
(1993).
[71] Philip J. Cook, The Case of the Missing Victims: Gunshot
Woundings in the National Crime Survey, 1 J. Quantitative
Criminology 91 (1985).
[72] U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, supra note 26, at 33.
[73] Kleck, supra note 18, at 57.
[74] Richard W. Dodge, The Washington, D. C Recall Study, in 1 The
National Crime Survey. Working Papaer: Current and Historical
Perspectives 14 (Robert G. Lehnen Wesley G. Skogan eds., 1981).
[75] Henry S. Woltman et al., Recall Bias and Telescoping in the
National Crime Survey, in 2 The National Crime Survey. Working
Papers: Methodological Studies 810 (Robert G. Lehnen & Wesley G.
Skogan eds., 1984); Sudman & Bradburn, supra note 40.
[76] See Table 3,
panel A.
[77] Rand, supra note 17.
[78] William A. Geller & Michael S. Scott, Police Executive Research
Forum, Deadly Force: What We Know 100-106 (1993).
[79] Rand, supra note 17.
[80] See Table 3,
Panel B.
[81] Id. at Panel C.
[82] Kleck, supra note 3, at 7-9; Kleck & Delone, supra
note 3, at 75-77.
[83] U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, supra note 26, at 83.
[84] See Table 3,
Panel F.
[85] For a related speculation, see Understanding and Preventing
Violence, supra note 15, at 266.
[86] Id.
[87] U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, supra note 26, at 83;
U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, supra note 70, at 18.
[88] See Table 3,
Panel H.
[89] Id. at Panel A.
[90] Id. at Panel G.
[91] Id. at Panel I.
[92] Loftin & MacKenzie, supra note 27, at 22-23.
[93] U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, supra note 26, at 82.
[94] See Table 3,
Panel J.
[95] Cook, supra note 4.
[96] See Table 3,
Panel K.
[97] National Safety Council, Accident Facts 11 (1994). This assumes
that 95% of "legal intervention" deaths involved guns.
[98] U.S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, supra note 26, at
25-26, 31, 38-39.
[99] Kleck, supra note 18, at 56.
[100] Arthur L Kellermann & Donald T. Reay, Protection or Peril?,
314 New Eng. J. Med. 1557 (1986).
[101] Kleck, supra note 18, at 11 1-117.
[102] See id. at 127-129 for a more detailed critique of these "junk
science" statistics. See Understanding and Preventing Violence,
supra note 15, at 267 for an example of a prestigious source
taking such numbers seriously.