By Rebecca Rosenberg
From the early 1990s through 2019, there was a national decline in violent crime, but the pendulum swung back in 2020
Massive social upheaval spurred by the coronavirus pandemic is in large part to blame for the national surge in violent crime — not guns, an expert told Fox News Digital.
“We have crime because we have people,” said Amy Swearer, a legal fellow at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. “Crime is a very complex subject.”
From the early 1990s through 2019, there was a national decline in violent crime, but the pendulum swung back in 2020, she said.
“We’ve seen across the nation unprecedented spikes in homicide rates and other types of violent crime,” she said.
Homicide spike
The homicide rate shot up by 30% in 2020 compared to 2019 — the sharpest one-year increase in the nation’s history — and the upward trend has continued into 2021, according to FBI and other data. About 4,000 more Americans were murdered in 2020 compared to the prior year, Swearer said.
Widespread rioting and social unrest over racial injustice in addition to COVID-19 shutdowns destabilized communities, she said.
Gang violence intervention programs, schools and other vital community services were shuttered, Swearer noted.
Although shootings are up in many big cities, Swearer said eliminating guns isn’t a realistic goal when there are 400 million privately owned firearms in the U.S. This figure doesn’t include police or military weapons.
Guns seized on display at the Chicago Police Department Aug. 31, 2015. (Reuters)
“The cat is already out of the bag,” she added. “There are more privately owned guns than people in this country. You have to take that into account when you talk about combating gun violence.”
Black market
Most people who commit gun crimes are obtaining their weapons on the black market, not through official channels, so broad, federal gun control laws largely aimed at law-abiding citizens won’t stop the killings, she explained.
“There are more privately owned guns than people in this country. You have to take that into account when you talk about combating gun violence.”— Amy Swearer, Heritage Foundation
Banning assault weapons, implementing universal gun purchase permits and universal background checks target people buying guns lawfully, Swearer noted.
“When you crack down on these official channels you’re not actually addressing the bulk of gun violence or how those offenders obtain those guns,” she said. “Tougher gun control is a talking point that sells well to certain politician’s constituents, but it isn’t effective policy.”
NEW YORK, NEW YORK – APRIL 06: NYPD officers respond to shooting that left multiple people injured in Brooklyn borough on April 06, 2021 in New York City. (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images) (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)
Cities like New York, Chicago and Los Angeles face a unique dilemma. It is incredibly difficult for residents to obtain a gun permit while criminals are roaming the streets with illegal firearms.
Maj Toure of Black Guns Matter is seen in the Los Angeles County Storm Drain Dec. 1, 2016. (Getty Images)
“You end up with this problem where there are a number of otherwise law-abiding citizens who can’t obtain concealed carry permits who are told they have no reason to be afraid, but they carry anyway because they are afraid,” Swearer said. “These residents tend to be people of color from poorer neighborhoods who are most likely to be victims of violent crime.”
In New York City, anyone caught with a loaded firearm faces a second-degree criminal possession of a weapon charge, which carries a mandatory minimum of 3.5 years and a maximum of 15 years.
The Black Attorneys of Legal Aid, along with other public defender groups, wrote a legal brief last year arguing that “New York’s licensing regime criminalizes the exercise of the Second Amendment” and unfairly devastates the lives of minorities in poorer neighborhoods who fear for their safety.
Gun control racist?
Political activist Maj Toure, who founded Black Guns Matter to educate Black Americans on the use of firearms and their Second Amendment rights, agreed.
“All gun control in America is racist,” he told Fox News Digital. “Many people on the left don’t want Black people to have the right to defend their lives from Democratic tyranny.”
In California, he said, the issue rate for concealed carry permits by zip code reveals glaring racial disparities.
“By design, the people who are most affected by violent crime are having their constitutional rights violated the most,” he said. “If you live in Compton, you’re not getting a license.”
“By design, the people who are most affected by violent crime are having their constitutional rights violated the most.”— Maj Toure, Black Guns Matter
Swearer said data shows that concealed carry permits in restrictive counties in California are given to “overwhelmingly rich, white, well-connected people.”
Amid a Los Angeles crime wave, wealthy residents are rushing to buy guns while Black residents are often denied the same privilege due to their ZIP code and the complicated process involved in getting a concealed carry permit.
Professor Jeffrey Butts, the director of John Jay College’s Research and Evaluation Center, said that in some respects conservatives and liberals are on the same page with gun control.
“The far left and the far right are actually pitching the same story,” he said. “The right is saying this is America, and you should be able to have a gun to protect yourself, and the far left is saying when you crack down on gun possession you create racial disparity in cities where it is a criminal offense to have a gun.”
But, he said, he doesn’t endorse Swearer’s opposition to federal gun control laws that would impose restrictions on the entire country. To combat illegal guns, he said we need a federal approach because many illegal guns come from states with less restrictive gun laws.
“Imagine if in 1982 people said we’re never going to convince all these people to use condoms, we just have to live with HIV,” he said. “I don’t want to live in a country that just gives up on major public health issues and gun violence is a major public health issue.”