Media
Bias Against Guns
John
R. Lott, Jr
Resident
Scholar, American Enterprise Institute
John
R. Lott, Jr., a resident scholar at the American
Enterprise Institute, received his Ph.D. in economics
from the University of California at Los Angeles.He
has been a senior research scholar at the Yale
University School of Law, a fellow at the University
of Chicago School of Law, a visiting fellow at
Cornell University Law School and a Hoover Institution
fellow. He has taught at the University of Chicago,
the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania,
UCLA, Rice University and Texas A&M University.
In 1988 and 1989, he was chief economist for the
U.S. Sentencing Commission. He is the author of
More Guns, Less Crime and The Bias Against Guns.
The
following is adapted from a speech delivered on
May 25, 2004, at a Hillsdale College National
Leadership Seminar in Seattle, Washington.
People
are very surprised to learn that survey data show
that guns are used defensively by private citizens
in the U.S. from 1.5 to 3.4 million times a year,
at least three times more frequently than guns
are used to commit crimes. A question I hear repeatedly
is: "If defensive gun use occurs so often,
why haven't I ever heard of even one story?"
Anecdotal stories published in newspapers obviously
can't prove how numerous these events are, but
they can at least answer the question of whether
these events even occur. Here are a few examples
of the 20 cases that I found reported in newspapers
as occurring during the first two weeks of May
2004: Lawrenceville, Georgia - At 3:00 a.m., an
estranged former boyfriend kicked in a woman's
front door. She had received a protective order
against the ex-boyfriend because of "a history
of drug addiction, violent behavior and threats."
He was shot four times as he entered the apartment.
Police said that the attacker, if he survived
his injuries, would likely face charges of burglary
and aggravated stalking.
Albuquerque, New Mexico - At just after 5:00 a.m.,
a homeowner called police saying that someone
was trying to break into his home. Police reported
that while waiting for help to arrive, the homeowner
defended himself by shooting the intruder in the
arm.
Louisville, Kentucky - As a robber tried to hold
up a Shelby Food Mart, he was shot by a store
clerk. The judge who heard the case said that
the clerk had acted responsibly and that he "was
viciously attacked by this animal."
Raceland, Louisiana - A man and his girlfriend
offered two men a ride. One of the hitchhikers
drew a gun and told the girlfriend to stop the
car. The man then drew his own gun, fatally shooting
the hitchhiker who was threatening them.
Toledo, Ohio - A store employee wounded one of
two men who tried to rob a West Toledo carryout.
The employee had received his concealed handgun
permit just three days earlier. The employee's
father said, "My son did what he had to do
. . . . Money can be replaced; lives can't."
These life and death stories represent only a
tiny fraction of defensive gun uses. A survey
of 1,015 people I conducted during November 2002
indicates that about 2.3 million defensive gun
uses occurred nationwide over the previous year.
Larger surveys have found similar results. Guns
do make it easier to commit bad deeds, but they
also make it easier for people to defend themselves
where few alternatives are available. That is
why it is so important that people receive an
accurate, balanced accounting of how guns are
used. Unfortunately, the media are doing a very
poor job of that today.
Though my survey indicates that simply brandishing
a gun stops crimes 95 percent of the time, it
is very rare to see a story of such an event reported
in the media. A dead gunshot victim on the ground
is highly newsworthy, while a criminal fleeing
after a woman points a gun is often not considered
news at all. That's not impossible to understand;
after all, no shots were fired, no crime was committed,
and no one is even sure what crime would have
been committed had a weapon not been drawn.
Even though fewer than one out of 1,000 defensive
gun uses result in the death of the attacker,
the newsman's penchant for drama means that the
bloodier cases are usually covered. Even in the
rare cases in which guns are used to shoot someone,
injuries are about six times more frequent than
deaths. You wouldn't know this from the stories
the media choose to report.
A
Case Study in Bias
But much more than a bias toward bad news and
drama goes into the media's selective reporting
on gun usage. Why, for instance, does the torrential
coverage of public shooting sprees fail to acknowledge
when such attacks are aborted by citizens with
guns? In January 2002, a shooting left three dead
at the Appalachian Law School in Virginia. The
event made international headlines and produced
more calls for gun control. Yet one critical fact
was missing from virtually all the news coverage:
The attack was stopped by two students who had
guns in their cars.
The fast responses of Mikael Gross and Tracy Bridges
undoubtedly saved many lives. Mikael was outside
the law school returning from lunch when Peter
Odighizuwa started shooting. Tracy was in a classroom
waiting for class to start. When the shots rang
out, chaos erupted. Mikael and Tracy were prepared
to do something more constructive: Both immediately
ran to their cars and got their guns, then approached
the shooter from different sides. Thus confronted,
the attacker threw his gun down.
Isn't it remarkable that out of 218 unique news
stories (from a LexisNexis search) in the week
after the event, just four mentioned that the
students who stopped the shooter had guns? Here
is a typical description of the event from the
Washington Post: "Three students pounced
on the gunman and held him until help arrived."
New York's Newsday noted only that the attacker
was "restrained by students." Many stories
mentioned the law-enforcement or military backgrounds
of these student heroes, but virtually all of
the media, in discussing how the killer was stopped,
failed to mention the students' guns.
A week and a half after the assault, I appeared
on a radio program in Los Angeles along with Tracy
Bridges, one of the Appalachian Law School heroes.
Tracy related how he had carefully described to
over 50 reporters what had happened, explaining
how he had to point his gun at the attacker and
yell at him to drop his gun. Yet the media had
consistently reported that the incident had ended
by the students "tackling" the killer.
Tracy specifically mentioned that he had spent
a considerable amount of time talking face-to-face
with reporter Maria Glod of the Washington Post.
He seemed stunned that this conversation had not
resulted in a more accurate rendition of what
had occurred.
After finishing the radio show, I telephoned the
Post, and Ms. Glod confirmed that she had talked
to both Tracy Bridges and Mikael Gross, and that
both had told her the same story. She said that
describing the students as pouncing, and failing
to mention their guns, was not "intentional."
It had been due to space constraints.
I later spoke with Mike Getler, the ombudsman
for the Post. Getler was quoted in the Kansas
City Star as saying that the reporters simply
did not know that bystanders had gotten their
guns. After I informed him that Glod had been
told by the students about using their guns, Getler
said, "She should have included it."
But he said that he had no power to do anything
about it. He noted that readers had sent in letters
expressing concern about how the attack had been
covered. But none of these letters was ever published.
It was not until February 28, 2004, after the
preliminary hearing where testimony verified again
what had happened, that the Washington Post published
one brief sentence containing the truth: "[The
killer] was subdued without incident by armed
students."
The Kansas City Star printed a particularly telling
interview with Jack Stokes, media relations manager
at the Associated Press, who "dismissed accusations
that news groups deliberately downplayed the role
gun owners may have played in stopping" the
shooting. But Stokes "did acknowledge being
'shocked' upon learning that students carrying
guns had helped subdue the gunman. 'I thought,
my God, they're putting into jeopardy even more
people by bringing out these guns.'"
Selective reporting of crimes such as the Appalachian
Law School incident isn't just poor journalism;
it could actually endanger people's lives. By
turning a case of defensive gun use into a situation
where students merely "overpowered a gunman,"
the media give potential victims the wrong impression
about what works when confronted with violence.
Research consistently shows that having a gun
(usually just brandishing it is enough) is the
safest way to respond to any type of criminal
assault.
Evidence of Unbalanced Coverage
I conducted searches of the nation's three largest
newspapers - USA Today, the Wall Street Journal
and the New York Times - for the year 2001 and
found that only the Times carried even a single
news story on defensive gun use. (The instance
involved a retired New York City Department of
Corrections worker who shot a man attempting to
hold up a gas station.) Broadening my search to
the top ten newspapers in the country, I learned
that the Los Angeles Times, Washington Post and
Chicago Tribune each managed to report three such
stories in a year.
During 2001, the New York Times published 104
gun crime news articles - ranging from a short
blurb about a bar fight to a front-page story
on a school shooting - for a total of 50,745 words.
In comparison, its single story about a gun used
in self-defense amounted to all of 163 words.
USA Today printed 5,660 words on crimes committed
with guns, and not a single word on defensive
gun use. The least lopsided coverage was provided
by the Washington Post, with 46,884 words on crimes
committed with guns and 953 words on defensive
stories - again, not exactly a balanced treatment.
Moreover, the few defensive gun-use incidents
that received coverage were almost all reported
locally. Though articles about gun crimes are
treated as both local and national stories, defensive
uses of guns are given only local coverage in
the rare instances they run at all. In the full
sample of defensive gun-use stories I have collected,
less than one percent ran outside the local coverage
area. News about guns only seems to travel if
it's bad.
This helps explain why residents of urban areas
favor gun control. Most crime occurs in big cities,
and urbanites are bombarded with tales of gun-facilitated
crime. It happens that most defensive gun uses
also occur in these same cities, but they simply
aren't reported.
The 1999 special issue of Newsweek entitled "America
Under the Gun" provided over 15,000 words
and numerous graphics on the topic of gun ownership,
but not one mention of self-defense with a firearm.
Under the heading "America's Weapons of Choice,"
the table captions were: "Top firearms traced
to crimes, 1998"; "Firearm deaths per
100,000 people"; and "Percent of homicides
using firearms." There was nothing at all
on "Top firearms used in self-defense"
or "Rapes, homicides, and other crimes averted
with firearms." The magazine's graphic, gut-wrenching
pictures all showed people who had been wounded
by guns. No images were offered of people who
had used guns to save lives or prevent injuries.
To investigate television coverage, I collected
stories reported during 2001 on the evening news
broadcasts and morning news shows of ABC, CBS
and NBC. Several segments focused on the increase
in gun sales after September 11, and a few of
these shows actually went so far as to list the
desire for self-defense as a reason for that increase.
But despite over 190,000 words of coverage on
gun crimes, a mere 580 words, on a single news
broadcast, were devoted to the use of a gun to
prevent crime - a story about an off-duty police
officer who helped stop a school shooting.
Another sign of bias is in the choice of authorities
quoted. An analysis of New York Times news articles
over a two-year period shows that Times reporters
overwhelmingly cite pro-gun control academics
in their articles. From February 2000 to February
2002, the Times cited nine strongly pro-control
academics a total of 20 times; one neutral academic
once; and no academic who was skeptical that gun
control reduces crime.
It's not that anti-control academics are non-existent.
In 1999, 294 academics from institutions as diverse
as Harvard, Stanford, Northwestern, the University
of Pennsylvania and UCLA released an open letter
to Congress stating that the new gun laws being
proposed at that time were "ill-advised."
None of these academics was quoted in New York
Times reports on guns over a two-year period.
Misleading
Polls
While polls can provide us with important insights
about people's views, they can also mislead in
subtle ways. In the case of weapons, poll questions
are almost always phrased with the assumption
that gun control is either a good thing or, at
worst, merely ineffective. The possibility that
it could increase crime is never acknowledged.
Consider these questions from some well-known
national polls:
- Do
you think that stricter gun control laws would
reduce the amount of violent crime in this country
a lot, a little, or not at all? (Pew Research
Center/Newsweek)
- Do
you think stricter gun control laws would reduce
the amount of violent crime in this country,
or not? (ABC News/Washington Post)
- Do
you think stricter gun control laws would, or
would not, reduce violent crime? (CBS News)
I reviewed 17 national and seven state surveys
and found that not one offered respondents a chance
to consider whether gun control might increase
crime. This omission of a "would increase
crime" option creates a bias in two different
ways. First, there is an "anchoring"
effect. We know that the range of options people
are offered in a poll affects how they answer,
because many respondents instinctively choose
the "middle ground." By only providing
the choices that gun control reduces crime somewhere
between "a lot" to "not at all,"
the middle ground becomes "a little."
Second, when the possibility that gun control
could increase crime is removed from polls, this
affects the terms of the national debate. When
people who hold this view never even hear their
opinions mentioned in polls and news stories,
they begin to think no one else shares their view.
There are other subtle biases in the construction
of these surveys. When a survey questions whether
gun control will be "very important"
for the respondent at the voting booth, the media
often hear a "yes" answer as evidence
that the person wants more gun control. Rarely
do they consider that someone might regard a politician's
position on gun control as important because he
or she opposes it. This blurring of opposite positions
in one question causes gun control to be ranked
more highly as an election issue than it should
be.
Debunking
the Myth of Accidental Shootings
A final area strongly affected by the media's
anti-gun bias is that of accidental shootings.
When it comes to this topic, reporters are eager
to write about guns. Many of us have seen the
public service ads showing the voices or pictures
of children between the ages of four and eight,
which imply that there is an epidemic of accidental
deaths of these young children.
Data I have collected show that accidental shooters
overwhelmingly are adults with long histories
of arrests for violent crimes, alcoholism, suspended
or revoked driver's licenses and involvement in
car crashes. Meanwhile, the annual number of accidental
gun deaths involving children under ten - most
of these being cases where someone older shoots
the child - is consistently a single digit number.
It is a kind of media archetype story to report
on "naturally curious" children shooting
themselves or other children - though in the five
years from 1997 to 2001 the entire United States
averaged only ten cases a year where a child under
ten accidentally shot himself or another child.
In contrast, in 2001 bicycles were much more likely
to result in accidental deaths than guns. Fully
93 children under the age of ten drowned accidentally
in bathtubs. Thirty-six children under five drowned
in buckets in 1998. Yet few reporters crusade
against buckets or bathtubs.
When crimes are committed with guns, there is
a somewhat natural inclination toward eliminating
all guns. While understandable, this reaction
actually endangers people's lives because it ignores
how important guns are in protecting people from
harm. Unbalanced media coverage exaggerates this,
leaving most Americans with a glaringly incomplete
picture of the dangers and benefits of firearms.
This is how the media bias against guns hurts
society and costs lives.
Copyright
© 2004. Permission to reprint in whole or part
is hereby granted, provided a version of the following
credit is used: "Reprinted by permission from
IMPRIMIS, the monthly journal of Hillsdale College
(www.hillsdale.edu)."