Violent Offenders Increasingly Likely to be Armed U.S. Department of Justice FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE BJS SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1994 202-307-0784 VIOLENT OFFENDERS INCREASINGLY LIKELY TO BE ARMED WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Violent offenders are increasingly likely to be armed, the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) said today. While the overall violent crime rate decreased during the last decade, the rate of offenses committed with pistols and revolvers rose from 9.2 percent in 1979 to 12.7 percent in 1992. From 1987 through 1992 there was an annual average of 858,000 rapes, robberies and assaults with firearms of all types, according to BJS's National Crime Victimization Survey. The FBI reported 16,000 firearm murders during 1992, and the number of all violent crimes with firearms reported to the FBI grew 55 percent from 1987 through 1992--from 365,709 to 565,575. Young people from 16 through 19 years old were the most frequent victims of firearm violence. During 1992 this age group had a per capita firearm victimization rate 21 percent higher than those 20 through 24 years old, three times the rate for those aged 35-49, almost eight times higher than those aged 50-64 and 15 times higher than those 65 years old or older. The data are from a "Selected Highlights on Firearms and Crime of Violence: Selected Findings from National Statistical Series" report that also noted: --Between 1987 and 1992 there were 415 law enforcement officers murdered--91 percent with firearms--73 percent handguns, 19 percent rifles and 8 percent shotguns (excluding those cases in which the officer's own gun was used). --In a nationally representative sample of state prison inmates, 16 percent said they were carrying a firearm during the commission of the offense for which they were serving time, and one-half of those said they fired the weapon during the crime. --Among state prison inmates with a prior adult criminal record who possessed handguns, 23 percent said they bought the weapon from a retail store. --An estimated 5,000 murderers who were serving time in a state prison for committing a crime with a handgun had purchased their gun in a store or gun shop despite having had a prior record. --More than 50 percent of the prison inmates who obtained a handgun illegally said they did so to avoid a background check or a waiting period. --From 1987 through 1991 the number of firearm homicides among young people 15 to 19 years old grew 66 percent for white females, 32 percent for black females, 108 percent for white males and 137 percent for black males. Single copies of the report, "Firearms and Crimes of Violence" (order number NCJ-146844), may be obtained from the National Criminal Justice Reference Service, Box 6000, Rockville, Maryland 20850. The telephone number is 1-800-732-3277. # # # 94-35
Date Published: February 1, 1994