The New York Times Implausibly Blames 'Looser' Gun Laws for a Homicide Spike That Is Now Receding
Without providing any evidence, the paper says "loosened restrictions on firearms" contributed to gun violence in Columbus.
Like many other cities across the country, Columbus, Ohio, saw a spike in homicides during the COVID-19 pandemic. Even though that was a nationwide phenomenon, The New York Times, in a story that purports to explain "How Gun Violence Spread Across One American City," blames "loosened restrictions on firearms" in Ohio.
The implausibility of that explanation is immediately apparent because the story opens and closes with the June 2021 death of 43-year-old Jason Keys, who was killed during a bizarre dispute in Walnut Hill Park, "a leafy neighborhood" of Columbus. Although Times reporters Shaila Dewan and Robert Gebeloff present that incident as emblematic of how weak gun control has helped make formerly safe Columbus neighborhoods newly dangerous, the details of this homicide plainly do not fit that theory.
Keys and his wife had just visited her grandparents' house when they were confronted by 72-year-old Robert Thomas, who was carrying a rifle. Prosecutors later said Thomas "believed that the couple had let the air out of his tires and poured herbicide on his lawn." But it was not Thomas who killed Keys. Another neighbor, a 24-year-old ex-Marine named Elias Smith, responded to the altercation by firing seven shots at Keys from his front porch.
At his murder trial in July 2023, Smith testified that he thought he was defending his neighbors from Keys, who had a pistol in his waistband. The jury did not buy it. Smith was convicted and received a sentence of 15 years to life.
It is hard to see how "loosened restrictions on firearms" contributed to Keys' death. Dewan and Gebeloff note that Smith was armed with "a so-called ghost gun, an AR-style rifle that Mr. Smith had assembled from parts ordered online," which is doubly irrelevant. First, Keys would be just as dead even if Smith had bought a ready-made rifle. Second, the "loosened restrictions on firearms" highlighted by the Times did not affect the availability of homemade rifles. More generally, those changes clearly had nothing to do with this crime.
In 2020, Dewan and Gebeloff note, Ohio "enacted a 'stand your ground' law supported by gun rights organizations, expanding established limits on when a shooting can be deemed self-defense." Under Senate Bill 175, which took effect in April 2021, "a trier of fact shall not consider the possibility of retreat as a factor in determining whether or not a person who used force in self-defense, defense of another, or defense of that person's residence reasonably believed that the force was necessary to prevent injury, loss, or risk to life or safety."
That rule already applied to people in their homes or vehicles. The new law extended it to other locations where "the person lawfully has a right to be." Whatever the merits of that change, it did not affect Smith's criminal liability, since he was standing on the porch of his own home when he fired his rifle. His defense failed because he was unable to show that he "reasonably believed" the use of deadly force was "necessary to prevent injury, loss, or risk to life or safety."
Dewan and Gebeloff also mention changes that Ohio legislators made in 2022, when they "allowed school boards to arm teachers who completed 24 hours of training, eliminated permit and training requirements for concealed weapons, and barred cities from prohibiting gun sales during riots." These provisions are not relevant to Smith's crime, and in any event they were approved the year after he killed Keys.
Finally, Dewan and Gebeloff note that "lawmakers pre-empted cities from passing their own gun statutes" in 2006 and "rescinded a ban on high-capacity magazines" in 2014. Litigation based on the former law, they add, blocked enforcement of Columbus ordinances "requiring guns to be safely stored around children and banning high-capacity magazines." Those ordinances were enacted in 2022, so it is logically impossible that preventing them from taking effect played a role in Keys' death even if their requirements were relevant, which they are not.
At the time of the shooting, Smith was a 24-year-old man, not a child. And since he fired seven rounds, the city's subsequent 30-round limit on magazine capacity could not even theoretically have made a difference either. Likewise with the magazine restriction that state legislators repealed in 2014, which imposed a similar limit.
In addition to Keys' murder, the Times notes homicides committed by gun-wielding Columbus teenagers as a result of trivial disputes. One reason those teenagers have access to guns, it says, is "the attitude that the 'man' of the family should be armed, even if he is still a child." A safe storage law might or might not correct that attitude, but at least it is arguably relevant to the problem the Times is describing, unlike the "stand your ground" law, permitless concealed carry, and limits on magazine capacity.
Dewan and Gebeloff also note that gun sales rose during the pandemic. "According to law enforcement officials," they say, "stolen guns in Columbus might be had for as little as $50." They quote a local activist who avers that buying guns is as easy as buying marijuana nowadays.
It is not clear what any of that has to do with "loosened restrictions on firearms." Stealing guns is still illegal in Ohio, and so is selling them to minors. The minimum purchase age is 18 for long guns and 21 for handguns.
Although homicides generally fell in 2023, the Times notes, they rose in Columbus. But Dewan and Gebeloff add that "there is optimism that 2024 is going to be better in Columbus, which has seen homicide numbers fall dramatically so far this year, with 36 as of last week, compared with 70 in the same period the year before."
Despite that good news, Dewan and Gebeloff cannot let go of the notion that insufficiently strict gun laws are retarding progress in this area. "Some criminologists," they write, "say there is no reason to think that homicides cannot fall back to the relatively low levels seen in the 20 years before the pandemic—except perhaps that there are far more guns and far fewer limits on them." Dewan and Gebeloff also worry that "the Supreme Court has made [guns] harder to regulate." The subhead likewise wonders if Columbus can "find its way back to the old normal" despite "more guns and looser laws."
The Times, in short, assumes that more guns mean more murder, even though that effect was not apparent in the decades prior to the pandemic, when a long decline in homicides established "the old normal" despite rising gun ownership. It also assumes that "loosened restrictions on firearms" resulted in more homicides during the pandemic without explaining exactly how that worked in Columbus or anywhere else. And it assumes that reducing crime requires stricter gun control, even though homicides are falling precipitously in Columbus and other cities despite "looser laws." When you take those propositions for granted, there is no need for evidence, which explains why the Times does not bother to offer any.
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More like “loser” gun laws. …shall not be infringed.
The chance of becoming a victim of either violent or property crime in Columbus is 1 in 24. So yeah, the man of the family should be armed.
Don’t they mean the city of Indigenous Peoples, Ohio?
Do either of Shaila Dewan and Robert Gebeloff have a permit to publish articles?
Bullshit like this is why we need common sense media control.
Yes they do, because they work for the New York Times – a ‘respectable, mainstream’ newspaper. And they’d agree with the need for common sense media control – to prevent independent on-line riff-raff from spreading ‘misinformation’ such as the ‘extremist right-wing white supremacist’ claims calling their article bullshit.
In their view, the truth or bullshittiness of their article doesn’t matter; what’s important is that it advances the Narrative and supports the Cause.
” the New York Times – a ‘respectable, mainstream’ newspaper. ”
What are you on and why aren’t you sharing. The New York Times has been a bullshit rag for decades. In 1944 the Editor of the Times stated that if he would have had the information on the D-day invasion, he would have published the story, no matter how many lives it cost.
You mean loose canons like Jimmy Kimmel or keith Olberman? Then there’s wild shooting by The View and Joe Scarborough.
The NYT has as much credibility as Pravda had in the old Soviet Union.
The NYT serves a public service by allowing us to determine fake news reports.
Articles that cite the NYT are false.
Keys and his wife had just visited her grandparents’ house when they were confronted by 72-year-old Robert Thomas, who was carrying a rifle. Prosecutors later said Thomas “believed that the couple had let the air out of his tires and poured herbicide on his lawn.”
LOL. Apparently all the Matchbox 20 money has finally run out.
You people don’t understand. Gun are like rings of power. When mere mortals so much as hold one in their hand it immediately begins to corrupt them. The power and temptation quickly becomes more than they can endure, and they must then use then gun. Before long the person is robbing liquor stores and shooting random people on the street. They can’t help it.
People who work for the government are different. They aren’t mere mortals because they have had training. That and they’re government. The combination of government training and the sheer selflessness of working for government makes them better than everyone else. They can own guns without committing crimes. And if they do, well Qualified Immunity is a bitch motherfuckers!
Most articles written by anti-Second amendment scribes start with the premise that all guns are bad and any crime is the fault of the gun and law-abiding citizens who own them, They then hunt for a few instances in which a gun was used to kill someone to use to fill in the details.
Now do immigrants.
So you’re saying that immigrants are inanimate objects with no will of their own?
I’m saying the anti-immigrant scribes start with the premise that all illegals are bad and they’re all criminals, they then hunt for a few instances of illegals committing crimes before applying the fallacy of composition.
There you go again. Conflating immigrants with illegals. How typically disingenuous of you.
An illegal immigrant is by definition a criminal! How hard is it for you to get this?
Look who you’re talking to? There are none so blind as those who will not see.
Sarc is a homogeneously raving drunk idiot.
The true legal term is illegal alien.
A criminal is someone who harms the life, liberty or property of others. Illegals are lawbreakers, but not criminals.
I read the NYT morning briefing (David Leonhardt) every day, just to see how much more overtly biased they can become. I am seldom disappointed. It is beyond Pravda, and they’re doing nothing more than preaching to their choir and shilling for Democrats.
NYT is just a Marxist media outlet for the DNC.
The NYT and their ilk always start with the premise “if there were no guns, there would be no shootings”. Which is true enough, but it’s like saying “if there was no water, there would be no drownings.”
They also believe the government should have a monopoly on violence, another impossible thing and one that is provably not a good one.
So to them, the only good gun laws are gun bans, and any other type of gun law is responsible for all shootings – except for when the government shoots someone, in which case it’s a certainty that whoever got shot was a white deplorable or a POC victim.
Some of them even want to punish gun owners if the gun is stolen and subsequently used in a crime.
That sort of thing is too far even for the judiciary.
https://www.foxnews.com/us/lawsuit-over-stolen-gun-tossed-by-san-francisco-judge
It must be working in Chicago as well.
Chicago to date:
Shot and killed:162
Shot and wounded: 771
Total shot: 993
Total homicides: 189
Stats courtesy Hey Jackass
But we haven’t entered the summer months, so expect the numbers to rise sharply. three more months of stupid decisions.
Shaila Dewan and Robert Gebeloff are prime examples of journalists who know nothing about the subject they write on. They are more evidence that a degree in journalism requires no rigorous critical thinking. Just like none of them know what an ‘assault rifle’ is, they don’t know what a ‘ghost gun’ is either. (An assault rifle is a weapon capable of selective semiautomatic or automatic fire and is covered under the Federal Firearms Act.) A semiautomatic rifle assembled from a kit is not a ghost gun. While one can order the parts, the most important part – the lower receiver – has a serial number and must be purchased through a Federal Firearms Licensee who, like with complete weapons, must run a background check on the purchaser before handing it over. If Smith passed a background check for the receiver, he would have passed a background check for a complete rifle. No ghosts here.
Also, the NYT has become a prime example of a newspaper with a useless fact checking department. That was proven 20 years ago when random people on the internet, not the hired fact checkers, exposed NYT reporter Jayson Blair for two years of just making up his “news” stories. It was still true when they passed the Dewan and Gebeloff article.