ARMED SELF-DEFENSE:
WHO'S REALLY DECEIVING WOMEN?
by Annie
December 31, 2001
CodyExpress.com -- Our “friends” at the Violence Policy Center recently released
their annual “When Men Murder Women” study. This year they used the
study as a means to accuse the firearms industry and the NRA of perpetuating
“the stereotype of the ‘dangerous stranger’ as the primary threat to a
woman.” According to Karen Brock, a health policy analyst for VPC,
scenarios in which a stranger attacks and mugs a woman in a dark alley or
breaks into a woman’s home to rape and kill are among the least common
dangers women will ever face. Brock goes on to tell us that the gun
industry, realizing the traditional market of white males has been
saturated, has focused on women as the next source to market their wares. In
order to sell as many guns as possible to the untapped female market,
firearms manufacturers, pro-gun magazines and firearms dealers have promoted
the “bogus” idea that women are in danger from strangers.[i] The Violence Policy Center cautions,
“Women must consider the risks of having a gun in their home, whether they
are in a domestic violence situation or not”[ii]
and concludes the study by observing, “For women in America, guns are not
used to save lives, but to take them.”[iii]
According to the study,
60% of female homicide victims were wives or intimate acquaintances of their
killers.[iv]
While it is true that crimes of violence committed by persons known to the
victim are more prevalent than crimes of violence committed by strangers,
numbers alone cannot tell the story when it comes to the murder of women by
former intimate partners. Many questions come to mind. How many of these
women were depending on a restraining order or other court ordered piece of
paper to protect them from violent intimates? In how many cases was the gun
actually owned by the woman or kept at her residence? How many women were
unarmed and had no viable means of defending themselves against an armed
attacker? How many assailants knew they would be all but unopposed in their
attack or that a gun would trump any means of defense their wife, former
wife or girlfriend had on the premises? How many victims would still be
alive if they had had access to a firearm for self-defense?
Those are all legitimate
questions that can’t be answered by crime statistics tables. Still, Brock
races forward in full support of the “study” advising women to shun
armed protection. She suggests that they have little to fear from strangers
and, further, that laws (such as the 1996 Domestic Violence Misdemeanor Gun
Ban[v]),
court orders and police protection are adequate measures to take in regard
to self-protection. In reality, the VPC and Ms. Brock are actually advising
women to take steps that may further endanger them. Perhaps it would benefit
Ms. Brock and her fellow VPC supporters to meet some of the women who chose
to ignore their “advice.”
Consider the plight of
Tammy Renee Thompson of Augusta, Georgia, for example. In February 2001
Tammy’s ex-boyfriend was arrested for assaulting and pointing a weapon at
her. He was released from jail after
posting a $16,250.00 bond and was awaiting trial when he again tried to
attack her in July 2001. After
shattering a window next to her front door, he let himself into her home and
tried to assault her with a piece of concrete. She fired .38-caliber revolver and struck
him dead center in the right eye. “She
was afraid for her life, and she took steps to lessen the threat,” said
Sgt. Wayne Bunton. No charges were
filed.[vi]
Leslie Joni Prater of
Clarksville, Tennessee found herself in similar jeopardy, but like Tammy was
prepared to defend herself. Leslie was asleep in her bed when she was
awakened by the sounds of her ex-boyfriend breaking into her home. A
struggle ensued as she tried to keep him out of the house but her strength
was no match for his. As he came into the room, Leslie ran around to the
other side of the bed to get a .38-caliber pistol. The ex-boyfriend lunged
across the bed at her and she fired. Her first shot missed; the second
struck him in the stomach. According to investigators, the man had been
stalking Leslie for months and had broken into her home just three weeks
earlier. Police commented that Leslie was lucky to be alive.[vii]
Consider also the case of
Maria Cruz of Las Vegas, Nevada. Maria’s common-law husband kept her tied
up for at least part of the four days she was held captive in the couple’s
home. He tortured her by heating a butter knife over a gas stove and burning
her hands, legs, breasts and vaginal area with it. She was bruised from
numerous beatings (a neighbor described her face as a “bloody pulp”) and
subjected to threats that she would be killed. Maria managed to convince her
husband that she needed to care for her children – ages 12, 2 and 1 – to
prompt him to untie her. She retrieved a handgun and fired five times,
killing her torturer. The husband had a history of domestic violence and
threatened to kill Maria if she ever reported it to authorities. No charges
were filed.[viii]
Would these women be with
us today if they had not had access to a gun? No one can say for sure, but
one thing is certain: The guns in their homes were a far greater threat to
the attackers than they were to the women who used them.
Threats By Strangers
Although domestic
violence and murder committed by intimate acquaintances is a serious
concern, it is foolhardy to minimize the very real dangers posed by
strangers. Murders committed by strangers are not as uncommon as the VPC
would like you to believe. For instance, in 14% of all murders committed
between 1976 and 1999, the victim and offender were strangers.[ix] Some might consider that to be a
relatively small percentage but it certainly is worth noting. Yet to read
the VPC report or Ms. Brock’s editorial one would think that women need
not concern themselves with attacks by strangers; after all, it’s just a
“bogus” idea designed to drum up business for the gun industry.
Murder isn’t the only
violent threat with which women must be concerned, but the VPC and Ms. Brock
fail to address other violent crimes. For instance, in 1999 (the year on
which this VPC report is based) strangers were responsible for 35% of the
violent crimes committed against women.[x] Again using 1999 statistics, 39% of
aggravated assaults against females were perpetrated by an assailant not
known to the victim.[xi] Of the 381,400 rapes and sexual assaults
in 1999, 34% (or 129,890) were committed by strangers.[xii] It would seem that the “stereotype”
of the “dangerous stranger” is not a stereotype at all, but a realistic
threat that women should be prepared to handle.
Furthermore, in nearly
90% of violent crimes directed against women, the offender does not have a
gun; and in only 10% of rapes does the rapist carry a firearm.[xiii] Thus, an armed woman usually has a
decided advantage over her assailant.
Still, whether through
ignorance or duplicity in order to advance an anti-gun agenda, the VPC
continues to advise women against having a gun in the home. One has to
wonder whether the Violence Policy Center is as anti-woman as they are
anti-gun, for it seems clear that unarmed female victims are much preferable
to them than are armed survivors.
[i]
Brock, Karen. Bogus Gun Pitch Deceives Women, Atlanta Journal
and Constitution, November 8, 2001
[ii] When Men Murder Women: An Analysis of 1999 Homicide
Data, Violence Policy Center, November 2001.
[iii] See Supra note ii
[iv] See Supra note ii
[v] Prohibits anyone who has been convicted of a misdemeanor
crime of domestic violence or child abuse from purchasing or possessing
a gun.
[vi] The Augusta Chronicle, Augusta, Georgia, July
31, 2001
[vii] WKRN.com, Nashville, Tennessee, August 21, 2001
[viii] Las Vegas Review-Journal, Las Vegas, Nevada,
October 26, 2001
[ix] Homicide Trends in the U. S – Intimate Homicide,
U. S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, January 4, 2001.
[x]
National Crime Victimization Survey, Criminal Victimization in the
United States, 1999 Statistical Tables, U. S. Department of Justice
Bureau of Justice Statistics, Table 29, January 2001
[xi] See Supra note x at Table 43a
[xii] See Supra
note x at Table 27
[xiii] Kates, Don B.
Jr. Guns, Murders and
the Constitution: A Realistic Assessment of Gun Control (1990), at
29, citing U. S. Bureau of Justice Statistics, also See Supra note x
at Table 66
Annie's
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