Attorney General Eric Holder warned a gathering of police chiefs from across the country that “active shooter” incidents rose dramatically in the last few years and called for better equipment and training for officers on the frontlines.
Holder, in Philadelphia on Monday for the annual International Association of Chiefs of Police conference, said the United States saw an average of five active shooting incidents a year between 2000 and 2008. The annual average of such incidents has tripled since then, he added.
The Department of Homeland Security defines an active shooter as someone engaged in killing or attempting to kill people in a confined or populated area.
“We’ve seen at least 12 active shooter situations so far in 2013,” Holder said, adding that over the past four years the total number of people shot and killed in these kinds of shootings is up nearly 150%.
A number of recent mass shootings have brought gun violence and gun control to the forefront of a broader national dialogue on America and its love of guns. Just last month, Aaron Alexis, a delusional Navy contractor opened fire on workers at the Washington Navy Yard, killing 12 people before being shot and killed by police.
“It’s become clear that new strategies and aggressive national response protocols must be employed to stop shooters in their tracks,” Holder said.
President Obama called on the nation to engage in soul-searching after the Navy Yard shooting, saying that “we can’t accept this” and that he fears that tragedy “is somehow the new normal.”
He called for tougher gun control measures and urged lawmakers to take on the tough political work necessary to break partisan gridlock in Washington around the gun issue.
After the Sandy Hook school massacre and a number of other high-profile shootings, the Obama administration and the Democrats successfully drummed up public support for gun control, but the efforts waned as Republicans and gun groups like the NRA pushed back and the country became enmeshed in the muck of other issues including the budget and health care concerns.
Sen. Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat from Nevada, has said that he would reintroduce a package of gun bills narrowly defeated last spring no sooner than 2014 ahead of the midterm elections. The gun lobby and conservatives successfully stymied measures that would have made required background checks on all gun purchases and limited high-capacity magazines. Though the measures were defeated, support for universal background checks among voters remains extraordinarily high.
Meanwhile, Holder’s comments during the IACP conference suggest a broadening of focus in the fight against mass-casualty gun violence that adds law enforcement training to the mix of legislative and social changes called for earlier by the president and myriad gun control groups.
Holder said that over the past decade the DOJ has helped train 50,000 frontline officers, more than 7,000 on-scene commanders and over 3,000 local, state, and federal agency heads on how to respond to active shooters.









