The Mother’s Day parade shooting in New Orleans Sunday demonstrates the role handguns play in urban violence. Police say up to three suspects using two types of firearms were involved. Bystander videos taken from different angles of the parade scene show two different suspects, each firing a handgun in the street. At least 19 people were injured including a boy and a girl, each 10 years old.
The gun lobby recently helped defeat bills in the Senate designed to help curb the flow of handguns to criminals. One sponsored by Democratic Rep. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Republican Rep. Patrick Toomey of Pennsylvania would have mandated background checks for more gun purchases. Another sponsored by Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy from Vermont would have restricted the reselling of firearms or “straw purchases.”
“We don’t know yet what this case illustrates,” Josh Sugarmann, executive director of the nonprofit Violence Policy Center, told msnbc.com. “It could have been a case involving law-abiding gun owners.” Louisiana has some of the laxest gun laws in the nation, including allowing citizens to carry concealed weapons, he added.
The National Rifle Association maintains that an armed citizenry can be a deterrent to criminal violence. But that’s not what happened in this case. Instead, families and others enjoying the Mother’s Day parade are seen in videos diving for cover as gunmen fire at their apparent rivals among the packed crowd.
About 40% of all gun purchases involve private citizens where the buyer is not now subject to a background check, according to an analysis by Politifact citing experts on both sides of the nation’s gun debate. The 1994 Brady Act, named for President Reagan’s former press secretary James Brady who was wounded in an assassination attempt, requires only gun sellers who are licensed firearms dealers to run a background check on a potential buyer.
“What occurred in New Orleans is a horrible tragedy, and unfortunately one that plays out on our city streets every day across America,” said a Brady Campaign spokesperson. “Handguns are used to take the lives of thousands of people each year. So many shootings like this one can be prevented by not allowing dangerous criminals access to guns. We can do that through expanding background checks because right now a criminal can purchase a gun over the internet, or at a gun show, with no questions asked. If we don’t stop this flow of guns onto our city streets, people will continue to mourn the loss of innocent victims of gun violence.”
Handguns are used in nearly three out of four gun-related homicides in the United States, according to FBI records. Every day about 17 individuals are murdered with a handgun across the nation, although homicides, like the nation’s overall crime rate, have been declining in recent years.
But the violence continues, especially in urban areas. Over half of all homicides in the United States have occurred in cities like New Orleans with a population over 100,000, according to a 2011 U.S. Justice Department study. More than a third of all homicides in large cities occurred in the biggest cities like New York, Los Angeles and Chicago with populations well over one million.
Handguns are used in most of the murders. How do they end up in the hands of so many criminals?









