Crime Guns Flow from States with Weak Gun Laws, Mayors Say

Ten states with weak gun laws supply a disproportionate share of firearms used to commit crimes in other states, according to a report released Monday by a coalition of mayors.

The coalition — Mayors Against Illegal Guns — found that crime guns most often came from Mississippi, West Virginia, Kentucky, Alaska, Alabama, South Carolina, Virginia, Indiana, Nevada, or Georgia, which the report described as having lax gun control laws. As a result, the report said, the states are prime sources of guns illegally trafficked to felons and used to commit crimes in other states.

Thomas Menino, mayor of Boston and co-chair of the mayoral coalition, said the data compiled in the report “confirm that the illegal market for guns is driven, in part, by weak gun laws.”

“It’s a wake-up call to state legislators and Washington to close gaps in the laws that give criminals easy access to guns,”  Menino said in a news release. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, an outspoken proponent of stricter gun control laws, also co-chairs the organization.

Along with the report, the coalition announced a new website, www.TraceTheGuns.org, featuring an interactive map with state-by-state statistics on gun export rates and firearms laws.

Mayors Against Illegal Guns was created in 2006 and now includes 596 mayors around the country, according to The New York Times. One of the coalition’s goals is closing the so-called gun show loophole, which allows people to buy firearms at shows without going through a standard background check, the Times reports.

A representative from the National Rifle Association called the coalition’s report “a cute little P.R. stunt,” according to The New York Times. Chris W. Cox, the NRA’s chief lobbyist in Washington, said the report appeared to rely on “flawed assumptions” about how guns flow across state lines.

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