Run on guns in New Orleans: Post-Katrina crime wave sparks salesby Run on guns in New Orleans: Post-Katrina crime wave sparks sales Date: Mar 24, 2007 10:01 AM PUBLICATION: Calgary Herald DATE: 2007.03.24 EDITION: Final SECTION: News PAGE: A20 DATELINE: NEW ORLEANS SOURCE: The Associated Press WORD COUNT: 321 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -------- Run on guns in New Orleans: Post-Katrina crime wave sparks sales ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -------- Sixty-four-year-old Vivian Westerman rode out hurricane Katrina in her 19th-century house. So terrible was the experience that she wanted two things before the 2006 season arrived: a backup power source and a gun. "I got a 6,000-watt generator and the cutest little Smith and Wesson, snub-nose .38 you ever saw," she boasted. "I've never been more confident." People across New Orleans are arming themselves -- not only against the possibility of another storm bringing anarchy, but against the violence that has engulfed the metropolitan area in the 19 months since Katrina, making New Orleans the nation's murder capital. The number of permits issued to carry concealed weapons is running twice as high as it was before Katrina -- this, in a city with only about half its pre-storm population of around 450,000. Attendance at firearms classes and hours logged at shooting ranges also are up, according to the gun industry. Gun dealers who saw sales shoot up during the chaotic few months after Katrina say sales are still brisk, and the customers are a cross-section of the population -- doctors, lawyers, bankers, artists, laborers, stay-at-home moms. "People are in fear of their lives. They're looking for ways to feel safe again," said Mike Roniger, manager of Gretna Gunworks in Jefferson Parish. Citizens, the tourism industry, police and politicians officials have been alarmed by the wave of killings in New Orleans, with 162 in 2006 and 37 so far this year. A Tulane University study put the city's 2006 homicide rate at 96 slayings per 100,000 people, the highest in the United States. National Guardsmen and state police are patrolling the streets of New Orleans. In neighbouring Jefferson Parish, which posted a record 66 homicides in 2006, the sheriff sent armoured vehicles to protect high-crime neighbourhoods. In New Orleans, police have accused the district attorney of failing to prosecute many suspects. Prosecutors have accused the police of not bringing them solid cases. In New Orleans, the number of concealed-carry permits issued jumped from 432 in 2003-04 to 832 in 2005-06. In Jefferson Parish, 522 permits were issued in 2003-04, and 1,362 in 2005-06. The Second Amendment IS Homeland Security ! Goto Forum Home |
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