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Theft of Firearms in the United States
Gun Watch ^
| 17 April, 2014
| Dean Weingarten
Posted on 04/17/2014 12:48:43 PM PDT by marktwain
The United States has one of the highest per capita numbers of firearms in the world. It is estimated that there is about one gun for each man, woman and child in the United States, about 310 million firearms. Every year, some of those firearms are stolen, breaking any official chain of ownership. In any given year, the percentage of firearms reported stolen is fairly small. In 2013, 191 thousand firearms were reported stolen to the NCIC. That is about .06 percent of the total firearms in private hands. Not six percent, but six hundredths of one percent.
The FBI started the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) in 1967. The NCIC maintains a list of stolen firearms that are reported to it from a variety of sources, primarily from other criminal justice agencies. From fas.org:
SOURCES OF DATA: Data contained in NCIC is provided by the FBI, federal, state, local and foreign criminal justice agencies, and authorized courts.
The numbers recorded in the NCIC system represent a minimum of the firearms that are stolen in the United States. Some guns are stolen but not reported to the police, some owners have not recorded or remember serial numbers, tens of millions of guns have been manufactured before serial numbers were required, and unknown numbers of firearms are made at home or in small workshops.
NCIC keeps data on stolen firearms until action is taken by the originating agency to clear or cancel the record, normally when the firearm is recovered or another reason is found to invalidate the original entry.
As of April 15, 2014, NCIC had records of 2,920,846 stolen firearms in the system, which is a little less than one percent of the total firearm stock in the United States.
©2014 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice is included.
Link to Gun Watch
TOPICS: History; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: banglist; guncontrol; guns; stolen
The only other numbers that I have for numbers of firearms stolen in the United States, are estimates from a telephone survey done 20 years ago.
1
posted on
04/17/2014 12:48:43 PM PDT
by
marktwain
To: marktwain
Amazing! Ours were stolen last year. Or lost in a boating accident.
I can’t really recall... but they’re gone...
2
posted on
04/17/2014 1:15:18 PM PDT
by
Marie
(When are they going to take back Obama's peace prize?)
To: marktwain
Every year, some of those firearms are stolen, breaking any official chain of ownership.Take your official chain and shove it up your ....
To: All
"If it was up to me, if you uttered the word 'gun control,' we'd put you in jail." ~Ted Nugent
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4
posted on
04/17/2014 1:37:47 PM PDT
by
trisham
(Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
To: marktwain
"...breaking any official chain of ownership..."
I love that, the notion that all firearms, at any given point in time, can be pinpointed because of this oversight that someone has.
Well, after 45 years in Arizona trading, buying at yard sales etc, I suspect that the 'chain' is a bit broken.
5
posted on
04/17/2014 2:40:54 PM PDT
by
n230099
("When no one knows who is armed...everyone is.")
To: n230099
Update: A
study done by the Bureau of Justice statistics ( BJS) shows a fairly reasonable approximation to the NCIC numbers, using the National Crime Victimization Study. Their study shows 145 thousand firearms stolen in 2010, which, while lower, is not that far off off the 169 thousand reported to the FBI.
6
posted on
04/17/2014 3:19:42 PM PDT
by
marktwain
(The old media must die for the Republic to live. Long live the new media!)
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