By SABRINA TAVERNISE
Published: February 13, 2013 669 Comments
DAYTON, Wyo. — Craig Reichert found his son’s body on a winter morning,
lying on the floor as if he were napping with his great-uncle’s pistol
under his knee. The 911 dispatcher told him to administer CPR, but Mr.
Reichert, who has had emergency training, told her it was too late. His
son, Kameron, 17, was already cold to the touch.
Guns are like a grandmother’s diamonds in the Reichert family, heirlooms
that carry memory and tradition. They are used on the occasional
hunting trip, but most days they are stored, forgotten, under a bed. So
when Kameron used one on himself, his parents were as shocked as they
were heartbroken.
“I beat myself up quite a bit over not having a gun safe or something to
put them in,” Mr. Reichert said. But he said even if he had had one,
“There would have been two people in the house with the combination, him
and me.”
The gun debate has focused on mass shootings and assault weapons since the schoolhouse massacre in Newtown,
Conn., but far more Americans die by turning guns on themselves. Nearly
20,000 of the 30,000 deaths from guns in the United States in 2010 were
suicides, according to the most recent figures from the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. The national suicide rate has climbed by
12 percent since 2003, and suicide is the third-leading cause of death
for teenagers.
Guns are particularly lethal. Suicidal acts with guns are fatal in 85
percent of cases, while those with pills are fatal in just 2 percent of
cases, according to the Harvard Injury Control Research Center.
The national map of suicide lights up in states with the highest gun
ownership rates. Wyoming, Montana and Alaska, the states with the three
highest suicide rates, are also the top gun-owning states, according to the Harvard center. The state-level data are too broad to tell whether the deaths were in homes with guns, but a series of individual-level studies
since the early 1990s found a direct link. Most researchers say the
weight of evidence from multiple studies is that guns in the home
increase the risk of suicide.
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