Police Commissioner William Evans said a gun buyback program and stepped up anti-gun efforts on the street are working: Boston Police are taking lots of guns out of circulation, 970 so far this year, compared to 667 in all of 2013.
But at a public meeting last night about a shooting in Lower Mills on Election Day, Evans said the extra work is like pushing back the tide: Guns keep coming into Boston from states where it's really easy to buy guns, such as Florida and the Carolinas.
Still, Evans said the anti-gun effort may be having an impact. Across the city, shootings are down this year - the latest BPD stats show 187 shootings compared to 222 in the same period last year. He said this comes despite an increase in shootings in East Boston and the district that covers downtown, the North End and Chinatown - because shootings in Dorchester, Roxbury and Mattapan have gone down significantly.
Evans added that gang-related shootings are down, although he added that domestic shootings appear on the increase. He said that one troubling trend is that the shooters seem to be getting younger - it's no longer just older teens and men in their 20s who are going around shooting up neighborhoods. "Unfortunately, a lot of young kids have guns," he said, adding he was talking about kids as young as 13.
The commissioner agreed with city councilors Ayanna Pressley (at large) and Charles Yancey (Dorchester), who also attended the meeting - called by state Sen. Linda Dorcena Forry and state Rep. Dan Cullinane - that police work alone will not dampen gun violence: The city needs to work harder to prevent kids from getting into guns to begin with.
Evans pointed to the success of a program this past summer, in which Mayor Walsh worked with the IBEW on a training program for 15 or 16 teens with violent records. All but one graduated the program and now have good jobs, he said.
Evans expressed frustration with the court system. He said too often, police arrest somebody on a gun charge who was out on bail on a gun charge.
He noted approvingly that London, which has a very low gun-violence rate, has a mandatory five-year sentence for gun convictions. Here, he said, too many kids see our 18-month sentence as "almost like a badge of courage."
"It's frustrating for us, we're getting the same kids all the time," he said, estimating that 5% of the teens and young adults in the city are causing 70% of the problems.
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Comments
Why Indeed
By anon
Wed, 11/12/2014 - 10:12am
Well it looks like you just answered your own question there. Are there any other people you would like to see people sentenced without trials, or just "gang bangers?"
Not asking for anyone
By polarbare
Wed, 11/12/2014 - 12:30pm
I'm making a point about the letter of the law versus its application.
Yes But
By anon
Wed, 11/12/2014 - 12:44pm
Letter and application are consistent here. You can't be sentenced unless you're convicted, and you can't be convicted without a trial (or pleading guilty). Complain about low bail if you like, but if you're actually concerned with liberty why would you suggest that something is wrong when a person isn't sentenced for a crime that no one's proved he committed?
State Laws....
By Rob O
Tue, 11/11/2014 - 7:49pm
What I take away is that stricter state gun laws are not going to solve our problems. I'm a supporter of the right to own guns and also troubled by the availability of guns to those who shouldn't have them. Even stricter (hard to imagine in the City of Boston) gun laws are not going to make the necessary difference if you can drive a car across the state border with a load of guns in the trunk. If we don't make gun control a matter of national law, I don't see how we make the necessary changes.
Gun violence
By polarbare
Wed, 11/12/2014 - 9:46am
is a socioeconomic issue. That's why here in the 'burbs I have 2 gun stores within walking distance of my house (including a class III dealer) and a dozen guns in my safe, and yet there hasn't been a shooting in my town since at least 2004 from what I can tell. If you get people out of poverty and stop glorifying gang life the gun violence issues will sort themselves out.
There are thousands of legally owned guns in the Wellesley, Weston, Newton, Natick, Wayland area but basically no gun crimes. If guns themselves are the issue, than there wouldn't be the disparity in gun crime levels that we see. People need to stop making a socioeconomic issue into a "gun" issue- politicians and anti-gunners do it because "ban guns!" is easier than actually doing something that will fix the issues at hand.
Not exactly a huge Swirly fan, but since she actually did something that was a MEANINGFUL solution to the gang/gun problem, good on her.
I don't think these are
By Eric
Wed, 11/12/2014 - 11:46pm
I don't think these are really either-or things. Solving the problems of poverty is surely a worthwhile goal, but even if we started down all of the right roads *right now*, the real improvements in the numbers would still be almost a generation away. Addressing the gun trafficking issue would reduce homicides *today*.
Illegal gun accessibility
By Deirdre Murphy
Wed, 11/12/2014 - 11:34am
Although anecdotal, I have been told by several young men that would know, if i were to hand them $100 and give them a half hour, they could purchase and bring home a gun. Scary stuff.
I believe you
By speakingouthere
Wed, 11/12/2014 - 7:17pm
I could do the same here North of Boston.
LTC Restrictions
By Bob
Wed, 11/12/2014 - 12:35pm
Dear Mr. Evans (and previously Ed Davis), why do you consistently put Target and Hunting restrictions on law abiding Bostonians who wish to get a License to Carry? There are those of us with squeaky clean records, evidence and certification of prior training, and we already have to show our marksmanship at your police range on Moon Island in front of your officers. It is insulting that you'd turn around and completely disregard our second amendment rights by disallowing an unrestricted License to Carry, which most,if not nearly all other MA towns issue. The fact that you don't trust law abiding citizens shows that YOU Mr. Evans only want the criminals and your police force to be armed, and no one else. It's too bad your position can't be voted out and replaced with someone who respects the rights of law abiding residents of Boston.
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