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Gun Sales Continue Apparent Swell In June As Pandemic Rages And Politics Boil

In states like Connecticut, Ohio and Illinois, businesses selling firearms are still open. Delta Arsenal in Wallingford, Connecticut, seen here in September 2019, is among those still open.
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In states like Connecticut, Ohio and Illinois, businesses selling firearms are still open. Delta Arsenal in Wallingford, Connecticut, seen here in September 2019, is among those still open. ⁠

Gun sales continued to mushroom in June, apparently due to a confluence of Joe Biden’s surge in polls, the spread of COVID-19, and ongoing protests against police brutality and racial injustice.

Americans bought 2.4 million firearms in June, according to industry estimates from Small Arms Analytics & Forecasting. That is a 145% increase from June 2019. Handgun sales make up the bulk of those estimates and increased at an even higher year-over-year rate of 178%.

The FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System processed more than 3.9 million firearm background checks in June, a monthly high since the FBI began reporting these statistics in 1998 and a full 70% increase over the same period last year.

The FBI’s background checks data don’t serve as an exact measure of gun sales. Some states run background checks on gun permit-holders, so background checks cannot be equated directly to gun sales. Still, they serve as a proxy, and SAAF uses that data to form its sales estimates.

Gun sales started to climb sharply in March, according to industry estimates, and continued to boom in April and May. June saw nearly 900,000 more FBI background checks than an already-high May.

The increase in sales concerns some safety advocates. Higher availability of guns could lead to an increase in violent crime like homicide, according to the Harvard Injury Control Research Center. Advocates and public health experts have also warned of the increased risk of domestic violence and suicide, especially in the midst of the pandemic.

It’s unclear if the spike during the pandemic, especially in June, was driven by new gun owners or existing owners adding to their collections. Experts have said they worry more about increased violence if data show an increase in new gun owners, as it expands the base of gun ownership.

FBI firearms background checks by month. Data: FBI

Natalie Dudas-Thomas / WUNC

Spikes in gun sales are often tied to politics. Gun sales rose during President Barack Obama’s eight years in office and hit a slight pause during the beginning of President Donald Trump’s administration. Gun advocates fear Democrats are more likely than Republicans to enact restrictive legislation, which tends to drive sales when Democrats are in power — or perceived to be coming into power — because there is a fear that it might become harder to purchase a firearm in the future.

That trend had already started as far back as late 2019, perhaps as polls began to show Biden as a formidable challenger to Trump.

“What we are seeing now is an intensification of that trend,” said Philip Cook, a Duke University professor emeritus of public policy studies and an expert on firearms policy.

The onset of the coronavirus appeared to drive sales in March, particularly as some local governments shut down gun stores. Protests supporting the Black Lives Matter movement may have helped drive even more sales in June, according to SAAF Chief Economist Jurgen Brauer.

“Relative to same-month sales in June 2019, firearms sales soared yet again in June 2020. Once more, demand was particularly strong for handguns,” Brauer wrote in a press release. “The first week of June saw especially high background check volumes, presumably related to the aftermath of the killing of Mr. George Floyd.”

Henry McKoy, North Carolina Central University School of Business’ director of Entrepreneurship, said in some ways the gun sales trend mirrors 2020 as a whole.

“It’s just back to back to back to back,” he said, referring to the seemingly endless news cycle of the year.

“The idea that the pandemic may lead to scarcity, and all out chaos, may contribute to [sales],” he said. “The thinking that, ‘I’m going to be ready for the apocalypse if it comes.'”

is a public media reporting project on the role of guns in American life.

Copyright 2020 Guns and America. To see more, visit .

Jason deBruyn
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