Published:
Ten Years After Chicago Racial Killings, Brady Center Report Cites New Wave of Hate Shootings
"Guns and Hate" Report Shows Weak Gun Laws Arm Violent Extremists
WASHINGTON, July 2 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- On the ten-year anniversary of the neo-Nazi shooting spree that terrorized the Midwest over the July 4th weekend in 1999, a new report released by the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence points to a new wave of hate-motivated gun violence by extremists armed by our nation's tragically weak gun laws.
The report explains how loopholes in our gun laws that have fueled hate shootings since 1999 still remain. The report also highlights how the National Rifle Association has repeatedly used incendiary, extremist rhetoric that has been reflected in statements made by several of these killers.
On the weekend of July 4, 1999, the nation witnessed a horrible rampage of hate-motivated gun violence. Over the course of three days, a white supremacist killer drove acrossIllinois andIndiana, randomly targeting African-Americans, Asian-Americans and Jews. The killer murdered two -- former Northwestern University basketball Coach Ricky Byrdsong and Indiana University graduate student Won Joon Yoon -- and left nine wounded.
"This Brady Center report illustrates the awful toll taken by armed racists and other extremists who never should have had access to firearms in the first place," said Paul Helmke, President of the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence. "There would be no better way to honor the victims of these hate killings than for our elected officials to act now to prevent other families from having to suffer such senseless loss."
The report issued today, Guns and Hate: A Lethal Combination, is available at http://www.bradycenter.org/xshare/pdf/reports/guns-hate.pdf.
The report points to a series of recent hate shootings by violent extremists who exploited loopholes in the nation's gun laws, including:
-- The shooting death of Officer Stephen Johns by a white supremacist at
the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., on June 10, 2009;
-- The shooting death of one soldier and wounding of another at a military
recruiting station in Little Rock, Arkansas, at the hands of a Muslim
extremist on June 1, 2009;
-- The shooting deaths of three Pittsburgh police officers at the hands of
a white supremacist armed with an AK-47 on April 4, 2009.
The Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence is a national non-profit organization working to reduce the tragic toll of gun violence in America, through education, research, and legal advocacy. The programs of the Brady Center complement the legislative and grassroots mobilization of its sister organization, the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence with its dedicated network of Million Mom March Chapters.
Contact: Peter Hamm, 202-898-0792, phamm@bradymail.org
SOURCE Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence
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