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-Land of the Free
Guess What Happened to Violent Crime Rates After Ohio Adopted Permitless Carry?
2023-11-24
[BearingArms] Last June, Ohio became the 23rd state in the nation to adopt a “permitless carry” law, allowing legal gun owners to both keep and bear arms without having to first obtain a government permission slip.

At the time, gun control activists and anti-gun politicians decried the move and declared it would make the state a more dangerous place. State Rep. Allison Russo even claimed that “Republicans have made it crystal clear that they value the approval of the gun lobby more than the lives of Ohioans and the police officers who protect our communities every day.”

With the FBI’s crime statistics for 2022 now publicly available, was Russo right? Did Ohio become a more dangerous place because of permitless carry? Were Republicans really casting their votes because they had no care or concern about the safety of their constituents or those tasked with enforcing the laws they approved at the state capitol?

Nope to all of the above.

Overall violent crimes were down in Ohio and the U.S. in 2022, with Ohio seeing a 7.5% decrease from 2021 and the U.S. reporting a 1.63% decrease.

Last year Ohio and the U.S. both also saw a drop in homicides after increases in 2021 and 2020.

Ohio had 6.1 homicides per 100,000 people last year, compared to 7.5 and 7 in 2021 and 2020, respectively, according data from the FBI. Nationally there were 6.5 homicide per 100,000 in 2020 and 6.8 in 2021 compared to 6.3 in 2022.

We still have a couple of months left in the first full calendar year since permitless carry took effect, and statewide crime stats for 2023 won’t be released for several months after that, but a look at crime analyst Jeff Asher’s Year to Date Murder Comparison dashboard shows continued declines in the homicide rate in many Ohio cities.

Akron, for instance, has seen its murder rate decline by almost 40% through September 30th. Homicides in Cincinnati are down 13% compared to last year, and murders have dropped by 30% in Toledo.

In Cleveland and Columbus it’s a different story. Murders have increased by almost 14% in Cleveland, while the state capitol has seen a 9.6% jump in homicides this year. Anti-gun politicians in those cities have been quick to blame Republican lawmakers and the “gun lobby” for the rise in crime, but the truth is that it’s those cities that are the outlier at the moment; not just in Ohio but across the country.

The vast majority of individuals who are responsible for the state’s homicides, armed robberies, aggravated assaults, carjackings, home invasions, and other violent offenses were already carrying without a permit long before Ohio’s permitless carry law took effect. They don’t care about a misdemeanor gun law prohibiting them from carrying without a license any more than they’re concerned with committing a violent felony.

Anti-gunners were absolutely convinced that permitless carry was going to make Ohio a more dangerous place, but once again we see that more guns doesn’t equate to more crimes. It is possible to protect the Second Amendment rights of responsible citizens while cracking down on violent criminals, and the “more guns, more crime” myth has been dealt another blow.
Posted by:Grom the Reflective

#13  I always think about the story told to me about their grandfather and grand-uncle had to buy firearms to ride the train. They were 13 and 14 yo at the time.
Posted by: AlmostAnonymous5839   2023-11-24 19:47  

#12  #3: i think that Massachusetts had an early law that churchgoers must be armed.
Posted by: irish rage boy   2023-11-24 16:15  

#11  4 per weapon, since I always carry 2 loaded plus the clip in the weapon, and keep two empty. Rotate the loading bi-monthly and on older mags carry one round short of max capacity to lengthen spring life.
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2023-11-24 13:40  

#10  Joking aside, this is a crucial question when buying older firearms at shows or pawn shops. I have a friend who bought a pre-81 Browning BLR with no magazine and they are basically unobtainable though you see elusive listings at eye watering prices online.

Always make sure you get at least a couple mags with it or take a pass on that table queen at the gun show.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2023-11-24 12:56  

#9  I'ma say one more than you actually end up needing before the shooting stops.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2023-11-24 12:52  

#8  /\ No less than two per weapon.
Posted by: Besoeker   2023-11-24 11:27  

#7  I have question for the Rantburg Posse. What is a good number of magazines per firearm?
Posted by: BrerRabbit   2023-11-24 11:23  

#6  Gun ownership at record high, firearms in majority of households: survey
Posted by: Skidmark   2023-11-24 09:50  

#5  ^ The leftist "mind" always gravitates to the polar opposite of whatever objectively makes sense.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2023-11-24 09:11  

#4  Louisville Mass Shooter Believed Killing ‘Upper Class White People’ Could Finally Secure Gun Control

"This'll show'em"
Posted by: Skidmark   2023-11-24 09:09  

#3  A record high since they started keeping records in what..1999? What do you think the percentage was in 1750? 1776? 1866? 1920? 1950?
Posted by: Mercutio   2023-11-24 08:44  

#2  Driving all the usual suspects nuts: NBC News Poll Reveals Gun Ownership Has Hit a New Record High in America
Posted by: M. Murcek   2023-11-24 08:25  

#1  Israel-Hamas war: It's time for all Israelis to get guns and be armed - opinion
Posted by: Skidmark   2023-11-24 08:20  

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