Tuesday, September 27, 2022

Gun Sales are NOT collapsing in Illinois

 

Samuel Stebbins writes for 24/7 Wall St and a number of other left leaning organizations such as the NYTs, HuffPost and MSN.

He has written a number of articles involving guns, crime, and statistics. The numbers he cites are usually correct. They are from sources such as the FBI Uniform Crime Reports.

Unfortunately, it is easy to make errors if you do not understand how the numbers are generated. It appears to be the reason for the laughable numbers in Samuel's article claiming "Gun Sales are Collapsing in Illinois".

 In Illinois, gun sales are falling even faster than they are nationwide. There were a total of 2,064,400 FBI firearm background checks in the state in the first half of 2022 compared to 6,050,704 in the first six months of 2021 -- a 65.9% reduction and the largest decline among states.

The problem with the above statement is background checks in Illinois are only slightly connected to gun sales.

I tried to contact Samuel so I could explain the error to him, and offer my services if he needs some professional firearms expertise in the future.

Unfortunately, a few searches did not turn up an email or a phone number to contact him.

In the article, Samuel uses the National Instant background Check System checks as a proxy for gun sales. There are problems with this.

The FBI carefully notes, when publishing the figures:

"These statistics represent the background checks initiated through the NICS. They do not represent the number of firearms sold.

In most states, the ratio between gun sales and NICS numbers varies between about .5 and .7 gun sales for each NICS check.

Illinois is a special case, as is Kentucky. Both of those states use NICS checks prodigiously for purposes other than gun sales. Both states run NICS checks over and over and over, month to month to month. The process is mostly automated and costs them very little.

In 2019, in Illinois, there were over 4.95 million NICS checks, and about  395 thousand firearms sales, or a ratio of about .08 firearms sold per NICS check.

In 2020, in Illinois, there were about  8.47 million NICS checks and about 534 thousand firearms sold, for a ratio of about .063 firearms sold per NICS check.

Looking at the first six months of 2021 and 2022, the gun sales in Illinois dropped from about 274 thousand in the first six months of 2021 to 215 thousand in the first six months of 2022, a 22% reduction.

In January of 2022, Illinois revised their procedures for running NICS Checks on the Firearms Owners IDentification (FOID) card. NICS does not show any permit rechecks for Illinois in 2022.

The number of NICS Checks for permits and permit rechecks for the first six months of 2021 was about 5.79 million.

For the first six months of 2022, it was 1.85 million, an enormous drop. The drop occurred because of the change in Illinois firearms law.

The change in permit and permit rechecks explains 98% of the drop in NICS checks from the first six months of  2021 to the first six months of 2022 in Illinois.

Instead of a "collapse" in gun sales, the drop in gun sales for Illinois was in the middle of what most states experienced, at about 22%.

It is an easy mistake to make, if you do not understand how the NICS numbers are generated.

Samuel, if you have questions, you can reach me at press@AmmoLand.com.

©2022 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.


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