Death of Wash. boy third gun accident in 3 weeks
By
Donna Blankinship and Doug Esser
Associated Press
/
March 14, 2012
SEATTLE—A
3-year-old scrambled out of his child seat after his parents stopped
for gas early Wednesday, found a gun police say was left in the car by
his father and fatally shot himself in the head.
The
accidental shooting in Tacoma marks the third in three weeks in
Washington involving young children, and the second death. The spate of
gun violence is raising questions about the effectiveness of the state's
gun laws and community awareness of firearm safety.
Tacoma police Officer Naveed Benjamin said the 3-year-old boy's death highlights the need for people to secure guns.
"It is incredible in light of the other ones," Benjamin said. "You would think people would take more care, not less."
Tacoma
police said the boy's death came after his father put his pistol under a
seat and got out to pump gas while the mother went inside the
convenience store. The boy's infant sister, who also was in the car when
the gun went off, was not injured.
The Pierce County medical examiner has identified the boy as Julio Segura-McIntosh of Tacoma.
Detectives
questioned the parents and have called the shooting a tragic accident,
Benjamin said. The father has a concealed weapons permit, and no charges
have been filed, he said. Pierce County Prosecutor Mark Lindquist said
that he is reviewing the case for possible manslaughter charges.
Washington
does not have a law specifically concerning child access to firearms,
but state law is very specific about carrying loaded pistols in
vehicles.
A person with a
concealed weapons permit may carry a gun in a car in Washington state,
but is required to have it on his person. If they have to leave it in
the car, the law says it must be locked and concealed from view.
The
Wednesday shooting follows the death of the 7-year-old daughter of a
Marysville police officer in Stanwood on Saturday when a sibling found a
gun and fired while the parents were out of their car. And on Feb. 22,
an 8-year-old girl was critically wounded in a Bremerton classroom when a
gun fired inside the backpack of a 9-year-old boy as he put it on a
desk.
The two deaths represent an uptick in the number of these tragic accidents, according to Washington state health officials.
About
one accidental firearm death of a child each year is typical in the
state, according to state health statistics gathered between 2007 and
2010, said Health Department spokesman Tim Church. During that same
time, an average of nine kids 17 and younger ended up in the hospital
because of an accidental shooting, Church added.
"You
can't predict what children are going to do," Benjamin said. "You need
to unload and lock it up if you're not carrying it. ... It's really not
that hard to practice firearm safety."
A spokesman for the Second Amendment
Foundation said existing laws are enough to encourage gun safety, as
long as the gun owners obey them.
"Responsible
people will maintain gun safety whether there is a law or not;
irresponsible people will ignore the law," said Dave Workman, senior
editor of the group's publication, thegunmag.com. He said existing statutes, including child endangerment laws, were designed to prevent such tragedies.
Workman
said what he can't figure out is why the two men left their guns in
their vehicles when they were licensed to carry them.
"Most responsible gun owners, especially if they're licensed to carry, will keep their firearm with them," Workman said.
Twenty-seven
states have some form of law to prevent child access to firearms, but
Washington is not one of them. Such laws can include criminal penalties
for adults who allow children to get their hands on guns, according to
the San Francisco-based group Legal Community Against Violence.
State
Rep. Sam Hunt, D-Olympia, expressed doubt that the Legislature could
succeed at overcoming opposition from gun rights advocates to strengthen
state gun laws.
He said a former state representative tried and failed for years to strengthen restrictions on firearms sales at gun shows.
"The
forces that be wouldn't even support doing that. It's pretty strong
from the gun lobby that they don't want to see any change under any
circumstance," Hunt said.
Washington
Cease Fire Executive Director Gregory Roberts responded to the latest
shooting, saying, "We think guns are dangerous, but they are not treated
as dangerous by our society or by laws or by our regulations," he said.
"We regard guns as some sort of sacred object that should not be
subject to regulation."
The
Seattle organization is currently running a campaign of ads on buses
urging people to think twice about owning guns. People with guns in
their home or car are more likely to injure or kill a family member or
loved one than to use it against an intruder, he said.
In
Saturday's shooting, off-duty Marysville police Officer Derek Carlile
had parked the family van near Stanwood City Hall, and he and his wife
were out of the vehicle when one of their children found the loaded gun
and fired. The shot hit 7-year-old Jenna Carlile, and the girl, the
oldest of their four children, died Sunday at a Seattle hospital.
The
8-year-old Bremerton girl, Amina Kocer-Bowman, remained in serious
condition at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle after nearly dying in
the accidental shooting at Armin Jahr Elementary, where a classmate
brought a handgun to class.
Authorities
believe the boy took the .45-caliber gun from the glove compartment of a
car while visiting his mother and her boyfriend at their home. He lives
with an uncle.
------
AP newsmen Jonathan Kaminsky and Chris Grygiel contributed to this story.
© Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights
reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or
redistributed.
No comments:
Post a Comment