Snipers�Predictable Consequence
of Gun Industry Marketing
According to Tom
Diaz, Senior Policy Analyst at the Violence Policy Center and author of
several studies examining sniper culture and their weapons, including
One Shot, One Kill: Civilian Sales
of Military Sniper Rifles:
The recent outbreak
of long-range sniper attacks in Maryland, Virginia, and the District of
Columbia exposes two long-term trends in gun industry marketing:
- Mass marketing
of military and military-style weapons, including assault rifles and
sniper rifles and equipment, to the civilian market. The .223 Remington
rifle round that has been positively identified as the round used in
five of the shootings, for example, was originally developed as an experimental
military cartridge for the Armalite AR-15 assault rifle, which was later
adopted by the U.S. Army as the M-16. The round is widely used in such
popular civilian semi-automatic assault rifles as the Colt AR-15, Armalite
M15A2, and various models of Bushmaster carbines and rifles, among others.
- The most recent
industry trend has been the marketing of 50 caliber sniper rifles, which
fire the largest bullet legal for general civilian sale (more than twice
the width of the .223 Remington) accurately over distances as great
as 2,000 yards. The 50 caliber round is capable of penetrating light
armor.
- Cultivation
of a sniper subculture within the gun community. A collateral aspect
of the marketing of military weapons has been the encouragement of a
sniper subculture in the United States. This includes the marketing
of books, paraphernalia, training, and assorted gear. Thus, although
the rifle used in these shootings has not yet been identified, the attacks
are consistent with a clearly growing subculture.
Although the perpetrator
of these attacks and the weapon used is not yet known, we do know that
the round being used is an example of the transfer of military weapons
development to the civilian market, and the attacks themselves are consistent
with a sniper subculture encouraged by the gun industry at large.
The Violence Policy Center is a
national non-profit educational foundation that conducts research on violence
in America and works to develop violence-reduction policies and proposals.
The Center examines the role of firearms in America, conducts research
on firearms violence, and explores new ways to decrease firearm-related
death and injury.
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For Release:
Tuesday, October 8, 2002
Contact:
Naomi Seligman
Violence Policy Center
(202) 822-8200 x105
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