[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 154 (2008), Part 13]
[Senate]
[Pages 17674-17675]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]


                     CHILDREN'S DEATHS BY FIREARMS

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, after more than a decade of decline, the 
number of children and teens killed by firearms is again increasing. I 
would like to take a moment to break down some of the statistics that 
contribute to this alarming fact. An analysis of firearm violence data 
by the Children's Defense Fund found that 3,006 children and teens were 
killed by guns in 2005. This marked the first time that more than 3,000 
kids were killed by firearms in many years and the first yearly 
increase in the number of children's

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deaths since 1994. Broken down, this amounts to 1 child or teen dying 
every 3 hours in America, 8 children a day, or 58 children every week.
  Firearms are the cause of death of more children between the ages of 
10 and 19 than any other cause except car accidents. In 2005 alone, a 
shocking 69 preschoolers were killed by firearms. Between 1979 and 
2005, gun violence took the lives of over 104,000 children and teens.
  A closer look at these 3,006 tragedies show 1,972 children and teens 
were homicide victims, 822 children and teens committed suicide, and 
212 children and teens died in accidental or undetermined 
circumstances; 2,654 were boys and 352 were girls; 404 were under the 
age of 15, 131 were under the age of 10, and 69 were under the age of 
5.
  More than five times as many children and teens suffered nonfatal gun 
injuries during the same period.
  Mr. President, these staggering statistics cannot and must not be 
ignored. We must strengthen our gun laws to limit children's assess to 
guns. As a father and a grandfather, I urge my colleagues to take up 
and pass sensible gun safety legislation so that this frightening trend 
will not continue.

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