On June 17, 2015, nine people including the Rev. Clementa Pinkney were killed in an assault at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina. The Justice Department was investigating the case as a possible hate crime. Dylann Roof was the accused of this hideous crime. A few days following the shooting, further investigation uncovered his website included racist views and pictures of Roof burning the American flag, holding a Confederate flag, aiming with a pistol and posing at locations connected to the Confederacy. The First 48 airing on December 11, 2015, an episode involving a multiple shooting at a local barber shop which left an innocent barber dead. The killer was on the loose with an AK47 assault rifle. Homicide detectives secured a search warrant of the killer’s residence and found a huge clip that consisted of several rounds of ammunition. Black men accounted for about 40 percent of the unarmed people fatally shot by police. Are the restrictions on gun ownership the only thing that needs to be restructured or should we examine this from a broader spectrum?
Weapon brutality has taken an excessive number on too many communities across the country. Over the previous decades in America, more than 100,000 …show more content…
The United States authorities do not keep up with regular folks allowed to have, gain, convey, offer or exchange a gun or ammo. Great Britain has probably the most stringent gun control laws on the planet. Handguns are disallowed weapons and require special permission. Self-defense, self-protection or a simple wish to possess a weapon is not viewed a valid or justifiable reason to have certain weapons. The United States has the most elevated firearm related wrongdoing rate in comparison to other nations such as the United