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Two Bellevue shooting deaths within two months, suspects not caught
“What we know is that states that have better firearm laws, those states see lower rates of gun death, whether you’re talking about homicides, suicides, or unintentional shootings,” [Roth] said.
“These are not numbers, these are real people whose lives were taken from their families and whose families, especially at Christmas, are suffering.”
At Chicago’s Mercy Hospital, domestic violence became multiple homicide. It’s part of a disturbing pattern.
“There is a particular form of masculinity that’s been very consciously cultivated and constructed by the corporate gun lobby over the past decades,” Jonathan Metzl, a professor of sociology and psychiatry at Vanderbilt University who has studied gun violence, told me earlier this year.
Report from the 2018 APHA Meeting, Part 2: Approaches to Reducing Gun Violence
In a presentation on gun violence prevention advocacy in “red” states, Beth Joslin Roth of the Safe Tennessee Project (session 4235) reported that support for gun law reform has increased substantially in that state between 2016 and 2018 and identified policies that show promise as legislative priorities with bipartisan support, including gun-violence restraining orders in cases of extreme risk, strengthening firearm dispossession practices (so that a trusted holder of firearms does not simply return them to an owner at risk of misuse), safer storage practices to prevent child access, and expanding background checks.
Speaking of Medicine – November 16, 2018
Deadly shootings are on the rise again in the U.S. after 20 years of steady decline, CDC data show
Jonathan Metzl, director of the Center for Medicine, Health, and Society at Vanderbilt University, said mental health professionals struggle with trying to predict who is at risk.
“People act impulsively in moments of despair,” said Metzl, who was not involved with the CDC study. “And it may or may not be linked to psychiatric illness.”
Kindergarten students brought home NRA pamphlets. Parents fired back at the district.
Among those critics is the Safe Tennessee Project, “dedicated to addressing the epidemic of gun related injuries and gun violence in Tennessee,” according to its web site. The project called the NRA’s gun safety program “ineffective…dangerous and irresponsible” in a Facebook post.
“Rather than emphasize to adults the importance of responsible gun storage, the program puts the onus on children to not pick up any guns,” said a press release from the project. “Schools should be encouraging parents to practice safe storage and to always ask how guns are stored any place where their child plays.”
Charlotte Observer – November 5, 2018
Franklin school district may ditch NRA gun safety program after parents express concerns
The Safe Tennessee Project, an organization that works to address gun violence in the state, said in a release Friday that the Eddie Eagle program puts the onus on children not to pick up any unsupervised guns they find, instead of emphasizing to adults the importance of responsible gun storage. \
Beth Joslin Roth, policy director for the organization, pointed to a study released earlier this year in the medical journal Health Promotion Practice that analyzed gun safety educational strategies in children.
The study concluded that gun safety programs “do not improve the likelihood that children will not handle firearms in an unsupervised situation.”
Mental Health Providers Can’t Stop Mass Shootings
To be clear, mass shooters may be disproportionately mentally unwell, but that isn’t the whole picture—one Columbia University study found that 22 percent of the mass shooters in a database of over 200 were mentally ill. And trying to force the public (or private) health system to identify potential shooters can backfire, according to Jonathan Metzl, a professor of sociology and medicine, health, and society at Vanderbilt University who advocates for gun reform. For one, it can create a stigma around the mentally ill, who already suffer from society’s misconceptions, and discourage people from accessing treatment.
And it can threaten providers’ evidence-based practices. “For practitioners, the laws make them liable, so they might overcompensate,” Metzl said. That creates potential for false positives: patients who are labeled as violent or homicidal even if they are not, because their doctors fear being deemed neglectful after some potential future tragedy.
Children getting access to unsecured guns
“Last year Tennessee lead the entire country in the number of incidents involving children gaining access to a negligently stored firearm and pulling the trigger,” said Policy Director of the Safe Tennessee Project Beth Joslin Roth.
“It’s incredibly frustrating because what we see is that states that have child access prevention laws see fewer of these types of incidents,” Roth said. “Simply telling the kid to not pick up the gun is not adequate.”
GOP House Candidate Deletes ‘Pro-Gun’ Ad With Kids
Beth Joslin Roth, the policy director for the pro-gun-control Safe Tennessee Project, says Mason’s use of the picture of students as “unwitting props for his pro-gun agenda” seemed “highly unethical.”
“Since Parkland, students across the nation, and across the state of Tennessee, have been calling for gun law reform,” Roth says. “Thousands of Tennessee kids, sick of school shootings, gun violence in their communities, and legislative inaction, have planned walkouts, marches and town halls with representatives and candidates. It’s worth noting that voter registration is a key component at most of these marches and walkouts. There will be many new voters casting their first votes this year, and as members of the lockdown generation, they are single issue voters.”
Nashville Scene – June 19, 2018
Could a Red Flag Law Gain Traction in Tennessee?
Red Flag laws give police the authority to seize guns if the owner is deemed a threat to the public.
A Red Flag law is being championed locally by the Safe Tennessee Project where Beth Joslin Roth is the Director.
Three murder suicides in Middle Tennessee have advocates looking to red flag law
This crime is the third murder-suicide in Middle Tennessee in a month, and it’s a pattern Safe Tennessee Project’s Executive Director Beth Joslin Roth tracks for one reason.
“Unfortunately, what we know is the common denominator in all these cases was an angry man with easy access to a firearm,” said Roth.
Roth said a gun violence restraining order or red flag law could help. It temporarily removes guns from someone who might be a threat to themselves or others.
“The idea being that a lot of time people are just having a bad day or a bad period of time and by removing firearms from the situation, tragedy can be averted,” said Roth.
And in domestic violence, it could potentially save a life.
“Too often guns are used to resolve conflicts,” said Roth.
WMC Action News 5- June 7, 2018
MorningLine- Gun Violence
With many cases of gun violence, including mass shootings, do you think is time to make it more difficult for people with mental illness to purchase firearms? On today’s MorningLine, Nick Beres is joined by Beth Joslin Roth, with Safe Tennessee Project, who see gun violence as a public health concern, not a political issue.
News Channel 5 Plus – April 30, 2018
Tennessee Lawmakers Weigh Gun Education in Schools
“Kids who are comfortable with guns, who are allowed to handle them regularly will sometimes be careless,” Roth wrote in an email. “There is no one size fits all approach to this issue and every child is different. We feel that this training should be done at home, not at school.”
This bill was not a priority for the Safe Tennessee Project, which has been tracking 45 pieces of firearm legislation this year.
Courthouse News Service — April 6, 2018
A Public Menace
“There’s a lot of agreement” on common-sense solutions, including extensive background checks for gun purchasers and restrictions on powerful, military-grade firearms, he says. “We’re fed this line that everyone is too divided by this issue but if you talk to everyday [gun-owning] Americans there’s a lot of agreement across the board” that the public should be safe from spree shooters or gun-wielding criminals.
Still, “it’s useful to step back and say there is a far broader problem in relation to guns than mass shootings,” Metzl says. “There’s epidemic rates of gun violence across the board.”
While mass shootings or people shot during the commission of a crime make headlines, Metzl and others say, most gun deaths are the result of suicide, and white men are the majority of gun-violence victims. Women in the U.S. are far more likely to be killed by gunfire during a domestic dispute if there are guns around, and African-American men – particularly those who live in cities – are on average, eight times more likely to be killed by firearms than whites.
“There’s only a particular kind of gun violence that makes the news. But beneath the headlines, in the everyday world, there’s much broader suffering that’s happening,” Metzl says. “The public-health framework calls attention to that.”
US News and World Report – March 23, 2018
Why Are Schools Still Accepting NRA Money?
With 29 million children having gone through the program (according to the NRA’s website), Eddie Eagle is probably the NRA’s widest-reaching youth program. And, it proved to be a fatal wrench in the Tennessee bill proposal.
According to Roth, the lobbyist’s testimony relied heavily on the effectiveness of the Eddie Eagle program as an argument against CAP laws. “The NRA markets the program in such a way that parents believe that if they let their children participate in the program that is going to somehow protect them in these situations,” Roth says. “But research shows that when presented with the opportunity, half the kids who’ve been through the program are still likely to pick up a gun, and some will pull the trigger.”
Nonprofit visit in Franklin asks residents to think about public safety
Beth Joslin Roth said her life changed in 2012 after the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School. “That was a real wake-up call for me,” she said Thursday night at a Safe Tennessee Project presentation in Franklin. “My daughter left a note to Santa, asking him to bring extra presents to the families who lost a student in the shooting. I sat on the floor and cried, and I asked what kind of country [I’m] raising my children in.”
The Tennessean — March 15, 2018
Nashville teens form Safe Tennessee Youth Advocacy Board for gun reform
These teens are expanding efforts while teaming up with Safe Tennessee Project and its founder, Beth Joslin Roth.
Roth explains, “They’ve grown up with these school shootings ever since they were little and they pay attention.”
Dick’s Gun Sale Changes Elicit Strong Reactions
“We’re seeing corporate leadership on this issue is stronger than legislative leadership,” said Beth Joslin Roth with the Safe Tennessee Project. “A lot of people are upset, a lot of people are fed up, and I think a lot of people are inspired by what we’re seeing from young people.”
News Channel 5 — February 28, 2018
Gun Reform Group To Create ‘Youth Advocacy Board’
A gun reform organization is in the middle of creating a student-run advocacy group to stand against gun violence.
Safe Tennessee Project Executive Director Beth Joslin Roth began the idea after receiving several calls from concerned parents and students following the shooting that killed 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.
Roth said the idea of a youth advocacy group has already garnered interest from more than 20 students from different public and private schools.
“These are kids that have grown up since kindergarten with lockdown drills. They have grown up seeing these mass shootings on the news and they’re angry about it,” said Roth.
The board will have a variety of goals, including lobbying, planning direct actions, learning about gun policy and organizing groups at their individual schools.
News Channel 5 — February 22, 2018
Tennessee Lawmaker Proposes Tax-Free Weekend For Guns
Beth Joslin Roth released a statement that said: “If passed, this legislation would cost the state over a quarter of a million dollars in decreased revenue and increased expenditures per year. In the last two years, Memphis, Nashville, and Knoxville have broken homicide records, firearm suicides have increased, as have unintentional shootings involving kids and negligently-stored firearms. Working with law enforcement and public health experts to study the causes for these increases in gun violence would be a better use of taxpayer money.”
News Channel 5 — February 2, 2018
Access to Loaded, Unlocked Guns Blamed For Child Gun Deaths
The Children’s Firearm Safety Alliance said responsible storage of firearms is the key to preventing gun accidents. Beth Joslin Roth is the group’s co-founder.
“We know that these types of shootings can be prevented. They are, in fact, 100% preventable if guns are stored properly,” Roth said.
Houston Public Media — January 29, 2018
Experts warn against connecting mental illness and gun violence
Dr. Jonathan Metzl, director of the Center for Medicine, Health and Society at Vanderbilt University, said that these mass shootings highlight Americans’ desire to reaffirm a stigmatization of the mentally ill as “ticking time bombs” to avoid more difficult conversations about gun violence.
“Mass shootings are horrific and terrifying,” he said. “But if we really want to stop gun violence in this country, everyday gun violence is predictable and could be stopped. Ending everyday gun violence would help end mass shootings as well.”
Memphis leads nation in accidental youth shootings
“These types of shootings are 100 percent preventable,” Safe Tennessee Project Police Director Beth Joslin Roth said.
Safe Tennessee Project is a gun violence prevention organization.
“We believe that this issue is not a political issue,” Roth said. “We believe that is a public health issue.”
For years, Safe Tennessee Project has advocated for a law with harsh penalties for adults who do not properly store their guns. Right now, that law does not exist in Tennessee.
The adult gun owner should be held responsible,” Roth said. “The idea of child access prevention laws would be for the law to serve as a deterrent, much the same way that DUI laws serve as a deterrent.”
WMC Action News – November 27 2017
How Mental Health Arguments Hinder Solutions To Gun Violence
Audio interview with Dr. Jonathan Metzl on Kansas City Public Radio.
KCUR 89.3 Public Radio – November 21 2017
Snap Chat shooting threat lands Wilson County teen in jail
It’s something that still concerns some mid-state residents, including Beth Joslin Roth with Safe Tennessee Project.
Roth says, “Lebanon Police did the right thing. you have to take any kind of threat like this seriously. That’s not something that anyone should joke around about . In this day in age where we see mass shootings often, I feel it’s something that we all have to take very seriously.”
I’m a Psychiatrist. Making Gun Violence About Mental Health Is a Crazy Idea.
What I haven’t seen is a serious attempt to grapple with just how complex and fraught it is to come up with a policy that works. For example, there’s accumulating evidence that psychiatrists can’t predict violence from their patients. How are we supposed to intuit when someone with, say, severe depression is capable of mass murder? More broadly, I think I speak on behalf of many experts on mental health when I say I wish politicians and other public figures would stop using mental illness as a shield against talking about the complex social issues related to gun violence—mass shootings and also the everyday gun violence to which we’ve become accustomed—in America.
The gun debate isn’t about what you think
“Everyone for the most part is for safety and against senseless terror and death,” said Jonathan Metzl, director of the Center for Medicine, Health, and Society at Vanderbilt University. “There’s a sense of commonality. I think the problem is that it’s very hard to find rhetoric that’s not polarizing, considering that this debate is so beholden to so many different interests on all sides.”
Public perception of mass violence and mental illness often misguided
Audio interview with Dr. Jonathan Metzl on Minnesota Public Radio.
Guns to be allowed at new Tennessee legislative complex
Beth Joslin Roth, the policy director of the Safe Tennessee Project, said her group opposes the gun policy change.
“There are plenty of very good reasons that guns have long been prohibited in legislative offices and meeting rooms,” she said in an email. “The presence of loaded firearms in situations where people are often angry and upset is a bad idea. It’s intimidating and has the potential to be dangerous.”
News Channel 9 – November 2 2017
Study shows firearm safety training largely ineffective for children
Beth Joslin Roth with the Safe Tennessee Project said the study shows that programs, like the NRA’s Eddie the Eagle, do not deter children from handling firearms.
“Parents are led to believe that if they give their kids this training then their kids will be safe,” she said. “The onus of child safety should not be on a child trying to remember a lesson they’ve been taught, it lies with the parent.”
Roth says education is important but can only go so far. She advocates for safe storage.
Hopkinsville football player laid to rest following accidental shooting
“It’s frustrating because these are preventable. Gun violence is complicated, but these types of unintentional shootings are not. They come down to being a responsible gun owner and practicing basic gun safety,” said Beth Joslin Roth, the executive director of the Safe Tennessee Project.
Roth tracks accidental shootings across the state and keeps tabs on trends across the country.
“We began tracking these nationally in 2015, and what we have seen is an alarming uptick this year. The number of deaths is up. The number of injuries is up,” said Roth.
Las Vegas shooting: What was Stephen Paddock’s motive?
Mental illness is another trait that often permeates the narrative of a mass shooting, but Jonathan Metzl, a Vanderbilt University professor who studies the history of mental illness, warned that linking it to gun violence is misguided.
People who suffer mental illness are actually far more likely to be a victim of a violent crime rather than commit the act themselves, Mr Metzl said.
“Linking [mental illness] to mass shootings reinforces the stigma that people with mental illness are ticking time bombs,” he said. “And in turn, it ignores the context of gun culture, gun access and other factors that play a part in a shooting.”
Nashville residents react to potential gun control
Beth Joslin Roth with the Safe Tennessee Project says the discussions are a step in the right direction. But she doubts the NRA’s idea of regulation will go far enough.
“The statement they put out said they were interested in looking possibly at additional restrictions,” said Roth. “We feel that there is no place in society for those types of mechanisms. So we would support an outright ban of them.”
How gun violence affects mental health — even for those who didn’t experience it firsthand
“I just think that the relationship between the rate of gun death versus the amount we spend researching that cause of death is unconscionable,” Jonathan Metzl, professor of sociology and psychiatry at the University of Vanderbilt, said in a Skype interview. “Gun violence receives the second-least amount of funding in this country in relation to the amount of injury and death that it causes.
“In a way, this question of how can we stop this problem [of gun violence] is made much more difficult by the real lack of knowledge … that should be important to everybody,” Metzl added.
Police: Armed Witness Fires At Victoria’s Secret Thieves
It’s unclear if Gordon has a permit to carry. Under Tennessee state law, permit to carry information is confidential.
Gun safety advocates said that law can be frustrating during instances like this.
“What would be helpful for us from a research perspective, is just to get an idea of who those people are and how we can better screen potential permit holders to reduce the number of them who engage in that behavior,” said Beth Joslin Roth, executive director for the Safe Tennessee Project.
News Channel 5 – September 11 2017
Memphis police give away gun locks in effort to prevent child shootings
“Once again, we see the tragic consequences of negligent gun storage,” said Beth Joslin Roth, policy director for the Safe Tennessee Project. “These shootings are not accidents. They are the direct result of an adult’s choice not to properly secure their firearm. This continues to be a serious issue in our state. Yet for two years now, our legislature’s solution to the problem is to do absolutely nothing.”
Roth has worked and plans to continue to work with lawmakers to try and get legislation passed that would punish gun owners who leave their firearms unsecured around children 13 years of age or younger. So far, those efforts have failed to gain traction in the Tennessee legislature. Back in March, the proposed bill did not make it out of committee.
Three children shot in three days? Blame gun culture, crime fears, and neglect
“A long time ago, people had guns, but they weren’t a part of who they were,” said Beth Joslin Roth, executive director and policy director of Safe Tennessee Project, an advocacy organization working to bolster firearm safety and violence prevention.
“They used them as tools for hunting, and they kept them locked up, so they had a healthy respect for guns. Now people don’t respect guns.”
Safe Tennessee, however, has been trying to do its part to deter adults from leaving guns around for children to mistake as toys to tamper with or show off to their friends.
Commercial Appeal – August 22 2017
Tennessee & Memphis lead nation in kids hurt with neglected guns
“This has nothing to do with race, geography or socioeconomics,” said Beth Joslin Roth, policy director for the Safe Tennessee Project. “What it comes down to is just parents who don’t think. Ultimately, that’s what it comes down to is parents just not thinking that it will happen to them.”
Joslin Roth said it’s not uncommon for those adults to ignore gun safes, even as effective safes are available for less than $100 with key locks, combination locks, or, in some cases, RFID (radio frequency) chip or biometric entry.
“Most police departments will provide you a free gun lock if you ask, and organizations like mine will provide a free gun lock if you ask,” she said.
Tennessee lawmakers tried to pass a bill to penalize adults who leave loaded guns unlocked and accessible to children under 13. The bill died under the weight of the gun lobby’s argument that the issue is about personal responsibility, not political policy.
To be sure, gun safety is a parent’s personal responsibility, regardless of some legislature’s mandate. If you can afford a gun, you can afford to secure it–and your kids cannot afford your carelessness. Three families in three consecutive days are living–and dying—proof.
WMC Action News – August 21 2017
Memphis Continues Troubling Weekend Of Children Accidentally Shooting Themselves
The weekend string of children accidentally shooting themselves – including a four-year-old girl in the neck Friday night – continues a troubling trend in Memphis compared to the rest of the state.
According to the gun safety organization Safe Tennessee Project, nine of 20 such incidents so far this year in Tennessee happened in Memphis, seven of the 20 incidents happened since June 21st alone and three of the eight deadly accidental shootings of children in 2017 happened in Memphis.
“It’s incredibly frustrating, you know, gun violence is a very complicated issue, keeping guns out of the hands of children is not,” Safe Tennessee Project Policy Director Beth Joslin Roth said.
A recent study found in 2016, among large cities, Memphis ranked first in unintentional shootings of children.
Local Memphis – August 20 2017
Tennessee cities adjust to law letting guns in buses, hubs
But the change in Nashville’s rules doesn’t provide much comfort to some parents whose children are among the thousands who use the city bus system to get to school every day.
“There’s not going to be any way of knowing whether or not someone’s gun is ‘authorized’ or ‘unauthorized,’” said Beth Joslin Roth, a gun-control advocate whose son takes Nashville buses to school and who heads the Safe Tennessee Project.
The law, which was strongly supported by the National Rifle Association, gives cities and counties a choice: either they must use metal detectors, hire security guards and check people’s bags at many local facilities; or they must let handgun permit-holders bring in their guns.
Nashville parents question safety as law allows gun owners to bring firearms on city buses
“I think a lot of parents are going to have concerns with the idea of people who are armed carrying guns on these MTA buses that are used by thousands of school children in the state,” Beth Roth with the Safety Tennessee Project says.
Roth is the policy director for the group, which supports the second amendment for responsible gun owners. She said she worries about the prospect of multiple armed people on a bus.
“Receiving a text from my son alerting me the shooting was terrifying, but honestly the only thing that could’ve made that situation worse in my opinion is a half a dozen armed individuals all drawing their guns trying to take out the bad guy,” Roth said.
East Nashville couple’s home hit by stray bullet on Fourth of July
What may be surprising to some is that celebratory gunfire is not illegal in Tennessee.
“Tourists coming to our city and being shot as a result of celebratory gunfire does not seem to be terribly concerning to our lawmakers,” said Beth Joslin Roth with the Safe Tennessee Project. “If a law was passed, I think it would create an awareness about the problem and hopefully it would act as a deterrent.”
7-Year-Old Killed By Toddler In Accidental Shooting Off Lewis Street
Officials from the Safe Tennessee Project released a statement Tuesday evening saying these kinds of shootings are not accidents, but a result of the improper storage of firearms.
“Once again, we see the tragic consequence of negligent firearm storage,” said Beth Joslin Roth, policy director for organization. “This continues to be a problem in our country and especially here in our state. This is the fourth child killed this year as a direct result of an adult’s choice to leave a loaded gun unsecured. These shootings are not accidents. They are fully preventable tragedies. We will continue to raise awareness about safe storage and we will continue to advocate to hold adults responsible when their irresponsible actions lead to a child’s injury or death.”
Calls For Tennessee Governor To Veto Controversial Gun Bill
Those places were exempted in the new bill because of the heavy security they already have, but the Safe Tennessee Project policy director says handgun permits holders could still carry weapons on public transit, unless they had metal detectors and other security measures.
She and Nashville mayor Megan Barry both said in letters to Governor Bill Haslam that the bill leaves cities with millions more in expenses, or the option of not complying, which they argued leaves cities more open to lawsuits from gun rights groups like the NRA.
“The aim of the bill is to make it cost prohibitive for cities to limit where guns can be carried and that is concerning to us,” says Beth Joslin Roth with Safe Tennessee Project. “Local law enforcement should have final say on where guns should be carried, and there should not be a financial penalty.”
Joslin Roth took her letter Tuesday to the governor’s office, where she told a staffer why she wants a veto.
“I can also speak as a parent of a child who rides an MTA bus. The idea of folks with guns riding with my son on public transportation terrifies me,” says Joslin Roth.
Lawmaker compares buying gun in Tennessee to purchasing lemonade, cookies
A Tennessee lawmaker is raising awareness for what he says are loopholes in the state’s background check law.
Rep. Mike Stewart said purchasing a gun in Tennessee is the same way you would buy cookies or lemonade: in cash from a private individual with no background check.
Stewart said he found and purchased a gun from Armslist.com within a few hours on Tuesday. Stewart said he met the seller in a parking lot to exchange.
“Although the data, facts, and statistics associated with the expansion of background checks are compelling, sometimes it takes making a dramatic statement to make an impact,” Beth Joslin Roth, policy director for The Safe Tennessee Project, said. “We are grateful to Rep. Stewart for his willingness to raise awareness about loopholes in our state’s background check law. In our experience, we find that most people have no idea how easy it is to buy a gun without a background check, no questions asked.”
Tennessee legislature takes aim at wide array of gun bills
One of Harris’ staunchest opponents, Beth Joslin Roth, says the same: that state lawmakers often don’t fully consider the effect of the laws they’re proposing and end up amending the laws they pass a year or two later.
She pointed to the “guns in parks” law that was passed in 2015 and blocked cities from adopting their own prohibitions on guns in parks. The bill was a clarification to one passed in 2013, after which gun-related deaths in parks across the state jumped to seven that year — more than the three years prior to the law’s passage combined, she said.
Knoxville boy’s shooting death renews push for ‘MaKayla’s Law’
Tennessee gun control advocates say they will continue their push for stiffer penalties against adult gun owners who leave loaded firearms within reach of young children after a 13-year-old Knoxville boy was charged Wednesday with first-degree murder in the shooting death of his 12-year-old brother.
“It all comes down to accessibility,” said Beth Joslin Roth, executive director of Safe Tennessee Project, a grassroots organization working to reduce gun violence. “Gun violence is a very complicated issue. … But these incidents involving children with access to loaded guns are not complicated.”
Police said the teen and his younger brother were the only two people in the family’s North Knoxville home at 2101 Needham Drive when the shooting was reported at 7:14 p.m. Tuesday.
Knoxville Police Chief David Rausch declined to offer an explanation as to how the boy gained access to the weapon and said the motive remains under investigation. Authorities have not released the name of either boy.
Before this week’s shooting, Safe Tennessee Project documented 39 incidents across the state since January 2015 involving children who injured or killed themselves or another person with a gun. The results include 14 deaths, 23 injuries to children and two injuries to adults.
Knoxville News Sentinel – December 22 2016
What’s next for Knoxville juvenile suspect: Experts say age is key
KNOXVILLE – An overnight investigation into the death of a 12-year-old leads police to arrest his brother as the alleged killer. It’s another tragedy in a region that’s no stranger to heart ache during the holidays.
Gun violence is a complicated issue, but these types of incidents are so preventable,” explained Beth Joslin Roth.
Roth is policy director for the Safe Tennessee Project, which tracks gun violence across the state. She thinks gun control laws like the proposed MaKayla’s Law, named for 8-year-old MaKayla Dyer, who was shot and killed by an 11-year-old neighbor in White Pine in October 2015, could have made a difference in this week’s shooting.
The bill would have held parents accountable for crimes that children committed with their guns.
“There is a good chance that having these types of laws on the books will serve as a deterrent, will force parents to think about how they store their guns,” she said.
Vanderbilt professor to lecture on gun violence, mental health
In recent years, a number of devastating mass shootings have sparked nationwide debate concerning guns, mental illness and what might be done to prevent similar attacks. Thursday, A&M students and staff will have a chance to learn more about various factors involved in this debate while examining potential courses of action for the nation’s future.
Jonathan Metzl, professor of sociology and psychiatry from Vanderbilt University, will present a lecture called “Changing the Terms of Debate about Gun Violence: Mental Illness, Mass Shooting, and the Politics of American Firearms.” .
Metzl said the lecture will primarily focus on how preconceived notions about mental illness have impacted the national discourse on gun violence and mass shootings.
“Most of the talk will be about the implications for the relationships between our assumptions about guns and stereotypes, particularly stereotypes of mental illness,” Metzl said. “Because a lot of times there’s a big push to push for more weapons because of mental illness, so I’ll be — hopefully — debunking that stereotype, and asking the audience to think a bit more deeply about the relationships between guns and mental illness.”
Senator working to create bill for ‘gun violence restraining order’
A Mid-South lawmaker wants to give people a tool he believes will help save lives.
Tennessee Senator Lee Harris said there is a gap in the laws. Many victims come to Regional Medical Center with wounds and Harris is trying to change that by reducing gun violence. He is aiming at domestic violence and those who pose a danger to the ones around them.
The new tool Harris is proposing gives new hope for those living in domestic violence situations
“It felt like rock bottom,” domestic violence survivor Jordan Howard said. “I didn’t care if I had to sleep on the street, I didn’t care what I had to do, as long as I wasn’t living like that.”
Howard suffered years of abuse, physically as well as emotional and verbal abuse.
Howard said she spent seven years married to a man who abused her.
“My abuser actually threatened to shoot my three pets because he knew that would hurt me more than anything else,” Howard said.
That’s why she is now working as an advocate for domestic violence victims and supports the new tool Harris is proposing.
“We should do something about those folks who are mentally ill and their access to weapons and other things that can cause violence or harm to others,” Harris said.
Harris is working with Safe Tennessee Project to soon propose a bill that would allow a judge to issue something similar to a gun violence restraining order.
It would allow family members and law enforcement officials to file against people who pose an immediate threat, but that person has to be known to the victim.
“Give them a recourse. They can go to court and ask a judge to temporarily, just for a limited period of time, take those weapons out of the house,” Harris said.
Howard said although her abuser didn’t have a gun, she said this is a necessary step.
McMinn Co Teen Dies in Accidental Shooting
According to the Safe Tennessee Project’s database of unintentional shootings this year, this is the 18th incident where a child has injured or killed someone due to access to an unsecured firearm.
Officials with the Safe Tennessee Project say Tennessee now ranks fourth in the nation for these types of accidental shootings. According to their records, 39 incidents since January have injured 23 children, 2 adults and killed 14 others.
Adult Gun Owners Must Protect Children’s Lives
The report found Tennessee and other Southern states are among those with the highest per capita rates of accidental shootings involving minors.
According to the Safe Tennessee Project, an advocacy group that seeks to reduce gun violence, as of Oct. 15 there have been 27 unintentional shootings involving minors statewide this year. Seven children have died. The group tracks news reports to compile its numbers.
Knoxville News Sentinel – October 20, 2016
Memphis First in Accidental Child Shootings
Beth Joslin-Roth is the policy director for the Safe Tennessee Project, which calls itself a “grassroots organization dedicated to addressing the epidemic of gun-related injuries and gun violence in Tennessee.” She understands the reluctance to prosecute parents in these cases, but still argues for it.
“People say to us, ‘Why do you want to cause more pain to this grieving family? They’ve already suffered this terrible loss,’” she said. “I understand that, but by the same token, if I make a decision to drink and drive with my children in the car, and have an accident and one of my children is killed, no one is going to feel sorry for me. People are going to say, ‘You made a bad choice, and your child died for it.’ That’s how we feel about these incidents.”
New group tackles children’s firearm safety
According to a new analysis by the Associated Press and USA Today, a child dies in an accidental shooting every other day in the U.S. That suggests accidental shootings are much more common than previously thought, but a new group is hoping to do something about that.
Last year, out of all 50 states, Missouri had the highest number of toddlers pulling the trigger.
“So here we make nationwide headlines and yet the legislature chooses to do nothing,” said Missouri State Rep. Stacey Newman (D) – St. Louis County.
Newman has introduced legislation that would hold adults responsible when kids shoot themselves or others, but to no avail.
“My bill last year, HB2500, didn’t even get a hearing,” she said.
That’s why she’s teaming up with Beth Joslin Roth, policy director of Safe Tennessee Project. Together, they formed the Children’s Firearm Safety Alliance. It involves doctors, law enforcement, prosecutors, and other lawmakers. The group had an official launch event at Washington University on Friday.
When Kids Pull the Trigger, Who is Responsible? Not Gun Owners, the NRA Says
Feature length investigative report on MaKayla’s Law and the NRA’s role in defeating it.
Concerts held nationwide to raise awareness about gun violence
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) – One man was killed and another was left injured after a shooting at a night club early Sunday morning. That same day, a 2 year old shot a 12 year old in Donelson.
For Eliot Bronson, it’s disturbing news, but news he says he continues to hear.
“I think every other day we hear about a tragedy and we are all horrified by it,” said Bronson.
Beth Joslin Roth with Safe Tennessee Project is on the same page, and that’s why she helped organize Concert
Across America to End Gun Violence.
“The event is to raise awareness around this issue and the issue of the 33,000 Americans who lose their life every year to gun violence,” explained Roth. “We are just advocates for policies that will help us reduce those numbers.”
Concert Across America to End Gun Violence was held Sunday and featured 350 events nationwide.
A Nashville 3-Year-Old Is Tennessee’s Latest Accidental Shooting Victim
Tennessee is on pace for a large increase in accidental shootings this year, according to the Safe Tennessee Project. The group tracks firearm incidents like the one Tuesday in Nashville in which a 3-year-old injured himself.
Nashville police said the boy shot himself in the wrist with a pistol his 24-year-old father carries as a security guard. The two had just gotten home and put down their backpacks, when the boy pulled the .40-caliber gun out of his dad’s bag and fired once.
The father quickly rushed the boy toward the hospital before encountering a Metro officer who called an ambulance to finish the trip.
Within hours, Beth Joslin Roth, of the Safe Tennessee Project, performed a sobering task — she logged these particulars into her accidental shootings database.
Nashville Public Radio – Sep 1 2016
Group Pushes For Gun Safety Training With Increase Of Accidental Shootings
A volunteer group advocating gun safety said the number of accidental shootings in Tennessee has increased, leaving more people both injured and killed.
According to the Safe Tennessee Project, there have been 50 accidental gun injuries so far this year compared to just 20 this time last year.
The group hopes there will be bigger pushes for more gun owner education, to keep guns out of the hands of curious kids.
“What’s concerning to me is adults being careless — adults making a choice to not store their guns responsibly,” said Beth Joplin Roth with Safe Tennessee Project.
Accidental shootings surge in Tennessee
Tuesday night’s incident where a 3-year-old boy shot himself in the hand is the just the latest example of what experts are calling a “significant and concerning” problem: accidental shootings.
At this time last year, there were 32 accidental shootings of children and adults in Tennessee.
As of August 2016, there have been 62.
According to the Safe Tennessee Project, the common denominator is carelessness.
“Carelessness on the part of the adult who forgets to check the chamber to make sure there isn’t a bullet in it before he or she cleans a gun. Carelessness when an adult doesn’t carry a gun holstered properly and it falls out of their pocket and discharges and shoots them or a bystander. And certainly carelessness on the part of the adult who chooses to leave a loaded firearm where a child can find it,” said Beth Joslin Roth, policy director of the Safe Tennessee Project.
Police: 3-year-old boy shoots himself in hand with father’s gun
Metro police say a 3-year-old boy shot himself in the wrist after getting a hold of his dad’s gun Tuesday evening.
The Safe Tennessee Project said this is the 16th child shot accidentally so far this year.
Safe Tennessee Project: Number of accidental shootings has already surpassed all of 2015
Following the accidental shooting of a 3-year-old Nashville boy on Tuesday, the Safe Tennessee Project says accidental shootings in the state this year is “particularly startling.”
In a release from STP, the number of adult-involved accidental shootings by the end of August last year was 14 total. This year, that total is 39 accidental shootings involving adults. According to STP, 23 accidental shootings have involved children in 2016, with seven death
The sum of these shootings (62), also reflects a sharp rise compared 2015 totals. In all of last year, there was a total of 51 accidental shootings in Tennessee.
Safe Tennessee Project policy director Joslin Roth says “We already knew we had a problem with these types of shootings, and it’s only getting worse.”
Guns in Donald Trump’s America
Editorial by Dr. Jonathan Metzl
The furor that ensued after the tweet raised an important question: How would Trump’s gun policies affect life for communities of color in cities like Chicago?
MorningLine: Gun Safety & Policies (VIDEO)
NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Beth Joslin Roth, Policy Director of the Safe Tennessee Project discusses Gun Safety & Policies.
Dozens of children shot in Tennessee this year
Timea’s shooting death is the latest in a series of shootings involving children — both accidental and criminal — across Tennessee this year.
In addition to the nine children who died from gunfire, at least 36 children have been injured by guns in the state this year, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive analyzed by the Safe Tennessee Project, a nonprofit group that tracks gun violence.
Fifteen injured children were victims of unintentional shootings, according to the Safe Tennessee Project.
Local gun activists hope Washington pays attention
As Washington tries to figure out any new gun legislation in the wake of the Orlando shootings, those on both sides are hoping lawmakers pay attention to them.
Beth Joslin Roth of the Safe Tennessee Project says she was “so moved at what was happening” with the House sit-in, which just happened to come to an end while talking with News 2.
The Senate was about to take up the bill from Sen. Susan Collins which dealt primarily with keeping those on the no-fly list from purchasing a handgun.
“I think that the Senate seeing what their colleagues in the House were doing motivated them to go into the chambers and push,” added Roth
WKRN – Jun 23 2016
Academy Sports pulls AR-15 style rifles from display cases
Others disagree. Beth Joslin Roth, policy director for the Safe Tennessee Project, a nonprofit aimed at deterring gun violence in the state, said that while she appreciates Academy’s gesture, it doesn’t really accomplish anything.
“I appreciate them trying to do something to be sensitive to the families of the victims, but it seems like a half measure,” Roth said. “Just because they’re out of sight won’t deter people from buying them. There’s no reason to have military-style weapons in the hands of the civilians.”
Organization uses campaign to teach parents about gun safety
The Safe Tennessee Project, which tracks accidental shootings in Tennessee, says the death of a three-year-old in Clarksville is the 13th such accident this year.
Beth Joslin Roth, Policy Director for the Safe Tennessee Project, says, “The shooting in Clarksville yesterday was the 13th incident of a child gaining access to a loaded firearm, discharging it, and injuring or killing themselves or someone else. It was the third fatality so far this year.”
Roth says parents should be asking adults and other parents if there are unlocked guns in the homes or places where their children visit.
“It’s so important for parents to just ask that simple question: Do you have unlocked firearms in your arms in your home?”
“This is your child’s life you’re talking about. It’s not in any way making a value judgement on a person if they have a guns,” explained Roth. “It’s perfectly fine to have guns. Responsible gun owners keep their guns locked up.”
Child Accidentally Shoots Self in Clarksville, First Death Since Makayla’s Law Voted Down
Beth Joslin Roth says, “There are no repercussions for the parent or the gun owner, so they get their gun back . There are still children in the home.”
Beth Joslin Roth is with Safe Tennessee Project.
Roth says, the Clarksville shooting is the 7th accident involving a child and first fatality since legislators voted down Makayla’s Law in March.
The bill would hold adult gun owners responsible if anyone under 13 accessed a loaded gun, fired it and hurt or killed someone.
Rally Held Ahead of Law Allowing Guns On Campuses
The Safe Tennessee Project put the rally together, ahead of the law’s enactment that will allow full time public university employees to carry registered guns on campus.
While some onlookers held a different view of gun control, the Safe Tennessee Project said laws like the one that takes effect tomorrow will make Tennesseans less safe.
“As we continue to log more accidental shootings, our legislators here in Tennessee continue to expand where people can carry guns, and that does not make a lot of sense to me,” said Beth Joslin Roth with the Safe Tennessee Project.
ER doctors see increase in gunshot victims over past year
The Safe Tennessee Project works to educate Tennesseans about gun violence and accidental shootings.
The organization was instrumental in writing MaKayla’s Law, which was defeated in the Tennessee General Assembly this year.
MaKayla’s Law would hold gun owners responsible if a child gained access to their weapon and then killed themselves or someone else.
“What we see with the gun violence is it continuing to happen,” Executive Director of the Safe Tennessee Project Beth Joslin Roth said. “What is especially troubling for people like me and my organization is the preventable forms of gun violence.”
41 accidental shootings reported in Tennessee so far in 2016
From a 2-year-old shooting herself earlier this month, to a boy accidentally shooting his dad in Rutherford County on Thursday, the circumstances vary, but Roth says “the common denominator in all these shootings is carelessness with firearms. We began to notice the frequency of unintentional shootings here in Tennessee. With the shooting this afternoon we’ve surpassed the total number of accidental shootings of adults in all of 2015.”
There’s 41 accidental shootings in the state to date, compared to a total of 51 in all of last year.
Safe Tennessee Project tracks all unintentional shootings in the state with a tracker and fully searchable database.
“Terribly sad that we have to have it,” Roth said. “It’s gut wrenching, we just want to educate people on all levels about gun safety. A gun should always be treated as if it’s loaded. “
Most mass shooters aren’t mentally ill. So why push better treatment as the answer?
Jonathan Metzl, a Vanderbilt University professor who studies the history of mental illness, has written that “insanity becomes the only politically sane place to discuss gun control.”
Nashville woman leading effort for ‘common sense’ gun laws
“We have found responsible gun owners do understand the importance of safe storage and support us in our efforts to get MaKayla’s Law passed,” Roth said.
MaKayla’s Law is named after 8-year-old MaKayla Dyer. She was killed by an 11-year-old neighbor with his father’s shotgun.
The bill would have made it a crime to leave a loaded gun accessible to a child. It was defeated in the Tennessee Legislature.
“We felt like it was a good law,” Roth said.
The Safe Tennessee Project championed the bill on Capitol Hill.
Smyrna toddler recovering after accidental shooting
These are preventable tragedies. They should not keep happening,” said Beth Roth with Safe Tennessee Project.
According to Safe Tennessee Project, the state is ranked ninth in the nation for accidental shootings. It is also ninth in the nation for death by firearm, and third for shootings in or near a school, college or university.
This year alone there have been nine reported accidental child shootings. Two have been fatal.
The Safe Tennessee Project said they hope by presenting these numbers to lawmakers, they can help make better child access prevention laws, known as CAP laws.
“We were recently flagged as one of seven states with a disproportionate number of accidental shooting,” Roth said. “And all seven of those states, including Tennessee, lacked meaningful child access prevention laws.”
Smyrna Toddler is 9th Child Accidentally Shot in State This Year
“Another child with access to a loaded gun leads to yet another 100% preventable tragedy, ” said Beth Joslin Roth, policy director of The Safe Tennessee Project. “This little girl was only 2-years-old- a baby! When we brought this issue to legislators, they were dismissive of our concerns. They said parents just need to tell kids not touch guns. Perhaps they’ve not spent time with toddlers. Or tweens or teens, for that matter. If you’re going to have firearms in a home with children, the responsibility to keep kids from hurting themselves with the gun is solely on the parents. And, if their decision to irresponsibly store their gun leads to a child being injured or killed, they need to held accountable. Period.”
WZTV – May 7, 2016
Would safe storage laws help prevent accidental shootings?
“It’s not our objective to throw a bunch of parents in jail,” said Safe Tennessee’s policy director Beth Joslyn Roth. “It’s to create a deterrent, much the same way drunk driving laws create a deterrent.”
According to SmartGunLaws.org, 14 states plus the District of Columbia have safe storage laws in place. In those states, the site says accidental shootings have dropped.
“It’s the same thing we’re trying to do with MaKayla’s law,” said Roth, who will bring push for the law next year. “We’re trying to reduce the number of children who are injured and killed in these very preventable tragedies.”
WKRN – May 2, 2016
Haslam allows controversial guns on campus bill to become law
Beth Joslin Roth, policy director of Safe Tennessee Project and who monitored the bill through the legislative process, said lawmakers should have listened to campus police chiefs who spoke against the bill in committees.
“According to campus police chiefs, not only will this new law make campuses less safe, it will also require them to scrap their FBI training protocol when it comes to responding to an active shooter situation. Additionally, numerous faculty members have indicated they will resign over this. But, in our state, the gun lobby is more influential than law enforcement and the wishes of the NRA trump the concerns of our public colleges and universities,” Roth said.
Senate approves bill to allow guns on college campuses
Beth Joslin Roth, policy director for Safe Tennessee Project, questioned lawmakers’ decision, noting that their action comes despite significant opposition from law enforcement.
“At the very least, university and college administration in conjunction with their campus police chiefs should be the ones deciding whether or not they allow guns on their individual school’s campus,” she said in a statement. “The fact that our legislators outright reject the recommendation of law enforcement and ridicule the concerns of administrators, faculty, and students clearly demonstrates that our legislature’s loyalty lies with the NRA, and not with the Tennesseans who will be affected by this bill.”
The Tennessean – April 19, 2016
Man with gun at Bellevue tests faith in laws of God, man
He’s not the only one. Like God, guns are everywhere, even in church — whether you know it or not.
“My guess would be that most people would assume that churches are automatically ‘gun-free.’ They are not,” said Beth Joslin Roth, policy director of the Safe Tennessee Project in Nashville.
“I’d also guess that the last thing many churches would like to do is have a huge debate over whether or not to allow people to carry in their place of worship.”
The Commercial Appeal – March 28, 2016
Tennessee lawmaker buys gun easily, brings it to the legislature
In addition to Stewart, Beth Joslin Roth, the policy director for the Safe Tennessee Project, an organization advocating against easing gun laws, told the committee that she obtained a weapon at a gun show without ever having to show identification or undergo a background check.
The Tennessean – March 23, 2016
After measure fails in House panel, proponents vow to press Tennessee gun safety bill next year
Beth Joslin Roth with the Safe Tennessee Project, which backed the bill, said despite the bill having support from “responsible gun owners” and others, the panel members “collectively shrugged their shoulders” and voted no.
Calling it “shameful,” Roth said “despite the setback, we do intend to bring the bill next year, and we will continue to raise awareness about this important issue.”
She said Tennessee, which ranks ninth nationally in accidental gun deaths, in the last 15 months has lost 12 children.
The Chattanooga Free Press – March 23, 2016
When Kids Share a Car with a Gun, It Can Make for a Deadly Mix
“It’s ironic to me that there are all of these common-sense laws surrounding car safety, but that’s not the case when it comes to the storage of firearms in cars,” [Metzl] says. “Because people are so worried about needing constant access to their firearms, the situation we’re creating is far more dangerous than the threat of being attacked by a stranger.”
The safety precautions that govern gun safety and storage at home “don’t seem to apply in cars,” says Metzl, who is also research director at the Safe Tennessee Project. One reason for the blind spot, he theorizes, could be that cars are a method of transport that people don’t imagine they’ll be sitting in long enough to necessitate safe storage.
Are Looser Gun Laws Changing the Social Fabric of Missouri?
Safe Tennessee Project Research Director Dr. Jonathan Metzl penned this thought provoking article regarding how easier access to guns and expanded carry laws affect social interaction. From The Conversation, an independent source of news and views from the academic and research community.
The Conversation – March 10, 2016
MaKayla’s Law in The News
There have been many news stories written and broadcast about MaKayla’s Law, legislation brought by the Safe Tennessee Project to strengthen our state’s child access prevention laws. All the news related to MaKayla’s Law can be found by clicking the link below:
#MaKaylasLaw #SafeStorageSavesLives
Lawmakers Discuss Allowing Guns at Capitol Complex
“Contrary to the myths we hear at Legislative Plaza, allowing more guns where they were previously prohibited will only increase the likelihood of unintentional shootings,” said Beth Joslin Roth, executive director of the Safe Tennessee Project. “That’s why the Tennessee Highway Patrol has repeatedly opposed these efforts, and will likely still oppose guns in the Capitol.
“It’s only February, and there have already been 10 unintentional shootings in Tennessee, resulting in the deaths of two children and one adult. Encouraging people to bring their guns to crowded hallways of the plaza poses an unnecessary risk to the lives of legislators, staff and the public.”
The Tennessean – February 11, 2016
Mental Health Reform Will Not Reduce US Gun Violence, Experts Say
But while few people would disagree with the need for mental health reform, scientists who study gun violence say it won’t make much of a dent in the number of homicides and attempted homicides committed with firearms. That’s because although mass shooters are likely to be mentally ill (but not necessarily diagnosed), high-profile mass shootings represent only a small fraction of US gun violence, the vast majority of which is committed by people who are not mentally ill. In addition, most people with mental illness are not violent; they are far more likely to be the victims than the perpetrators of shootings.
“There’s no real psychiatric diagnosis that psychiatrists can use to predict which patient is going to commit a violent act and which isn’t,” he said. By blaming gun violence on mental illness, Metzl said, “we lose the sense of the larger contextual factors that surround the violence,” such as drinking, arguing with a spouse or neighbor, having access to firearms, and having a history of violence, all of which are statistically correlated with gun violence but not linked to mental health disorders.
As far as Metzl is concerned, looking to mental health reform to lower the US rate of gun homicides sidesteps the real issue. “We have a major problem with gun violence in this country,” he said. “When we say it’s all a problem of mental illness, that’s really a diversionary tactic” to shift discussion away from the need for stronger gun control laws.
The Journal of American Medicine – January 12, 2016
OpenLine: Executive Actions & Gun Control
Ben Hall is joined by Beth Joslin Roth from The Safe Tennessee Project to discuss gun control and President Obama’s recent executive actions concerning gun control.
WTVF Open Line – January 13, 2016
Researchers Say Mental Illness Isn’t Only Factor Linked to Gun Violence
“Research rather convincingly shows that gun violence committed by persons diagnosed with mental illness is really a minute fraction of gun violence in this country,” Jonathan Metzl, a psychiatrist and director of the Center for Medicine, Health and Society at Vanderbilt University, said in a phone interview Wednesday. “I think that focusing just on mental illness, which is a position that, for example, the NRA often takes and many Republican lawmakers, is to my mind pretty much a red herring.”
“It’s not like we can draw a direct line at all between the diagnosis of mental illness and somebody’s propensity to commit violent violence, and in fact psychiatrists are very, very poor predictors of which one of their patients is going to commit violent acts for that reason,” Metzl said in the interview.
Instead, his research found that better predictors of gun violence include the following: a history of violence, abuse alcohol or drugs, lack of firearm training, and relationship stress.
“These are all factors that aren’t really linked to mental illness per se, and mental illness certainly can play a role in them but it’s really kind of limiting guns at the times of these everyday issues are at play,” Metzl said.
Morning Consult – January 13, 2016
Bill Would Require Private Schools to Implement Gun Carry Policy
Last year, Bell proposed a bill to allow faculty to carry guns on private college campuses. It was met with strong opposition by some.
University of Tennessee President Joe DiPietro issued a statement saying the university “opposes allowing anyone other than law enforcement officers to carry guns while on campus. The current law works. There is no need to change it.”
Beth Roth, policy director with Safe TN Project, and other safety advocates disagree with the latest legislation.
“Somebody who has taken an eight-hour class to be a permit holder, I don’t know that I’m ready to trust them with the life of my child,” Roth said. “Tennessee is ninth in the nation for accidental shootings. Every year, lots of Tennessee gun owners, some of whom are permit holders, have accidents with their guns.”
Constitutional Rights Behind Gun Reform
This week President Barack Obama announced several executive actions designed to further regulate access to guns. Executive Director at the Center for Constitutional Rights, Vince Warren, and the Research Director at the Safe Tennessee Project, Dr. Jonathan Metzel, discuss President Obama’s recent actions.
MSNBC – The Melissa Harris Perry Show – January 9, 2015
Obama Takes Aim at the Gun Lobby
As Obama noted in his speech, the $500 million for mental health – a budget item that may need congressional approval – can do a lot to prevent gun deaths, but not as much to stop gun-related murders, says psychiatry professor Jonathan Metzl, director of the Center for Medicine, Health, and Society at Vanderbilt University.
“I’m hopeful that the way this is going to play out, it’s going to make a dent in gun suicide,” Metzl says. But while media reports have focused on the stability or mental health of notorious mass shooters, such as James Holmes, convicted of a 2012 shooting in a Colorado movie theater, “persons diagnosed with serious mental illness are relatively unlikely to go commit random acts of violence,” he adds.
Metzl said there is a concern among psychiatrists that mentally ill people could be stigmatized, depending on how the background checks are done. But “if the question of mental illness is raised in the context of broader gun control, it’s far more likely to be effective,” he says.
US News & World Report – January 5, 2016
Tennessee Republicans Criticize Obama Gun Action
Beth Joslin Roth, policy director for the Safe Tennessee Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to reducing gun violence pointed out that Americans are looking for leadership on the issue.
“The president’s decision to clarify and enforce the law requiring more gun sellers to conduct background checks will be a real setback for criminals and traffickers who have exploited these loopholes for too long,” Roth said.
The Tennessean – January 5, 2015
Sheriff Advises Citizens to Arm Themselves; Advocates Say More Education Needed
Opponents argue that the prospect of countless armed citizens is more frightening than an unknown terror attack.
“I do feel like it’s stirring fear where it doesn’t need to be,” said Beth Joslin Roth with Safe Tennessee Project.
Safe Tennessee Project works to prevent gun violence.
Roth said one eight-hour class is not nearly enough to learn how to properly handle a firearm, especially in a life-or-death situation.
She said accidental shootings pose a far greater risk.
“Terrorism is something we should be mindful of, but I don’t think it’s the imminent threat that the news stories I see come across my desk multiple times every day are,” Roth said.
Mass Shootings are Distracting from the Real Danger of Guns in America
“In many ways, these events are a red herring,” says Jonathan Metzl, a professor of sociology and psychiatry at Vanderbilt who has published a paper in the American Journal of Public Health on why scholars focus too much on mass shootings.
The paper by Metzl and colleague Kenneth MacLeish argues that “many scholars who study violence prevention hold that mass shootings occur too infrequently to allow for statistical modeling, and as such serve as poor jumping-off points for effective public health interventions.”
The Washington Post – December 8, 2015
How We Process Mass Shootings
Safe Tennessee Project Director of Research Dr. Jonathan Metzl discusses the San Bernardino mass shooting and how people come to terms with such attacks and grapple with biases as they search for an explanation.
WBUR – Boston NPR News – December 3, 2015
Non-partisan Gun Violence Prevention Group Calls for Tougher Laws, More Awareness
Following the tragic unintentional shooting of a 5-year-old by an older sibling who was playing with their father’s loaded gun, NewsChannel 5 interviewed Safe Tennessee Project Policy Director Beth Joslin Roth.
“Honestly, this is one example of many,” Roth said. “There are ways to be responsible and keep the guns away from children.”
News Channel 5 – November 23, 2015
20 Children Accidentally Shot in Tennessee This Year; 8 Killed
Safe Tennessee Project Policy Director Beth Joslin Roth interviewed by News 2 about the latest accidental shooting of a Tennessee child and the need for tougher gun storage laws and safe storage education.
“That’s hard to wrap your mind around,” said Beth Joslin Roth with the Safe Tennessee Project. “Eight children who are no longer here because someone was irresponsible with a gun.”
News 2 / WKRN – November 23, 2015
The Psychological Effect of Terrorism and Violence
Safe Tennessee Project Director of Research Dr. Jonathan Metzl discusses the psychological effects of terrorism and violence on The Melissa Harris Perry show on MSNBC.
MSNBC – The Melissa Harris Perry Show – November 21, 2015
Mass shootings and U.S. Gun Ownership
Gun violence and mental illness expert Dr. Jonathan Metzl weighs in on the latest mass shooting in the U.S. and the national debate on gun ownership that has been re-opened.
CTVNewsChannel (Canada) October 2, 2015
Copy Cat Phenomenon Part of Mass Shootings
Safe Tennessee Project Director of Research Dr. Jonathan Metzl interviewed by KSRO morning news in Sonoma County, CA.
KSRO Morning News October 2, 2015
Everyone Blames Mental Illness for Mass Shootings. But What if That’s Wrong?
It seems like there’s one thing everyone agrees on after a mass shooting: The shooter must have been mentally ill. President Barack Obama said as much in his reaction to the Umpqua Community College shooting on Thursday: “We don’t yet know why this individual did what he did, and it’s fair to say that anybody who does this has a sickness in their minds, regardless of what they think their motivations may be.”
But what if the assumption is wrong, or at least misses the nuance of the issue?
Jonathan Metzl, a professor of psychiatry, sociology, and medicine, health, and society at Vanderbilt University, argues that mental illness is often a scapegoat that lets policymakers and the public ignore bigger, more complicated contributors to gun violence
Audit: Tennessee’s Courts Lag on Law Keeping Guns from Mentally Ill
NASHVILLE — Dangerous holes exist in a Tennessee process that is supposed to keep both guns and state handgun-carry permits out of the hands of people declared mentally ill, according to a new state comptroller audit.
Beth Joslin Roth with the Safe Tennessee Project, which advocates for stronger gun laws, said, “To learn that an audit revealed that Tennessee Court System management had not fully complied with state laws regarding mental health and firearms reporting is inexcusable — and terrifying.”
Times Free Press August 6, 2015
Haslam Says Guns-in-Parks Bill Worth Reviewing for Clarity
MT. JULIET, Tenn. (AP) – Tennessee lawmakers should consider reviewing a new law that allows handgun carry permit holders to bring firearms to parks, playgrounds and sports fields following a key opinion from the state’s attorney general, Gov. Bill Haslam said Monday.
Beth Joslin Roth, policy director for the Safe Tennessee Project, said there have been at least 20 accidental shootings in Tennessee so far this year and that there’s a greater “possibility of these kinds of accidental shootings happening in extremely crowded situations such as an outdoor concert venue or festival.”
The Washington Times August 3, 2015
Attorney General: Concerts, Festivals Can’t Ban Guns in Public Parks
NASHVILLE — A state attorney general’s opinion about Tennessee’s new guns-in-parks law says city and county governments and third-party contractors who run such events as concerts and festivals in public parks cannot ban handgun-carry permit holders from going armed into those events.
Roth, who opposed the bill’s passage in April, said even an accidental shooting at a large-scale event is concerning.
“Those who supported this bill might say there would never be an incident of an inebriated person with a gun accidentally dropping and firing it during a Live on the Green concert in Nashville or during the Boomsday celebration in Knoxville, but they also might not think that a guy would shoot himself as he adjusted a gun in his waistband or that a person would reach for a tissue in his pocket and end up shooting themselves instead,” Roth said.
“We feel that the only individuals properly trained to handle an active shooting situation in a crowded and possibly dark area are trained law enforcement officers. The idea of multiple shooters in a chaotic scene in a public park is extremely concerning. We believe Tennessee families should be able to enjoy music and entertainment in our cities’ parks without worrying about being a victim of one of the many accidental shootings that happen in our state every year.”
Knoxville News Sentinel July 31, 2015
TN’s New Guns-in-Parks Law Sets up ‘Disaster’ for Festivals like Riverbend, Officials Warn
NASHVILLE — A state senator, a former police chief and head of a gun-safety group warned today that Tennessee’s new guns-in-public parks law will set up big-crowd events like Chattanooga’s Riverbend Festival for huge safety problems with a volatile mix of firearms, alcohol and lots of people.
Beth Joslin Roth, policy director for The Safe Tennessee Project, which opposed the guns-in-parks law, said there are dangers even if someone has no intent to shoot anyone through accidental gun discharges. She cited cases, including a man in McMinnville, she said, who reached for a handerchief and wound up shooting himself in the leg with the handgun he was carrying. Roth said Tennessee ranks 9th nationally in the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention statistics on accidental gun shootings.
Times Free Press July 31, 2015
House-Senate Panel: No Guns in Capitol Complex
NASHVILLE — Guns in the statehouse are out but guns in parks adjacent to schools are in under a compromise plan on the guns-in-parks bill recommended Tuesday by a House-Senate conference committee.
“I’m very concerned about it,” said Beth Joslin Roth of Nashville, who is following the bill as founder of Safe Tennessee Project. “I think there is still a lot of confusion about this bill. I think it’s interesting that Sen. Yarbro’s amendment to allow guns in the Capitol got removed without any discussion.
“I’m a mom. I have kids who go to schools that use parks adjacent to the schools where my children attend and I think there’s still a lot of ambiguity about how this bill is going to be applied,” she said. “There were 1,541 Tennessee handgun-carry permits suspended or revoked by the state in 2014. Those are things that factor into my feelings about this bill and about people with guns being near my children while they’re at school.”
Knoxville News Sentinel April 14, 2015
City: Guns-in-Parks Bill Strips Local Control
The state House of Representatives voted Monday to remove the Tennessee Capitol from a bill to expand the areas where people with handgun carry permits can be armed, a move supported by Republican Gov. Bill Haslam.
Beth Roth of Nashville was among several people who came to the Capitol on Monday to oppose the guns-in-parks proposal. Roth said she agrees with the governor’s concerns because the school her sixth-grade son attends uses an adjacent park for recess and after-school activities. She also said the right to ban guns in such places should stay with local governments.
“I feel like the cities absolutely should be the ones deciding what makes sense for those cities,” Roth said. “It’s definitely an example of big government trying to come and take control away from local communities, and that concerns me.”
The Tullahoma News April 7, 2015
Special Committee Strips Capitol Complex from Gun Bill
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) – It took Tennessee lawmakers about an hour to come up with a tentative compromise today on the controversial guns in parks bill, but the final details are still being officially written and subject to approval of both the House and Senate.
Senate sponsor John Stevens said the compromise intentionally did not say what “immediate vicinity” meant because it would create what supporters did not want– a specific “gun-free zone.”
Opponent Beth Joslin Roth of the Safe Tennessee Project called the compromise “confusing.”
House Subcommittees to Wrap Up Work this Week
NASHVILLE — Most state House subcommittees plan to hold their final meetings of the 2015 session this week, which means that hundreds of bills pending in the panels will either advance to the next step or quietly die.
The Safe Tennessee Project, a coalition advocating for gun control, questioned whether political games are behind the bill’s revival, Post Politics says.
“What is the point of the committee even taking any initial action on a bill if the bill sponsors and the lobbyists pushing the bill force them to hear it again?” asked Beth Joslin Roth, policy director of the project.
Knoxville News Sentinel March 22, 2015
House Bill 535 Could Eliminate Gun Permits in Tennessee
CHATTANOOGA, Tennessee (WDEF) – If a Tennessee state representative gets his way, gun permits for concealed or open carry would no longer be required.
Safe Tennessee Project Policy Director Beth Joslin Roth is worried that HB-535 will ultimately lead to an innocent person getting hurt or killed.
“Someone could be walking around with a gun on them in a public place and they may or may not have ever had any type training on how to use the gun or how to handle the gun in a high stress situation,” Roth said.
WDEF wanted to know why Representative Womick would endorse a bill that even some gun rights advocates don’t agree with. No one from his office was available.
“They feel they have a constitutional right to carry a gun and that any type of permitting process is an infringement of that right,” Roth said.
Commentary: Businesses Have Right to Keep Guns Out
“We are grateful for the leadership shown by Governor Bill Haslam,” said Beth Joslin Roth, Policy Director for The Safe Tennessee Project. “Standing up for the rights of cities and businesses to decide whether or not they wish to allow guns is the right thing for Tennessee’s citizens and employers. He has demonstrated that when it comes to keeping Tennesseans safe, he is willing to stand up to the gun lobby.”
The Hartsville Vidette – Editorial – March 18, 2015
TN Lawmakers Weigh Numerous Firearm Bills
NASHVILLE, TN (WSMV) – Tennessee lawmakers are focused on gun legislation and Second Amendment rights on Capitol Hill this week.
“A lot of these bills, we find them to be unnecessary, and unneeded and an invitation to potential tragedy,” said Beth Joslin Roth with the Safe Tennessee Project. “Exploding targets, that seems like an accident waiting to happen.”
Handgun Permits Rise as Legislators Try to Ease Laws
Nashvile – In 2008, roughly one out of 32 Tennesseans had a valid handgun permit. Now, it’s nearly one out of 13.
As the number of valid gun permits in Tennessee prepares to exceed half a million — 300,000 of which are new since 2008 — Tennessee lawmakers continue to push to ease restrictions on where and when Tennesseans can pack heat.
There is “undoubtedly” a connection between a state’s gun laws and firearms related deaths, argues Beth Joslin Roth of the Safe Tennessee Project, an organization advocating against easing gun laws. She points to several studies from the Harvard Injury Research Center that argue in states with more guns there are more accidental shootings and homicides.
Only eight other states had higher rates of death through injury by firearm than Tennessee in 2013, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Roth said the CDC currently ranks Tennessee 12th in accidental shootings.
“Some accidents happen when an adult who should know better, including in some cases law enforcement, drops a gun or forgets that a gun is loaded,” Roth said in a statement.
“We understand that gun-related accidents happen. We just want to minimize the chance that they’re happening in public places, especially places where children play and learn, such as parks, playgrounds and school campuses.”