Authors
Susan L Stewart, Rose MC Kagawa, Shani AL Buggs, Mona A Wright, Garen J Wintemute
Publication date
2024/5/1
Journal
International Journal of Drug Policy
Volume
127
Pages
104413
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Background
There is evidence linking use of controlled substances with perpetration of interpersonal violence. While the United States constitution protects the right to own a firearm, federal law prohibits firearm purchase and possession by persons believed to be at high risk for violence, including those who use controlled substances unlawfully.
Methods
We report here the results of a 13-year prospective observational study on the risk of violent crime associated with a history of criminal drug charges in a cohort of 79,678 legal purchasers of handguns in California in 2001. The main outcomes were post-purchase charges for any violent crime, violent Crime Index crimes (murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault), and firearm-related violent crimes. The main exposure of interest was a history of pre-purchase charge(s) for drug-related offenses; we examined as a secondary exposure a history of marijuana-related …
Scholar articles
SL Stewart, RMC Kagawa, SAL Buggs, MA Wright… - International Journal of Drug Policy, 2024