Officials in Memphis, Tenn., traded gasoline for guns Sept. 15 at an inner-city Baptist church with no questions asked in a program aimed at reducing the number of weapons on the street.
The mayor’s office teamed with Bloomfield Full Gospel Baptist Church and other organizations to sponsor “Gas for Guns” from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. Each participant received a $50 gas card in exchange for each gun up to a maximum of $150 for three weapons per person.
Those surrendering guns also received two free tickets to a preseason game of the Memphis Grizzlies, the city’s NBA professional basketball team.
“Crime, especially violent crime, is often fueled by relatively easy access to firearms,” Memphis Mayor A.C. Wharton said in a press release.
“Last year, 1,600 guns were reported stolen here in Memphis. Those guns didn’t just evaporate and disappear. They ended up on the street,” Wharton said.
Memphis Police Director Toney Armstrong said the parking lot of Bloomfield Baptist would be a “judgment-free zone,” where no questions would be asked about any firearm turned in or any persons who participated.
“In 67 percent of the aggravated assaults we’ve investigated this year, a firearm has been used to commit those crimes,” said Armstrong, a 23-year police force veteran appointed as director in April 2011.
“This is an effort for us to take guns off the street.”
Forbes Magazine ranked Memphis the second most-dangerous city in America behind Detroit.
The FBI reported a violent-crime rate of 1,006 per 100,000 inhabitants in a Memphis metropolitan area totaling 1.3 million in 2010.
Officials say chronic poverty plays a role. More than 19 percent of residents were below the poverty line in 2010, making Memphis the most impoverished large metro area in the country.
Gun buy-back programs are growing in popularity in high-crime areas as an option to keep weapons out of the hands of criminals, but they are not without critics.
Recently in Detroit, gun advocates protested a police gun buy-back at a Catholic church by standing across the street with signs offering to pay more for firearms than was being offered by the police.
Protestors told local media that gun buy-back programs unfairly “demonize” guns, and that weapons do not cause crime.
(ABP)
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