Mr. Anderson usually posts well thought out questions and ideas.
While I tend agree with MKM that it is not so much a rise in incidents as it is wider dissemination of reports, I am approaching the OP as primarily summed up by the title.
What can we in the gun culture do either re-actively or proactively other than commiserating with the victims , and regretting that such incidents occur ?
I really don't think there is much we can do. The most important step is enforcing laws already on the books, here are 2 examples I ran across in the past week
http://finance.boston.com/boston/news/read?GUID=16858245Arizona Aftermath: More Than Thirty States Have Failed to Enact Laws Requiring Mental Health Records to Be Submitted to the National Gun Background Check Database
Friday January 28, 2011 - 12:41 PM EST
PRNewsWire News Releases
Released By Mayors Against Illegal Guns
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Only 17 states have submitted more than 1,000 mental health records to database, and more than 1.5 million records are estimated to be missing
New state laws enacted to improve submission of records to National Instant Background Check System (NICS) in the wake of the Virginia Tech massacre appear to be working
WASHINGTON, Jan. 28, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The following is being issued by Mayors Against Illegal Guns:
In December 2005, Seung-Hui Cho was found to present "an imminent danger to himself as a result of mental illness" by a special judge. This should have barred him from owning a gun under federal law, 18 U.S.C. section 922(g)(4), but, because his mental health records were never sent to the FBI's National Instant Criminal Background Check System ("NICS"), in March 2007 Cho was able to purchase the guns he used the following month to shoot and kill 32 people at Virginia Tech. Similarly, the Tucson shooter, Jared Loughner, should have been barred from purchasing his shotgun less than a year after he was rejected from enlisting in the army due to drug abuse, but his record was not forwarded to NICS.
The tragedy at Virginia Tech brought attention to the failure of our national gun background check database to identify people with mental health issues that should prohibit them from purchasing guns. At the time of the shooting, there were only around 300,000 records in the NICS Index "Mental Defective" file, even though the United States General Accounting Office estimates that the file should contain around 2.7 million records.
There are several reasons that states were not sending mental health records to NICS. Some states had not provided their agencies with the authority to share mental health records with the federal government. In other states, state privacy laws barred the sharing of such records. In still others, the right laws were in place but state agencies lacked the resources or initiative to share the records.
More at link, as you read through note that States most likely to suffer mass shooting incidents, Il, NY NJ are amung the least likely to report mental illness to the NICS system.
(Yeah, I know, this comes from Bloomberg, but I can't find the story I originally saw and this does list the non complying states. It was the best I could find on short notice )
Then there is the other problem, I posted this earlier in the week.
http://www.downrange.tv/forum/index.php?topic=15617.0http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1317386&srvc=rssIn the wake of the assault arrest of a seven-time lifer out on parole, the new head of the state Parole Board yesterday said the board is reviewing the casework of all the state’s paroled lifers to see if more supervision is required.
“Our primary objective with the policy is to create a level of enhanced supervision for certain parolees to ensure those who (are) at a higher risk are receiving the maximum amount of supervision,” said Chairman Josh Wall.
Word of the review comes after a convicted killer — paroled in 2007 while serving seven life sentences — was arrested for allegedly dragging his girlfriend from his car and threatening to “put a bullet in her head” on Valentine’s Day.
Charles Doucette Jr., 51, of Beverly was nabbed late Monday evening and charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, threat to kill, and witness intimidation.
Doucette told cops his girlfriend hit him and he pushed her away from the car and then drove off.
He was held without bail following his arraignment Tuesday in Salem District Court.
Wall said the board is working on revoking Doucette’s parole, which would send him back to prison for the rest of his life. Parolees can be sent back to prison for a number of non-criminal violations, including the use of alcohol and drugs, Wall noted.
According to a letter sent to the Parole Board by Essex District Attorney Jonathan W. Blodgett in 2006, Doucette was sentenced to seven concurrent life sentences for second-degree murder, home invasion and a variety of other offenses committed while he was out on bail for the 1991 murder. Doucette served 15 years and was paroled in February 2007.
Suzanne Maynard, the sister of Ray Bufalinos who was shot to death execution-style by Doucette, said she was one of nine whose testimony failed to sway the board that year.
“He’s a menace to society. I hate his guts, I can’t help it,” Maynard said. “He’s a vicious, violent person who never should have gotten out. I don’t get it. I don’t get our system.”
The year after his parole, Doucette was charged with raping a woman and was ordered held on $300,000 bail in Haverhill District Court, but a grand jury found there was not enough evidence to indict him, the Essex DA’s office said.
ojohnson@bostonherald.com
As long as States can't or won't enforce their current laws or keep convicted violent offenders in their cages, I do not see any thing that the rest of us can do other than publicly placing the blame where it belongs.