86°F
weather icon Clear

LETTER: Do gun owners learn from tragic events?

As an ardent supporter of the Second Amendment, I was disturbed to read in the Review Journal last week about a careless shooting of a young child.

The article stated that a mother was sentenced to probation for the accidental shooting death of her 3-year-old son. The mother was with another woman and wanted to show her the gun was not loaded. The mother removed the safety, pointed the gun in front of her and pulled the trigger. The bullet hit her son in his head.

When a sane, law-abiding citizen legally owns a firearm for self-protection, the onus is on the individual to practice gun safety and understand how to use and maintain their firearm. Even a person who does not own a firearm would agree the mother did not practice safe handling of a firearm or understand how to inspect the gun to be sure there were no bullets in the gun.

My concern is not whether sentencing the mother to probation was too lenient for her careless handling of a loaded firearm; my concern is whether people who own firearms learned something from this tragic event.

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
LETTER: Staffing bill aims at the wrong target

Critically needed temps help Nevada industries.

LETTER: All burned up

There might be another reason Georgia burns less than California.

LETTER: Lawyer joke

Attorney sues Las Vegas Valley Water District over conservation efforts.

LETTER: The transportation bureaucracy

The U.S. Department of Transportation grant to study the alternatives to improving public transit on Charleston means we will spend $5.9 million of before Charleston ever sees an orange cone. Wow.

LETTER: The dangers in school zones

I’ve lived in Southern Nevada since 1996, and school zones are invisible to many drivers. It seems that the casual attitude of local officials hasn’t helped much.

MORE STORIES