Gun purchase background checks soared to a record for the month of May, snapping a five-month streak of year-over-year declines since President Trump was elected, and suggesting the demand for guns is once again picking up amid world tumult.
More than 1.9 million checks were run through the federal government’s database in May, which is an increase of about 70,000 from the previous May.
The numbers helped to dispel worries about a post-Obama “Trump slump” in gun sales, with the National Shooting Sports Foundation, an industry group, saying their own calculations of data from the National Instant Criminal Background Check System suggest a healthy market.
“We did see a decline in the adjusted NICS numbers after the election,” said Lawrence G. Keane, senior vice president and general counsel for the NSSF. “As we’ve always said, those spikes in demand that are driven by political concerns last for a period of time, but eventually they subside and you return to a more normalized market, and that’s what’s occurred.”
May also saw a significant amount of chaos overseas, including the deadly terrorist attack in Manchester, England. On May 22 attacker Salman Abedi killed 22 people and injured scores of others in a suicide bombing attack outside an Ariana Grande concert in the British city — an attack for which the Islamic State terrorist group later claimed credit.
by David Sherfinski