Across the State

  • On average, someone is killed with a gun every 6 hours in Illinois and, in an average year, at least 1,363 people die from gun violence.
  • Illinois has the 12th highest rate of gun homicides in the country, and of all homicides in Illinois, 84% involve a gun.
  • From 2012-2021, gun deaths increased 77%.
  • From 2012-2021, suicides accounted for 36% of all firearm deaths in Illinois.
  • Black individuals comprise nearly 50% of all firearm deaths in Illinois, even though Black individuals make up only 14.6% of the population.

In Chicago

Chicago’s homicide rate is an outlier among major U.S. cities. At a rate of 29 firearm homicides per 100,000 residents, it is six times higher than New York City’s and three times higher than in Los Angeles. In 2020 alone, gun homicides increased 52%, resulting in 769 deaths. And the annual impact of gun violence extends much further—in 2020, 3,261 people were wounded in shootings.

Impact of Gun Violence on Black Communities

Across the country, a Black American is shot and wounded every 11 minutes. In Illinois, Black individuals are 38 times more likely than White individuals to die by gun homicide, which is triple the national average. This vastly elevated rate of violence imparts multiple levels of trauma on individuals and Black communities across the state, in addition to structural violence, police violence, and other forms of harm disproportionately experienced by Black communities throughout our state.

Guns and Intimate Partner Violence

National research shows that simply living in a state with a high firearm ownership rate increases a woman’s risk of being fatally shot in a domestic violence incident. In Illinois, 74% of intimate partner gun homicide victims are women. Black women experience disproportionate risk of both homicide and intimate partner violence. Additionally, if an abuser has access to a firearm, the likelihood of a female victim being killed is five times greater.

Impact of Gun Violence on Children and Young Adults

Firearms are the leading cause of death for children in Illinois, with an average of 183 children and teens dying each year. The state’s gun violence crisis disproportionately affects Black children and teens, who are 13 times more likely to die than White children and teens. Around 60% of Chicago’s youngest children live in community areas where 91% of homicides took place.

Sources:

GVPAC

Everytown

Impact of Gun Violence on Latino Communities

Latino communities are disproportionately impacted by gun violence in Chicago, across Illinois, and nationwide. Latinos are murdered by people using guns at twice the rate of White people and experience higher rates of violent hate crime victimization. Latino communities also experience higher rates of police violence, such as the police killing of 13-year-old Adam Toldeo in the Little Village neighborhood of Chicago.

Impact of Gun Violence on LGBTQ+ Communities

Gun violence has a substantial impact on LGBTQ communities in Illinois and across the country. Youth suicides, hate crimes, and anti-trans violence often involve guns. Since 2013, more than 60% of fatal violence against transgender and gender-nonconforming individuals has involved a gun.