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D.C. Views Shaped by A History Of Violence

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Jeff Canady, an elementary school teacher in Northwest, agreed. A teenager has broken into his mother's Southeast home three times. "The police never did anything," he said. "I have two elderly parents. If it came to that, what else are you going to do [but defend yourself]?"

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What most people aren't going to do is shoot someone, said Charles Powell Jr., 73, of Congress Heights in Southeast. His .22-caliber rifle mostly collects dust.

Bernice Callands, 67, who was a District police officer for 27 years, said her handgun, which she owns legally, does the same. Both said they had no qualms about using them to stop an intruder.

But as they prepared for lunch at the Congress Heights Senior Wellness Center in Southeast yesterday, Callands and Powell said more guns aren't the answer.

"You're wasting your time registering something for nothing," said Callands, adding that she doesn't know anyone clamoring for a gun. "Who wants the gun? We don't need it."

Ronald Cosby, who lives along U Street NW, begs to differ.

"I would love to have a weapon in my home," said Cosby, 58, yesterday as he ate at the 24-Seven cafe. He doesn't know anyone affected by gun violence but plans to buy a gun. "I'll just feel safer, I guess," he said.

But Sandra Mathis, 38, said too many young people say the same thing. As she waited outside juvenile court yesterday for her nephew's case to be heard, she pondered the effect of guns on her life.

"I lost two nephews to homicide in Southeast," said Mathis, who lives in the Parkland neighborhood in Southeast. "I'm here today because my nephew was charged with having a gun. I feel like we're losing our kids to the streets. How is it made so easy to get a gun?"

Even proponents of the gun ban recognize that it hasn't worked, but they said guns purchased legally could end up in the hands of criminals.

At a news conference in Anacostia, Ronald Moten, co-founder of the anti-violence group Peaceoholics, said the gun ban has not worked well because its enforcement has been uneven, focused solely on those who possess those guns rather than those who sell them. Yesterday, he called on Mayor Adrian M. Fenty (D) and the D.C. Council to enact stiffer penalties for those who sell guns illegally in the city.

Curtis Watkins, who heads Lifestarts, a community group that mentors at-risk youths, said he worries that more guns purchased legally will be stolen and used for crime. "It's an opportunity to make money," he said.

Julieta Lopez is worried about her children. Two decades ago, she came to this country from a village in southern Mexico. As she walked down Connecticut Avenue NW in Woodley Park with her two boys, 1 and 10, she said she is afraid for her eldest.

"He's going to fifth grade next year, and I hear about all these guns in schools here," she said. "I lived for 20 years in my country, and I felt very safe there."

It's something she misses in the United States, where she says guns are on TV shows and in the news far too much.

Staff writer Sindya Bhanoo contributed to this report.


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