Many
drivers in America carry guns and are often willing to use them in road rage
shootings. According to this article,
there were 1,319 road rage shootings from 2014 to 2016. This resulted in 354
people being wounded and 136 being killed. The rate seems to be increasing,
from 247 in 2014 to 620 in 2016. Official statistics do not keep separate
record of road rage incidents; these numbers were gleaned from published
reports by the organization that published the above article.
Moreover,
the number of road rage gun incidents is under-reported. I know this for a fact
because one of my students told me of an incident in which an enraged driver
followed another and shot his car. The incident, not involving any injury, went
unreported.
One
reason they often go unreported is that the victim may place him or herself at
risk of further attack. A policeman once told me that a man at a stop sign got
out of his car and used a baseball bat to smash the windshield of the car
behind. The victim started to report it, but the police discouraged the victim
from taking action. The reason is that, if you report or sue someone who
commits violence against you, your name and address become a matter of public
record, and the perp may track you down. You
lose the protection of anonymity.
One
way, you might think, to get around the problem of revealing your identity to
the attacker is to let your insurance company pursue a suit against the
attacker. However, this will not work: before an insurance company can act,
they need a police report, which contains your personal information and to
which the attacker may also have access.
Statistically,
you are unlikely to be injured or killed by road rage. But the numbers are
great enough to justify a cynic’s wariness: if there is a pickup truck nearby,
you can assume the driver is armed and angry, and you should take precautions.
Under no circumstances should you make that driver angry or angrier.
From
an online search, I found a story about a road rage shooting in France. See,
they aren’t all in America. But the article was published in 2013. America
stands out among industrialized countries in the frequency of road rage.
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