Hoping to do something — anything — in response to mass shootings in Seattle and elsewhere, Seattle police and political leaders on Tuesday announced a new gun buyback program in which people can anonymously turn in their weapons for a shopping gift card worth up to $200.
The effectiveness of such programs has been debated, but they very well might save lives, supporters said, and at worst can’t do any harm.
“By taking these measures today, we are certainly preventing senseless tragedies,” King County Executive Dow Constantine told a news conference at Mount Zion Baptist Church in Seattle. “How many? That will never be known.”
The program was announced on the two-year anniversary of the Tucson, Ariz., shooting that killed six people and left then-U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords critically injured. It also came a month after a gunman in Newtown, Conn., opened fire in an elementary school, killing 20 children and six adults.
Amazon.com, which has been expanding its headquarters in Seattle, kicked in $30,000 in Amazon gift cards — $100 for each handgun, rifle or shotgun turned in, and $200 for each gun classified as an assault weapon under state law. In an emailed statement, the company said only that it thanked Seattle Mike McGinn for the invitation to participate and that it was happy to do so.
The Seattle Police Foundation donated $25,000, Seattle-based search engine optimization software company SEOmoz gave $10,000 and PEMCO insurance committed $5,000. That money will be used for gift cards from other retail or grocery stores.
The first buyback is scheduled for Jan. 26 under Interstate 5 between Cherry and James streets downtown. Additional dates are expected to be announced later. Unless they have historical value, the guns will be melted down and recycled.
Neither the Tacoma Police Department nor the Pierce County Sheriff’s Department has immediate plans to offer a similar program.
Pierce County hasn’t had a gun buyback program in recent years. But it is watching what other communities are doing, said Sheriff’s Department spokesman Ed Troyer.
“We are evaluating the effectiveness and watching to see if they are successful,” Troyer said.
Staff writers Steve Maynard and Stacia Glenn contributed to this report.


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