Gun Violence Reduction
Responsible ownership means understanding the full picture.
Most firearm deaths in Oregon are suicides, not homicides. The decisions you make about storage, household access, and communication directly affect whether your firearm contributes to harm - or prevents it. This page covers the evidence, Oregon law, and practical steps that every firearm owner should know.
The Oregon Reality
These figures come from the Oregon Firearm Safety Coalition and align with data tracked by the OHSU-PSU School of Public Health Gun Violence Prevention Research center - Oregon's dedicated academic source for objective firearm violence data.
of Oregon firearm deaths are suicides
not homicides - suicide is the primary driver of firearm death in our state
of youth firearm suicides use a family member's firearm
stored at home - accessible without a parent's knowledge
lethality rate for firearm suicide attempts
compared to under 5% for most other methods - means are not interchangeable
of attempt survivors do not re-attempt suicide
the crisis is temporary - access to lethal means during that window is the variable
of firearm suicides among rural Oregonians and veterans are firearm-method
these communities face compounded risk and fewer nearby support services
Why does this matter for firearm owners? Because the most impactful firearm safety decisions most owners will ever make are not about self-defense scenarios - they are about storage, access, and what to do when someone in your household is struggling. The statistics above are directly shaped by how owners store their firearms.
Mental Health and Firearms
Suicide is a crisis of access as much as it is a crisis of mental state. Research consistently shows that most suicide attempts are impulsive - made during a window of acute distress that, in many cases, lasts minutes to hours. Firearms are uniquely dangerous during that window because of their lethality rate: a firearm suicide attempt is fatal approximately 90% of the time. Most other methods have fatality rates under 5%.
This is not about politics, and it is not about restricting ownership. It is about a simple, evidence-backed truth: when lethal means are temporarily unavailable during a crisis, lives are saved. 90% of people who survive a suicide attempt do not go on to die by suicide. The crisis passes. What matters is whether the most lethal option was within reach during that window.
For LGBTQIA+ communities specifically, the risk is compounded. LGBTQIA+ people face significantly elevated rates of suicidal ideation and attempt, driven by minority stress, rejection, discrimination, and lack of affirming support. Firearm safety in LGBTQIA+ households requires this context to be centered - not minimized.
Warning Signs to Know
- Talking about wanting to die or having no reason to live
- Withdrawing from friends, family, and activities
- Giving away important possessions
- Unusual calm after a period of depression (may signal a decision has been made)
- Increasing alcohol or substance use
- Expressing hopelessness or being trapped
- Increased interest in firearms or asking about lethal means
What You Can Do
- Ask directly: 'Are you thinking about suicide?' - asking does not increase risk
- Take firearms out of the home or secure them - even temporarily - during a crisis
- Work with a trusted friend, family member, or FFL for off-site storage
- Know your state's ERPO law as a last resort option (ORS 166.525)
- Call 988 together or on behalf of someone you are worried about
- Let the person know you take their pain seriously and are not going anywhere
- Follow up after the crisis window passes - people remember who showed up
Secure Storage Saves Lives
Oregon's ORS 166.395 requires secure storage when minors are present. But the case for secure storage goes beyond legal compliance - it is the single most effective thing most firearm owners can do to reduce preventable deaths.
| Storage Option | Best For | Suicide Prevention | Child Access | Theft Resistance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quick-access biometric or keypad safe | Nightstand or bedroom - fast access with access control | - | ||
| Locking gun cabinet | Multiple firearms, moderate-cost storage option | - | ||
| Heavy-gauge gun safe (UL-rated) | Long-term storage, burglary resistance, fire protection | |||
| Trigger locks | Supplemental layer, stored unloaded firearms | - | ||
| Off-site storage with a licensed FFL dealer | Crisis periods, temporary relocation of all firearms | |||
| Firearm removed from home temporarily | Mental health crisis in household - short-term solution with a trusted person or FFL | - |
Oregon ORS 166.395
Oregon law requires firearms to be stored in a locked container or with a trigger lock when minors are present. Violation is a Class A misdemeanor; if a minor causes death or serious injury, it becomes a Class C felony. This is a floor, not a ceiling.
The Defense Concern
Many owners resist secure storage because of home-defense concerns. Quick-access biometric or keypad safes address this directly - under two seconds to access for an authorized user, completely inaccessible to everyone else. These are widely available at most firearm retailers.
Serial Number Documentation
Write down the make, model, and serial number of every firearm you own and store that information somewhere separate from the firearms. Take a photo. This is essential for theft reporting and insurance claims. Do it today.
If Your Firearm Is Stolen
A stolen firearm becomes a community safety problem immediately. Most crime guns traced by the ATF started as legally purchased firearms - stolen from homes, vehicles, and ranges. How you respond in the hours after a theft directly affects whether your firearm can be traced and recovered.
Call 9-1-1 or local non-emergency police immediately
Report the theft as soon as you discover it. Provide the make, model, caliber, and serial number. If you do not have the serial number written down - this is why you should record it now, before anything happens.
File a report with the ATF
The ATF maintains the National Stolen Firearm database. You can report online at atfonline.gov or by contacting your local ATF field office. This connects your firearm to the federal trace system.
Notify your insurance provider
If you have a homeowner's or renter's insurance policy, stolen firearms are often covered under personal property. Document everything and file a claim promptly.
Keep a copy of your police report number
If your firearm is later used in a crime, law enforcement can use the report to show it was out of your possession. This matters both legally and morally.
Liability Considerations After a Theft
Civil liability for subsequent use
HighIf you knew or should have known that your firearm was accessible to someone dangerous - or was stored negligently - and it was used to harm someone, you could face civil suit. Oregon courts have considered negligent entrustment in firearm cases.
Negligent storage prior to theft
CriminalUnder ORS 166.395, if a minor obtains a firearm you own due to negligent storage and harm results, you may face criminal liability regardless of whether the firearm was later stolen.
Delay in reporting
ModerateWhile Oregon does not currently require you to report a stolen firearm within a specific window, significant delay in reporting can create the appearance of complicity if the firearm is used in a crime - and can complicate civil proceedings.
Straw purchases and transfers
FederalIf someone obtains a firearm through you - legally or illegally - and uses it in a crime, federal law around straw purchases and transfers can come into play. Always follow Oregon's background check requirements for private transfers.
Important note: This information is educational and not legal advice. If your firearm has been stolen and used in a crime, consult a licensed Oregon attorney before making any statements beyond the initial police report.
Household Access and Your Responsibility
The people in your home are the highest-risk access point for your firearms. Not strangers, not burglars - the people who live with you and know where things are. Here is what every owner needs to understand.
Children and Unsecured Firearms
ORS 166.395 makes it a Class A misdemeanor to store a firearm in a manner accessible to minors if harm results, and a Class C felony if the minor causes death or serious injury. 'Accessible' means a child can reach it without defeating a locking mechanism.
ORS 166.395Household Members in Crisis
If someone in your home is experiencing a mental health crisis, temporary relocation or off-site storage of firearms is one of the highest-impact harm-reduction steps available. You do not need to surrender ownership - just create distance during a vulnerable window.
No statute required - this is ethical practiceProhibited Persons in the Home
Knowingly allowing a prohibited person (convicted felon, domestic violence misdemeanant, person under protective order, etc.) to access a firearm you own is a federal crime. If someone moves into your home who is legally prohibited, your storage obligations are significantly heightened.
18 U.S.C. 922(g) and ORS 166.250Oregon's Extreme Risk Protection Order
Oregon's ERPO law (ORS 166.525) allows family members, household members, and law enforcement to petition a court to temporarily remove firearms from someone who poses a significant danger to themselves or others. This is a civil process, not a criminal charge.
ORS 166.525 (ERPO)The Conversation Every Owner Needs to Have
Every adult in your household should know: that firearms are present, where they are stored, that they are secured, and what to do in an emergency. Children should receive age-appropriate firearm education - not secrecy. Secrecy builds curiosity. Education builds safety.
That conversation should also include a frank discussion about mental health: what to do if someone in the household is struggling, who to call, and the understanding that temporarily storing firearms elsewhere during a crisis is an act of love, not judgment.
Crisis Resources
If you or someone you know is in crisis right now, these resources are available 24 hours a day.
988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline
HotlineCall or text 988
24/7 free and confidential support for people in suicidal crisis or mental health distress. Available to everyone, including veterans (press 1).
Crisis Text Line
TextText HOME to 741741
Free, 24/7 crisis support via text message. Works anywhere in the U.S. for anyone in any type of crisis.
Oregon Firearm Safety Coalition (OFSC)
Oregon Resourceofsc.us
Oregon-based 501(c)(3) focused on suicide prevention within the firearm community. Free training for instructors and retailers, off-site storage partnerships, veteran-specific programming.
Veterans Crisis Line
VeteransCall 988, press 1 - or text 838255
Confidential crisis support for veterans and service members. Staffed by VA staff, many of whom are veterans themselves.
Trans Lifeline
LGBTQIA+877-565-8860
Peer support hotline for trans and gender-nonconforming people in crisis, staffed by trans operators. No non-consensual active rescue.
Trevor Project
LGBTQIA+1-866-488-7386 or text START to 678-678
Crisis intervention and suicide prevention for LGBTQ+ young people under 25. Available 24/7.
If someone is in immediate danger, call 911.
If you are calling on behalf of someone else, you can request a mental health officer or crisis team respond alongside or instead of uniformed officers. Ask specifically.
Organizations Doing the Work
These two Oregon-based organizations represent the evidence side and the community side of reducing firearm harm - and they are not in conflict with responsible ownership.
Oregon Firearm Safety Coalition (OFSC)
501(c)(3) NonprofitSuicide prevention within the firearm community - not gun control
Programs and Resources
- Free suicide prevention training modules for firearm instructors
- Retail staff training and point-of-sale resources
- Off-site storage partnerships with licensed FFL dealers
- Veteran programming with VFW and American Legion chapters
- Oregon State Shooting Association partnership
OFSC operates entirely within the firearm community - the language, the culture, and the respect for Second Amendment rights are built in. This makes their suicide prevention outreach land differently than campaigns from outside the community.
OHSU-PSU School of Public Health - Gun Violence Prevention Research
Academic Research CenterEvidence-based, objective research on firearm violence and its prevention in Oregon
Programs and Resources
- Oregon-specific firearm violence data and research publications
- Objective policy-relevant findings for Oregon stakeholders
- Student research and academic pipeline development
- Cross-sector partnerships with public health researchers
When conversations about gun violence get politically charged, credible data from an independent academic source matters. The OHSU-PSU center is Oregon's designated research home for this work - peer-reviewed, objective, and locally focused.
FST Covers This in Every Class
Firearm Safety Team integrates responsible ownership, safe storage, mental health awareness, and household access conversations into every training course - not as a political add-on, but as fundamental firearm safety content. Because the evidence says it matters.
FST's LGBTQIA+-centered approach means these conversations happen without judgment, with specific attention to the elevated mental health risks faced by queer and trans firearm owners and their households.
Responsible Ownership Is an Act of Care
Securing your firearms, having the hard conversations, and knowing when to call for help - these are the behaviors that reduce gun violence. They are also what it means to be a responsible firearm owner.