Skip to content
Apply
Stories

The FBI reported nearly 4.7 million background checks for gun purchases in March, revealing a record number of firearms sales in the US

People in this story

Insider, June 2021

The Federal Bureau of Investigations reported close to 4.7 million background checks for new gun purchases in March, the largest on record since the FBI began tracking them 20 years ago, revealing a record number of firearms sales in the US. 

The figure is a 77% increase compared to March 2019. The agency conducted over a million more background checks in March 2021 compared to March 2020, which also saw a record number of gun sales.  The New York Times previously reported in March 2020, a record number of Americans were buying guns due to the uncertainty of the pandemic.  “We attribute it mainly to the virus scare,” Larry Hyatt, who owns a gun store in North Carolina and saw a record number of sales at the time told the Times.

Hyatt told The Times he’s seen similar influxes of people buying guns in the past.  “People have a little lack of confidence that if something big and bad happens, that 911 might not work. We saw it with Katrina,” Hyatt said. “People haven’t forgotten that a disaster happened, and the government didn’t come.”

Months with the highest number of FBI background checks like March, June, July, and December show months where there was political or social unrest. 

Continue reading at Insider.

More Stories

01/15/26 - BOSTON, MA. - Northeastern students, faculty and staff filled the East Village 17th floor event space for the annual A Tribute to the Dream event to commemorate Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on Jan. 15, 2026. The event featured President Joseph E. Aoun, Ted Landsmark, Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and Urban Affairs at Northeastern's College of Social Sciences and Humanities, Zolan Kanno-Youngs, '15, White House correspondent at The New York Times, and musical performances. Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University

Landsmark urges continued vigilance to honor the legacy of MLK

01.16.2026
01/06/26 - BOSTON, MA. - Ted Landsmark, Northeastern Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and Urban Affairs and Director of the Kitty and Michael Dukakis Center, poses for photos next to the “Watson and the Shark” painting by John Singleton Copley in the Museum of Fine Arts on Jan. 6, 2026. Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University

Ted Landsmark: portrait of a leader

01.14.2026

How Donald Trump Should Tackle America’s Population Crisis

01.20.26
In the News