Thats a demographic model. i.e. criminals shoot other criminals
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.8245
Comparing levels of gun violence in the United States and its concentration within communities with an epidemic garners wide appeal but, scientifically, often stops at descriptive and spatial analyses. Whereas previous research has been cross-sectional, the present study advances understanding of gun violence by modeling it as social contagion and by directly tracking the contagions spread. Our findings suggest not only that gunshot violence concentrates within certain populations but also that the diffusion of violence follows an epidemic-like process of social contagion that is transmitted through networks by social interactions. Violence prevention efforts that account for contagion, in addition to demographics, to identify likely subjects of gun violence have the potential to prevent more shootings than efforts that focus on only demographics.
Our research suggests that a holistic public health approach to gun violence should be developed in at least 2 ways. First, violence prevention efforts should consider the social dynamics of gun violence: tracing the spread of violence episodes through social networks could provide valuable information for public health and medical professionals, in addition to law enforcement, looking to intervene with the people and communities at highest risk. Given that public health and epidemiology are founded on studying pathways of transmission, approaches from these domains may readily extend to gun violence prevention efforts. For example, information on the timing and pathways of gunshot cascades might provide street outreach workers of campaigns (eg, Cure Violence, a violence prevention model used in more than 50 US cities that draws on public health methods to mediate conflicts before they become violent) with a more accurate assessment of the people who would most benefit from their program. Likewise, hospital-based violence intervention programs might follow such network models to extend their services beyond the emergency department to others within a social network who are also at risk of becoming gunshot subjects.
Second, concerted efforts should focus on making gun violence prevention efforts subject focused rather than offender focused by prioritizing the health and safety of those in harms way. Although mounting evidence from multiple cities suggests that small place-, group-, and network-based interventions can effectively reduce gun violence, these network-based approaches have often relied heavily or solely on law enforcement activities. The individuals identified in our study are not in contact just with the criminal justice system: they are also deeply embedded within the public health, educational, housing, and other governmental systems. A fully realized public health approach centered on subjects of gun violence includes focused violence reduction efforts that work in concert with efforts aimed at addressing the aggregate risk factors of gun violence, namely, the conditions that create such networks in the first place or otherwise determine which individuals are in such networks (eg, neighborhood disadvantage and failing schools).