On this date, December 14, 2012,
20-year-old Adam Lanza fatally shot twenty children and six adult staff members
in a mass murder at Sandy Hook Elementary School in the village of Sandy Hook
in Newtown, Connecticut. Before driving to the school, Lanza shot and killed
his mother Nancy at their Newtown home. As first responders arrived, he
committed suicide by shooting himself in the head.
Unit 1012 will post the information
about the mass murder from Wikipedia before giving our condolences on another
blog post.
Victims
of the Sandy Hook Elementary School Shooting (PHOTO SOURCE: http://catholicmoxie.wordpress.com/2012/12/17/26-souls/sandy-hook-victims/)
|
Location
|
Sandy
Hook, Connecticut, U.S.
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Coordinates
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41°25′12″N 73°16′43″WCoordinates: 41°25′12″N 73°16′43″W
|
Date
|
December 14, 2012
c. 9:30 am – c. 9:40 am EST (UTC−05:00) |
Target
|
Students
and staff at Sandy Hook Elementary School
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Attack
type
|
School
shooting, murder–suicide, matricide, spree shooting
|
Weapon(s)
|
Bushmaster
XM15 Glock 20SF Sig Sauer P226
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Deaths
|
28
total; 27 at the school (including perpetrator) and perpetrator's mother (at
home)
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Injured
(non-fatal)
|
2
|
Perpetrator
|
Adam
Peter Lanza[
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Defender
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Dawn
Hochsprung, Mary Sherlach, Victoria Leigh Soto, Lauren Rousseau, Rachel
D’Avino, Anne Marie Murphy (all unarmed; all posthumous recipients of
Presidential Citizens Medal)
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Motive
|
Unknown
|
On December 14, 2012, 20-year-old Adam
Lanza fatally shot twenty children and six adult staff members in a mass murder
at Sandy Hook Elementary School in the village of Sandy Hook in Newtown,
Connecticut. Before driving to the school, Lanza shot and killed his mother
Nancy at their Newtown home. As first responders arrived, he committed suicide
by shooting himself in the head.
It was the second deadliest mass
shooting by a single person in American history, after the 2007 Virginia Tech massacre, and the second
deadliest mass murder at a U.S. elementary school, after the 1927 Bath School bombings in Michigan.
The incident prompted renewed debate
about gun control in the United States, and a proposal for new legislation
banning the sale and manufacture of certain types of semi-automatic firearms
and magazines with more than ten rounds of ammunition.
A November 2013 report issued by the
Connecticut State Attorney's office concluded that the perpetrator acted alone
and planned his actions, but no evidence collected provided any indication as
to why he did so or why he targeted Sandy Hook elementary school.
The victims of the Sandy Hook shooting
|
Background
As of November 30, 2012, 456 children
were enrolled in kindergarten through fourth grade at Sandy Hook Elementary
School. The school's security protocol had recently been upgraded, requiring
visitors to be individually admitted after visual and identification review by
video monitor. Doors to the school were locked at 9:30 am each day, after
morning arrivals.
Newtown is located in Fairfield County,
Connecticut, about 60 miles (97 km) outside New York City. Violent crime
had been rare in the town of 28,000 residents; there was only one homicide in
the town in the ten years prior to the school shooting.
Casualties:
Killed
Perpetrator's mother
• Nancy Lanza (shot at home)
School personnel
• Rachel D'Avino, teacher's aide
• Dawn Hochsprung, principal
• Anne Marie Murphy, teacher's aide
• Lauren Rousseau, teacher
• Mary Sherlach, school psychologist
• Victoria Leigh Soto, teacher
First grade students
• Charlotte Bacon
• Daniel Barden
• Olivia Engel
• Josephine Gay
• Dylan Hockley
• Madeleine Hsu
• Catherine Hubbard
• Chase Kowalski
• Jesse Lewis
• Ana Marquez-Greene
• James Mattioli
• Grace McDonnell
• Emilie Parker
• Jack Pinto
• Noah Pozner
• Caroline Previdi
• Jessica Rekos
• Avielle Richman
• Benjamin Wheeler
• Allison Wyatt
• Rachel D'Avino, teacher's aide
• Dawn Hochsprung, principal
• Anne Marie Murphy, teacher's aide
• Lauren Rousseau, teacher
• Mary Sherlach, school psychologist
• Victoria Leigh Soto, teacher
First grade students
• Charlotte Bacon
• Daniel Barden
• Olivia Engel
• Josephine Gay
• Dylan Hockley
• Madeleine Hsu
• Catherine Hubbard
• Chase Kowalski
• Jesse Lewis
• Ana Marquez-Greene
• James Mattioli
• Grace McDonnell
• Emilie Parker
• Jack Pinto
• Noah Pozner
• Caroline Previdi
• Jessica Rekos
• Avielle Richman
• Benjamin Wheeler
• Allison Wyatt
Perpetrator
• Adam Lanza (suicide)
Wounded
• Natalie Hammond, lead teacher
• One unnamed adult
Shooting
Some time before 9:30 a.m. EST on
Friday, December 14, 2012, Lanza shot and killed his mother, Nancy Lanza, aged
52, at their Newtown home. Investigators later found her body, clad in pajamas,
in her bed with four gunshot wounds to her head. Lanza then drove to Sandy Hook
Elementary School.
At about 9:35 am, using his
mother's Bushmaster XM15-E2S rifle, Lanza shot his way through a glass window
at the front of the school. He was wearing black clothing, earplugs and an
olive green utility vest, carrying magazines for the rifle. Initial reports
that he had been wearing body armor were incorrect. Some of those present heard
initial shots on the school intercom system, which was being used for morning
announcements.
Principal Dawn Hochsprung and school
psychologist Mary Sherlach were meeting with other faculty members when they
heard gunshots. Hochsprung, Sherlach and lead teacher Natalie Hammond
immediately left the room, rushed to the source of the sounds, and encountered
and confronted Lanza. A faculty member who was at the meeting said the three
women called out "Shooter! Stay put!" which alerted their colleagues
to the danger and saved their lives. Lanza killed both Hochsprung and Sherlach.
Hammond was hit first in the leg and also sustained another gunshot wound. She
laid still in the hallway and then, not hearing any more noise, she crawled
back to the conference room and pressed her body against the door to keep it
closed. She was later treated at Danbury Hospital.
A nine-year-old boy said he heard the
shooter say: "Put your hands up!" and someone else say "Don't
shoot!", people yelling, and many gunshots over the intercom as he, his
classmates, and teacher took refuge in a closet in the gymnasium. Diane Day, a
school therapist who was at the faculty meeting with Hochsprung, heard screaming,
followed by more gunshots. A second teacher, a substitute kindergarten teacher,
was wounded in the attack while closing a door further down the hallway. She
was hit in the foot with a ricochet bullet. Lanza never entered her classroom.
Lanza entered a first-grade classroom
where Lauren Rousseau, a substitute teacher, had herded her first grade
students to the back of the room and was trying to hide them in a bathroom.
Rousseau, behavioral therapist Rachel D'Avino, who had been employed for a week
at the school to work with a special needs student, and fifteen students in
Rousseau's class were killed. Fourteen of the children were dead at the scene;
one injured child was taken to a hospital for treatment but later declared
dead. A six-year-old girl was the sole survivor and was found by police in the
classroom following the shooting. The girl's family pastor said that she
survived the mass shooting by playing dead and remaining still. When she
reached her mother, she said, "Mommy, I'm okay, but all my friends are
dead." The child described the shooter as a very angry man.
Lanza next went to another first-grade
classroom nearby, where there are conflicting reports about the order of
events. According to some reports, the classroom's teacher, Victoria Leigh Soto, had concealed some of the
students in a closet or bathroom and some of the other students were hiding
under desks. Soto was walking back to the classroom door to lock it when Lanza
entered the classroom and killed Soto. Lanza walked to the back of the
classroom, saw the children under the desks and shot them. First grader Jesse
Lewis shouted at his classmates to run for safety, which several of them did. Lewis
was looking directly at Lanza when Lanza fatally shot him. Another account,
given by a surviving child's father, said that Soto had moved the children to
the back of the classroom and they were seated on the floor when Lanza entered.
According to this account, neither Lanza nor any of the occupants of the
classroom spoke. Lanza stared at the people on the floor and pointed the gun at
a boy seated on the floor, but did not fire at the boy, who ultimately
survived. Instead, Lanza shot first Soto and then a first-grade girl. As Lanza
reloaded the gun, according to this account, several of the children ran past
him for safety. The children who ran out of the classroom escaped, perhaps when
Lanza's rifle jammed or when he erred in reloading it. Earlier reports said
that as Lanza entered her classroom, Soto reportedly told him that the children
were in the auditorium. When several of the children came out of their hiding
places and tried to run for safety, Lanza fatally shot them. Soto put herself
between her students and the shooter, who then fatally shot her. Anne Marie
Murphy, a teacher's aide who worked with special-needs students in Soto's
classroom, shielded six-year-old Dylan Hockley with her body, trying to protect
him from the bullets that killed them both. Soto was found deceased near the
north wall of the classroom with a set of keys nearby. Four children were found
dead in the classroom; one injured child was taken to the hospital, but was
later declared dead. Six surviving children from Soto's class and a school bus
driver took refuge at a nearby home. According to the official summary report
released by the state's attorney, nine children in all ran from Soto's
classroom and survived, while two children were found by police hiding in a
bathroom in the classroom. In all, eleven children from Soto's class survived.
Five of Soto's students were killed.
School nurse Sally Cox, 60, hid under
a desk in her office. She later described seeing the door opening and Lanza's
boots and legs facing her desk from approximately 20 feet (6.1 m) away. He
remained standing for a few seconds before turning around and leaving. She and
the school secretary Barbara Halstead called 9-1-1 and hid in a first-aid
supply closet for up to four hours.
Custodian Rick Thorne ran through hallways, alerting classrooms.
First grade teacher Kaitlin Roig, aged
29, hid 14 students in a bathroom and barricaded the door, telling them to be
completely quiet to remain safe. Lanza is believed to have bypassed her
classroom, which was the first classroom on the left side of the hallway,
because, following a lockdown drill weeks earlier, Roig failed to remove a
piece of black construction paper covering the small window in her classroom
door. Lanza may have believed that Roig's classroom was empty because the door
was closed and the window was covered.
School library staff Yvonne Cech and
Maryann Jacob first hid 18 children in a part of the library the school used
for lockdown in practice drills. Discovering that one door would not lock, they
had the children crawl into a storage room, where Cech barricaded the door with
a filing cabinet.
Music teacher Maryrose Kristopik, 50,
barricaded her fourth-graders in a tiny supply closet during the rampage. Lanza
arrived moments later, pounding and yelling "Let me in", while the
students in Kristopik's class quietly hid inside.
Two third graders, chosen as classroom
helpers, were walking down the hallway to the office to deliver the morning
attendance sheet as the shooting began. Teacher Abbey Clements pulled both
children into her classroom, where they hid.
Laura Feinstein, a reading specialist
at the school, gathered two students from outside her classroom and hid with
them under desks after they heard gunshots. Feinstein called the school office
and tried to call 9–1–1 but could not connect because of lack of reception on
her cell phone. She hid with the children for approximately 40 minutes, before
law enforcement came to lead them out of the room.
The police heard the final shot at
9:40:03 a.m, and believe that it was Lanza shooting himself in the lower rear
portion of his head with the Glock 20SF in classroom 10. Lanza was found
wearing a pale green pocket vest over a black polo shirt, over a black T-shirt,
black sneakers, black fingerless gloves, black socks, and a black canvas belt.
Also found in the vicinity of Lanza was a black boonie styled hat, and thin
frame glasses. The Glock was found apparently jammed near the shooter, the
Bushmaster was found several feet away from the shooter, and the Sig Sauer P226
was found on the shooter's person.
Authorities determined that Lanza
reloaded frequently during the shootings, sometimes firing only fifteen rounds
from a thirty-round magazine. He shot all of his victims multiple times, and at
least one victim, six-year-old Noah Pozner, 11 times. Most of the shooting took
place in two first-grade classrooms near the entrance of the school. The
student victims were eight boys and twelve girls, between six and seven years
of age, and the six adults were all women who worked at the school. Bullets
were also found in at least three cars parked outside the school, leading
police to believe that he was firing at a teacher who was standing near a
window.
First
response
The first call to 911 was around 9:35
am, approximately three to five minutes after the shooter had entered the
building. Newtown 911 police dispatch first broadcasts that there is a shooting
at Sandy Hook Elementary (SHES) at 9:36 am about thirty seconds after they
received the first call. Connecticut State Police (CSP) are dispatched at 9:37 am.
Newtown police arrived at the school street at 9:39 am, approximately four
and a half minutes after the 911 call and Connecticut State Police arrive to
the school street at 9:46 am. Newtown police first entered the school at
9:45 am, approximately ten minutes after the first 911 call and
approximately fourteen minutes after the shooting had started. Police entry
into the school is approximately five minutes after the last shot is heard;
when the shooter is believed to have committed suicide. No shots were fired by
the police.
The Newtown police and Connecticut
State Police mobilized local police dog and police tactical units,
a bomb
squad, and a state police helicopter. Police locked down the school and
began evacuating the survivors room by room, escorting groups of students and
adults away from the school. They swept the school for additional shooters at
least four times.
At approximately 10:00 am,
Danbury Hospital scrambled extra medical personnel in expectation of having to
treat numerous victims. Three wounded patients were evacuated to the hospital,
where two children were later declared dead. The other was an unidentified
adult.
The New York City medical examiner
dispatched a portable morgue to assist the authorities. The victims' bodies
were removed from the school and formally identified during the night after the
shooting. A state trooper was assigned to each victim's family to protect their
privacy and provide them with information.
On December 4, 2013, seven 911 calls
relating to the shooting were made public.
Investigation
On-site
Investigators did not find a suicide
note or any messages referring to the planning of the attack. Janet Robinson,
superintendent of Newtown schools, said she had not found any connection
between Lanza's mother and the school in contrast to initial media reports that
stated Lanza's mother had worked there. Police also investigated whether Lanza
was the person who had been in an altercation with four staff members at Sandy
Hook School the day before the massacre. It was presumed that he killed two of
the four staff members involved in the altercation (the principal and the
psychologist) and wounded the third (the lead teacher) in the attack; the
fourth staff member was not at the school that day. The state police stated
that they did not know of any reports about any altercations at the school.
Police sources initially reported
Lanza's sibling, Ryan Lanza, as the perpetrator. This was likely because the
perpetrator was carrying his brother's identification, Ryan told The Jersey
Journal. Lanza's brother voluntarily submitted to questioning by New Jersey
State Police, Connecticut State Police, and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. Police said he was not considered a suspect, and he was not
taken into custody. Ryan Lanza said he had not been in touch with his brother since
2010. Connecticut State Police indicated their concern about misinformation
being posted on social media sites and threatened prosecution of anyone
involved with such activities.
A large quantity of unused ammunition
was recovered inside the school along with three semi-automatic firearms found with Lanza: a
.223-caliber Bushmaster XM15-E2S rifle (with a
30 round magazine), a 10mm Glock handgun, and a 9mm SIG
Sauer P226 handgun. Outside the school, an Izhmash Saiga-12 combat
shotgun was found in the car Lanza had driven.
Shortly after the shooting, police
announced that Lanza used the rifle to kill the victims at the school. At a
press conference on December 15, Dr. H. Wayne Carver II, the Chief Medical
Examiner of Connecticut, was asked about the wounds, and replied "All the
ones that I know of at this point were caused by the long weapon." When
asked if the children suffered before dying, Carver replied by stating that
"If so, not for very long". Under Connecticut law at the time, the
20-year-old Lanza was old enough to carry a long gun, such as a rifle or
shotgun, but too young to own or carry handguns.
On March 28, 2013, court documents
released from the investigation showed that the school shooting had occurred in
the space of less than five minutes with 156 shots fired. This comprised 154
shots from the rifle and two shots from the 10mm pistol used by Adam Lanza to
kill himself, one in the hall and one through his head.
Off-site
Investigators evaluated Lanza's body,
looking for evidence of drugs or medication through toxicology tests.
Additionally, although unusual for an investigation of this type and unlikely
to provide conclusive information, DNA testing
of Lanza was utilized. Although the testing was supposedly being done at the
University of Connecticut, a January 2013 article in The Daily Campus
revealed that neither the UConn genetics department nor the UConn Health Center
in Farmington were aware of any such testing. Lanza's autopsy showed no tumors
or gross deformities in his brain.
Lanza removed the hard drive from his
computer and damaged it prior to the shooting, creating a challenge for
investigators to recover data. At the time of publication of the final report,
it had not been possible to recover data from it. Police believe that Lanza
extensively researched earlier mass shootings, including the 2011 Norway attacks and the 2006 Amish school shooting at a one-room school in
Nickel Mines, Pennsylvania.
Details of the investigation were
reported by law enforcement officials at a meeting of the International
Association of Police Chiefs and Colonels held during the week of March 11,
2013. An article published in the New York Daily News on March 17, 2013,
provided purported details of this report by an anonymous law enforcement
veteran who had attended the meeting. The source stated that the investigation
had found that Lanza had created a 7-by-4-foot sized spreadsheet listing around
500 mass murderers and the weapons they used, which was considered to have
taken years of work and to have been used by Lanza as a "score
sheet". On March 18, 2013, Lt. Paul Vance of the Connecticut State Police
responded that the information from this meeting was "law enforcement
sensitive information" and considered the release to be a leak.
The March 28 documents also provided
details on items found at Lanza's home, including three samurai swords, a
newspaper article about the Northern Illinois University
shooting, and a National Rifle Association certificate.
The NRA denied that Adam Lanza or Nancy Lanza were members and reporters noted
that the NRA site provides training certificate completion templates for
courses offered by NRA affiliated instructors. A gun safe was
found in a bedroom and investigators found more than 1,400 rounds of ammunition
and other firearms. At home, Lanza had access to three more firearms: a .45 Henry
rifle, a .30 Enfield rifle, and a .22
Marlin rifle. These were legally owned by Lanza's mother who was
described as a gun enthusiast.
According to the New York Times,
law enforcement officials commented that Adam Lanza would spend most of his
time in his basement doing solitary activities. Some of which include playing
video games, one of which was the warfare game Call of
Duty. According to these officials, it also appeared that Lanza
"may have taken target practice in the basement".
Final report
The final report summarizing the
investigation into the shooting was published on November 25, 2013. It
concluded that Adam Lanza had acted alone, and that the case was closed. The
report noted that "[Lanza] had a familiarity with and access to firearms
and ammunition and an obsession with mass murders, in particular the April 1999 shootings at Columbine
High School in Colorado." The report did not identify a specific motive
for the shooting, stating "The evidence clearly shows that the shooter
planned his actions, including the taking of his own life, but there is no
clear indication why he did so, or why he targeted Sandy Hook elementary
school." On the question of Lanza's state of mind, the report noted
"significant mental health issues that affected his ability to live a
normal life and to interact with others, even those to whom he should have been
close... What contribution this made to the shootings, if any, is unknown as
those mental health professionals who saw him did not see anything that would
have predicted his future behavior." The report found no evidence that
Lanza had taken drugs or medication that would have affected his behavior, and
observed "'Why did the shooter murder twenty-seven people, including
twenty children?’ Unfortunately, that question may never be answered
conclusively, despite the collection of extensive background information on the
shooter through a multitude of interviews and other sources."
Born
|
Adam
Peter Lanza
April 22, 1992 Kingston, New Hampshire |
Died
|
December
14, 2012 (aged 20)
Newtown, Connecticut |
Cause of
death
|
Suicide
by gunshot to the head
|
Nationality
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American
|
Occupation
|
None
|
Motive
|
Unknown
|
Perpetrator
Adam Peter Lanza (April 22, 1992 – December
14, 2012) and his mother lived in Sandy Hook, 5 miles (8 km) from the
elementary school. He did not have a criminal record. He attended Sandy Hook
Elementary School for a brief time. Afterward, he attended St. Rose of Lima
Catholic School in Newtown, and then Newtown High School, where he was an
honors student. He was taken out of high school at the age of 16, and began
attending Western Conneticut State University shortly thereafter. Subsequent to
his removal from high school, Lanza was home-schooled by his mother, and earned
a GED. Lanza's aunt said his mother removed him from the Newtown public school
system because she was unhappy with the school district's plans for her son. He
attended Western Connecticut State University in 2008 and 2009.
Students and teachers who knew him in
high school described Lanza as "intelligent, but nervous and
fidgety". He avoided attracting attention and was uncomfortable
socializing. He is not known to have had any close friends in school.
Lanza's brother told law enforcement
that Adam was believed to have a personality disorder and was "somewhat
autistic". An anonymous law enforcement official and friends of Nancy
Lanza
reported that Adam had been diagnosed with Asperger
syndrome.
According to the Hartford Courant
and Frontline, Lanza was diagnosed with sensory processing disorder when he was
about 6. This disorder does not have official status by the medical community
as a formal diagnosis but is frequently one of the characteristics of autism.
Following her divorce from Adam's
father, a corporate executive, Nancy Lanza was supported by alimony payments.
A relative commented that she did not have to work because the divorce
settlement had left her "very well off". Initial reports said that
Nancy Lanza had worked as a volunteer at the Sandy Hook Elementary School, but
this was denied by the school superintendent on December 15, 2012.
Her sister-in-law described Nancy
Lanza as a "gun enthusiast who owned at least a dozen firearms". She
often took her two sons to a local shooting range and had them learn to shoot.
Because of concerns that published
accounts of Lanza's autism could result in a backlash against others with the
condition, autism advocates campaigned to clarify that
autism is a brain-related developmental problem and
not a mental illness. The predatory aggression demonstrated
by Lanza in the shooting is generally not seen in the autistic population.
Flowers for those who died in the Sandy Hook shootings |
The Sandy Hook Elementary School makeshift
memorial on Berkshire Road in Newtown, CT. 12 days after shooting. (Wed 12/26)
|
Reactions
Main article: Reaction to the
Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting
President Barack Obama gave a televised address on
the day of the shootings, saying, "We're going to have to come together
and take meaningful action to prevent more tragedies like this, regardless of
the politics." Obama expressed "enormous sympathy for families that
are affected", He also ordered flags to be flown at half-staff at the
White House and other U.S. federal government facilities worldwide in respect
of the victims. On December 16, Obama traveled to Newtown where he met with
victims' families and spoke at an interfaith vigil. President Obama honored the
six slain adults posthumously with the 2012 Presidential Citizens Medal on
February 15, 2013.
Dannel Malloy, the Governor of Connecticut,
addressed the media the evening of the shootings near a local church holding a
vigil for the victims, urging the people of Connecticut to come together and
help each other. Malloy said, "Evil visited this community today, and it
is too early to speak of recovery, but each parent, each sibling, each member
of the family has to understand that Connecticut, we are all in this together,
we will do whatever we can to overcome this event, we will get through
it." Hundreds of mourners, including Malloy, attended vigils in various
churches in Newtown. On December 17, Malloy called for a statewide moment of
silence and church bells to be tolled 26 times at 9:30 am on December 21,
exactly one week after the school shooting.
Arne Duncan, the U.S. Secretary of Education, said:
"...our thanks go out to every teacher, staff member, and first responder
who cared for, comforted, and protected children from harm, often at risk to
themselves. We will do everything in our power to assist and support the healing
and recovery of Newtown."
The day after the shootings, Lanza's father
released a statement:
"Our hearts go out to the families and friends who lost loved ones and to all those who were injured. Our family is grieving along with all those who have been affected by this enormous tragedy. No words can truly express how heartbroken we are. We are in a state of disbelief and trying to find whatever answers we can. We too are asking why. We have cooperated fully with law enforcement and will continue to do so. Like so many of you, we are saddened, but struggling to make sense of what has transpired."
Leaders from many countries and organizations
throughout the world also offered their condolences through the weekend after
the shooting.
|
Gun control
In his speech at the December 16
vigil, President Obama called for using "whatever power this office
holds", to prevent similar tragedies in the future. Nearly 200,000 people
signed a petition at the Obama administration's We the People petitioning website
in support of stricter gun control legislation. President Obama later affirmed
that he would make gun control a "central issue" at the start of his
second term of office, in a speech on December 19; signing 23 executive orders
and proposing 12 congressional actions regarding gun control, one month after
the shooting. The President formed a Gun Violence Task Force to be led by Vice
President Joe Biden to address the causes of gun violence in the United States.
Senators Dianne Feinstein and Joe Lieberman called for an assault weapon ban,
with Feinstein intending to introduce a ban bill on the first day of the new
Congress, while former Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, who was shot and
injured in a 2011 shooting in Tucson, launched Americans for Responsible
Solutions to raise money for further gun control efforts in light of the Sandy
Hook shooting. Fear of future restrictions on firearms led to a spike in sales
of guns, ammunition, and magazines in the weeks following the shooting.
On December 21, the National Rifle
Association called on the United States Congress to appropriate funds for the
hiring of armed police officers in every American school to protect students.
The NRA also announced the creation of a school protection program called the
National School Shield Program, which would be led by former Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) administrator and United States Congressman Asa Hutchinson.
A month after the shooting, President
Obama cited the incident while announcing proposals for increased gun control.
His proposals included universal background checks on firearms purchases, an
assault weapons ban, and limiting magazine capacity to 10 cartridges. Relatives
of the victims in the shooting and survivors from other mass shootings were
official guests during the announcement.
On January 17, 2013, the Utah
Sheriffs' Association sent a letter to President Obama criticizing attempts
"to demonize firearms". In the letter, they suggested that they would
refuse to uphold federal laws that restricted the Second Amendment rights of
their constituents.
In reaction to anticipated
restrictions on firearms, gun permit applications increased dramatically in a
multi-state trend that followed the shooting.
On April 17, a bill that would have
seen the restrictions on gun control, known as the Manchin-Toomey Background
Checks Bill, failed to pass the U.S. Senate by six votes, with 48 Democrats and
4 Republicans voting for the bill, and 5 Democrats and 41 Republicans voting
against. The NRA released a statement critiquing the bill, stating that
"expanding background checks, at gun shows or elsewhere, will not reduce
violent crime or keep our kids safe in their schools." In a speech the
following day, Obama called the failing of the bill "shameful" and
stated how the Republicans had "wilfully lied" about the proposal on
background checks, while Ted Cruz, a leading opponent of the bill, stated that
making a registry is the only way to make the background checks effective.
Video games
Police found "numerous"
video games in the basement of Adam Lanza's home, which was used as a gaming
area, prompting a renewed debate about their effect on young people. Connecticut
Senator Christopher Murphy stated in January 2013 that, as well as guns, video
games played a role in the shootings. He said, "I think there's a question
as to whether he would have driven in his mother's car in the first place if he
didn't have access to a weapon that he saw in video games that gave him a false
sense of courage about what he could do that day." An anonymous
Connecticut police officer also claimed that the shooting, and specifically
Lanza's suicide, can be attributed to Lanza's video game playing and that the
rest of the police department believes similarly. "In the code of a gamer,
even a deranged killer like this little bastard, if somebody else kills you,
they get your points." he said. "They believe that's why he killed
himself."
Wayne LaPierre, CEO and Executive Vice
President of the National Rifle Association, publicly blamed video games for
the shooting, specifically targeting the free online game Kindergarten
Killers created by Gary Short. LaPierre also called for more firearms in
public schools and armed teachers in order to prevent similar attacks. In
November 2013, an unnamed website hosted a video game called The Slaying of
Sandy Hook, which allowed players to reenact the events of the shooting.
The game garnered extremely negative reactions, especially from those related
to the victims. The game was eventually pulled off the site. The game was
allegedly created by Ryan Jake Lambourn, who claimed that the game was about
"the importance of gun control" (sic).
The final report into the shooting,
published in November 2013, noted that "[Lanza] played video games often,
both solo at home and online. They could be described as both violent and
non-violent. One person described the shooter as spending the majority of his
time playing non-violent video games all day, with his favorite at one point
being Super Mario Brothers. The report described his liking for Dance
Dance Revolution, which he played frequently for hours with an acquaintance
at a theater which had a commercial version of the game, and also played the
game at home. The final report did not make a link between video games and the
motive for the shooting.
Remember
the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting (PHOTO SOURCE: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=561568960535815&set=a.170020733023975.45795.170009073025141&type=1&theater)
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Impact on the
community
The school was closed indefinitely
following the shooting, partially because it remained a crime scene. Sandy Hook
students returned to classes on January 3, 2013, at Chalk Hill Middle School in
nearby Monroe at the town's invitation. Chalk Hill at the time was an unused
facility, refurbished after the shooting, with desks and equipment brought in
from Sandy Hook Elementary. The Chalk Hill school was temporarily renamed
"Sandy Hook". The University of Connecticut created a scholarship for
the surviving children of the shootings.
On January 31, the Newtown school
board voted unanimously to ask for police officer presence in all of its
elementary schools; previously other schools in the district had such
protection, but Sandy Hook had not been one of those.
On May 10, a task force of
twenty-eight appointed members voted to demolish the existing Sandy Hook
Elementary school and have a new school built in its place. The $57 million
proposed project was sent to the Newtown Board of Education for approval, to be
followed by a public ballot. In October 2013, Newtown residents voted 4,504–558
in favor of the proposed demolition and reconstruction, to be funded by $50
million in state money. Demolition began on October 25, 2013.
After the town clerk's office was
inundated with requests from the media, Connecticut House of Representatives
Republican Dan Carter introduced legislation that would restrict access to
public information available under the Freedom of Information Act.
On June 5, both houses (Senate and
House of Representatives) of the Connecticut state legislature passed a bill
modifying the state's Freedom of Information Act in order to "prevent the
release of crime-scene photos and video evidence from the Sandy Hook Elementary
School massacre and other Connecticut homicides, concerned such records would
be spread on the Internet." The bill then went on to Gov. Dannel P.
Malloy's desk for his signature. The bill creates a new exemption to the
state's Freedom of Information Act. The release of photographs, film, video,
digital or other visual images depicting a homicide victim is prevented if such
records "could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted
invasion of the personal privacy of the victim or the victim's surviving family
members."
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