Children in Connecticut rampage, all six and seven, shot repeatedly – World Updates | The Star Online


Children in Connecticut rampage, all six and seven, shot repeatedly – World Updates | The Star Online.

 

Sunday, December 16, 2012

Children in Connecticut rampage, all six and seven, shot repeatedly

By Ernest Scheyder and Rob Cox

NEWTOWN, Connecticut (Reuters) – Twelve girls and eight boys. One had celebrated her seventh birthday just four days before her death. They included Charlotte and Jack, Noah and Grace.

A memorial is seen along the road to Sandy Hook Elementary School a day after a mass shooting in Newtown, Connecticut December 15, 2012. REUTERS/Adrees Latif
A memorial is seen along the road to Sandy Hook Elementary School a day after a mass shooting in Newtown, Connecticut December 15, 2012. REUTERS/Adrees Latif

 

Dressed in “cute kid stuff,” all 20 died when a heavily armed 20-year-old gunman forced his way into their school, Sandy Hook Elementary, and shot them and six women in an act of violence that has shattered their once-tranquil suburban town.

“They were first-graders,” said Connecticut Chief Medical Examiner Dr. H. Wayne Carver II, before releasing the names of all the victims of the school shootings on Saturday.

Asked to describe the attack, Carver, who oversaw the autopsies of all the victims and conducted many himself, called it “the worst I have seen.”

The shooter, identified by law enforcement officials as Adam Lanza, killed his mother Nancy on Friday, then drove to the school where he gunned down another 26 people before taking his own life in one of the deadliest mass shootings in U.S. history.

 

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He fired a rifle, shooting his victims multiple times. Parents identified their children through pictures, a process intended to minimize their shock, Carver said.

Members of the close-knit community went into public mourning on Saturday as the depth of the tragedy became clear.

“I don’t know how to get through something like this,” said Robbie Parker, a 30-year-old physician’s assistant whose 6-year-old daughter Emilie was among the dead.

“My wife and I don’t understand how to process this and how to get our lives going,” Parker told reporters. The oldest of his three kids, Emilie, “could just light up a room,” he said.

Police did not officially identify Lanza or his mother, but his father on Saturday issued a statement saying he too was struggling to understand his son’s actions.

“No words can truly express how heartbroken we are,” Peter Lanza said. “We are in a state of disbelief and trying to find whatever answers we can.”

While Americans have seen many mass shootings in the past decades, the victims have rarely been so young. On Saturday, some Democratic lawmakers called for sweeping new gun-control measures, a move certain to run up against stiff opposition from the nation’s powerful pro-gun lobby.

President Barack Obama plans to travel to the affluent suburb of 27,000 people about 80 miles (130 km) from New York City on Sunday to meet with victims’ families and speak at a vigil at 7 p.m. local time (0000 GMT), the White House said in a statement.

MISSING FROM THE NATIVITY

Townsfolk packed into the church memorial services held throughout the day. On Saturday night, the pews at St. Rose of Lima were packed with parishioners standing at the rear of the church for a Nativity concert.

There was a live cow, a donkey and a camel. But at least one person was missing – 6-year-old Olivia Engel, who was to have had a role.

“She was supposed to be an angel in the play,” said Reverend Robert Weiss. “Now she’s an angel up in heaven.”

Town fire officials set up 26 Christmas trees, decorated with stuffed animals, near the school as a memorial to the victims – many of whom were children who may have been hoping for such toys as their own holiday presents.

“Those innocent little boys and girls were taken from their families far too soon,” said Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy. “Let us all hope and pray those children are now in a place where that innocence will always be protected.”

One of the victims, Josephine Gay, had celebrated her seventh birthday on Tuesday.

Rabbi Shaul Praver said he had spent time with Veronika Pozner, whose 6-year-old son Noah, was among the victims.

“We encouraged her to focus on her other four children that need her and not to try to plan out the rest of her life,” Praver said.

The adult victims, some of whom died defending the students, ranged in age from 27 to 56. Carver, the medical examiner, said all the bodies had examined had been shot with a rifle. He said he and his staff had not yet examined the shooter or his mother.

 

PENDUDUK Minneapolis menahan tangisan ketika menyertai perhimpunan mengenang kejadian amuk Lanza di Taman Martin Luther King Park, semalam.

MOTIVES EMERGING

Police earlier said they had assembled “some very good evidence” on the killer’s motives.

“Our investigators at the crime scene … did produce some very good evidence in this investigation that our investigators will be able to use in, hopefully, painting the complete picture as to how – and more importantly why – this occurred,” Connecticut State Police Lieutenant Paul Vance told reporters.

Shooter Adam Lanza had struggled at times to fit in in his suburban community and his mother Nancy pulled him out of school for several years, to home-school him, said Louise Tambascio, the owner of My Place Restaurant, where his mother was a long-time patron.

Nancy Lanza legally owned a Sig Sauer and a Glock, both handguns commonly used by police, and a military-style Bushmaster .223 M4 carbine, according to law enforcement officials, who also said they believed Adam Lanza used at least some of those weapons.

The death toll exceeded that of one of the most notorious U.S. school shootings, the 1999 rampage at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado, where two teenagers killed 13 students and staff before fatally shooting themselves.

At Virginia Tech, a Blacksburg, Virginia university where in 2007 a gunman killed 32 people in the deadliest school shooting in U.S. history, an announcer extended sympathies to the residents of Newtown before a basketball game.

“This campus … shares a deep sense of grief,” the announcer said. “We open our hearts to that community.”

(Additional reporting by Dan Burns, Edward Krudy, Edith Honan, Chris Kaufman, Dave Gregorio, Colleen Jenkins and Chris Francescani; Writing by Scott Malone and Daniel Trotta; Editing by Will Dunham and Eric Walsh)

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