Tag Archives: Sandy Hook Elementary School

Families of Newtown shooting victims to receive $281,000 each

Families of the 26 children and educators killed in the Connecticut school shooting last year will receive $281,000 each under a final plan, released Wednesday, for dividing up $7.7 million in donations.

The families of 12 surviving children who witnessed the Dec. 14 shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School will each get $20,000. Two staff members who were injured will get $75,000 each.

The Newtown-Sandy Hook Community Foundation released the final plan after the draft proposal by a distribution committee of the foundation was recommended last week. The foundation’s board approved the plan Monday.

“The board wishes to express its appreciation for the thorough and thoughtful efforts of the distribution committee,” foundation Chairman Charles Herrick said.

Retired U.S. District Court Judge Alan Nevas, the committee chairman, thanked Kenneth Feinberg for his advice on how to allocate the $7.7 million to the 40 families.

“We went through a thoughtful and deliberative process which included private meetings with many of the families and received input at a public forum,” Nevas said. “While no amount of money can serve to ease the pain experienced by these families, we feel confident in these recommendations and wish the foundation well in its continuing work to help the community of Newtown heal.”

Twenty-year-old Adam Lanza shot his mother at their home before driving to the school and assaulting school children and staff, then killing himself as police arrived. His motive remains unclear.

The foundation was asked to divide up more than $11 million raised with the help of the United Way. The foundation decided to divvy up $7.7 million to the families and survivors, and to have committees decide on uses for the remainder of the donations.

At a public hearing last week, some questioned the process for arriving at the $7.7 million for the families and why all the money wasn’t going to the victims. Some victims’ families have said dealing with questions over how to distribute the money has caused them more pain.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy weighed in Friday with a letter expressing frustration with the process and calling for an independent party to handle the remaining nearly $4 million in donations. Malloy said he hopes families are not precluded from receiving additional money.

Patrick Kinney, a foundation spokesman, countered that the fund was created to help those most affected by the shooting, including families, surviving students and first responders and is best managed by local people who understand their long-term needs. He said the remaining money will be used for services to support the needs of all those affected by the tragedy, which doesn’t exclude anyone who has already received money.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Conn. state employee fired for allegedly showing Newtown gunman's body

The employee at Connecticut’s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner accused of letting her husband see the body of the Newtown school shooter has been fired.

Chief Medical Examiner Dr. H. Wayne Carver, in a dismissal letter to Jean Henry released Friday, wrote that bringing her husband into the morgue in December violated the agency’s ethical mission and showed “extremely poor judgment.”

Chris DeFrancesco, a University of Connecticut Health Center spokesman, says a grievance process is underway and no further information is available.

Henry, a processing technician, was accused of showing Adam Lanza‘s body to her husband on Dec. 16, two days after he killed 26 people at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

A message was left Friday for Henry at her home.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

'Furious' Giffords: The Senate Shamed Itself

By Matt Cantor It was “political fear” and “cold calculations” that drove a Senate minority to block a gun background-check measure yesterday. But “that fear must be nothing compared to the fear the first graders in Sandy Hook Elementary School felt as their lives ended in a hail of bullets,” writes Gabrielle Giffords

From: http://www.newser.com/story/166433/furious-giffords-the-senate-shamed-itself.html

Lanza Beaten by Sandy Hook Classmates: Source

By Evann Gastaldo The New York Daily News calls it an “exclusive” and the Huffington Post calls it a “possible motive”: As a child, Adam Lanza was bullied and even beaten by his fellow students at Sandy Hook Elementary School, a relative of Nancy Lanza tells the Daily News . Nancy Lanza was so…

From: http://www.newser.com/story/166368/lanza-beaten-by-sandy-hook-classmates-source.html

Boston Marathon bombings bring back painful memories for Newtown runners

Laura Nowacki rushed to help the shooting victims at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. As a first responder, the pediatrician was stunned at the horror she encountered.

Four months later, she hurried out of Boston with her husband and four children, anxious to keep them safe after the deadly explosions near the finish line of the historic marathon she had just completed.

“That really scared us,” she said Tuesday. “My daughter was really upset, so we needed to be a family first and get back home.”

The race was supposed to help Nowacki recover from the shock of the Newtown shootings that killed 20 children and six educators — and from which her 10-year-old daughter fled uninjured. Instead, it brought the painful memories back.

“Running has been kind of my escape, my freedom,” Nowacki said. “We felt like we were getting back to normalcy. My husband said, `Leave it all in Boston and come back to a fresh start.’ And now it’s just unbelievable.”

About 40 minutes after she completed the Boston Marathon on Monday, two explosions near the finish line killed three people and wounded more than 170, more than a dozen critically.

The death of 8-year-old Martin Richard, who was watching the race, deepened the connection to the Newtown shootings of school children.

“I think there are families back here in town that are feeling it again,” Nowacki said.

Nowacki was part of a group of eight people who ran the Boston Marathon for the Newtown Strong Fund, which was set up to raise money in the wake of the Sandy Hook shootings last Dec. 14. She was its spokeswoman and attended a news conference in Boston last week at which marathon organizers announced they would honor the victims of the shootings with a special mile marker at the end of the 26th mile of the 26.2-mile race on Monday.

Before the race began, there were 26 seconds of silence in honor of each of the 26 victims. And each of the eight Newtown Strong runners wore T-shirts with the names of those victims on the back. Each mile of the race was dedicated to one of them.

“When I ran each mile, I thought about each kid,” Nowacki said, “from Charlotte Bacon on Mile 1 and all the way to Allison Wyatt at the 20th mile. Her mom cheered me on when I was running. So I feel like each mile did mean something to the families.”

Each of the last six miles was run in honor of the educators who were shot.

“I felt strong coming across the line,” said Nowacki, who finished the race in 3 hours, 28 minutes, 55 seconds. “I felt like I came and did what I meant to do and you heard the cheers for Newtown all the way along. It was a good thing. And then we got back to the hotel and started hearing the sirens.”

David Oelberg, another Newtown Strong runner, had crossed the finish line on Boylston Street about 12 minutes earlier in his fourth Boston Marathon

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/X7I_Hj7gYSU/

Weekly Address: Sandy Hook Victim’s Mother Calls for Commonsense Gun Responsibility Reforms

By The White House

Remarks of Francine Wheeler
The President’s Weekly Address

Hi. As you’ve probably noticed, I’m not the President. I’m just a citizen. And as a citizen, I’m here at the White House today because I want to make a difference and I hope you will join me.

My name is Francine Wheeler. My husband David is with me. We live in Sandy Hook, Connecticut.

David and I have two sons. Our older son Nate, soon to be 10 years old, is a fourth grader at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Our younger son, Ben, age six, was murdered in his first-grade classroom on December 14th, exactly 4 months ago this weekend.

David and I lost our beloved son, but Nate lost his best friend. On what turned out to be the last morning of his life, Ben told me, quite out of the blue, “ I still want to be an architect, Mama, but I also want to be a paleontologist, because that’s what Nate is going to be and I want to do everything Nate does.”

Ben’s love of fun and his excitement at the wonders of life were unmatched His boundless energy kept him running across the soccer field long after the game was over. He couldn’t wait to get to school every morning. He sang with perfect pitch and had just played at his third piano recital. Irrepressibly bright and spirited, Ben experienced life at full tilt.

Until that morning. 20 of our children, and 6 of our educators – gone. Out of the blue.

I’ve heard people say that the tidal wave of anguish our country felt on 12/14 has receded. But not for us. To us, it feels as if it happened just yesterday. And in the four months since we lost our loved ones, thousands of other Americans have died at the end of a gun. Thousands of other families across the United States are also drowning in our grief.

Please help us do something before our tragedy becomes your tragedy.

Sometimes, I close my eyes and all I can remember is that awful day waiting at the Sandy Hook Volunteer Firehouse for the boy who would never come home – the same firehouse that was home to Ben’s Tiger Scout Den 6. But other times, I feel Ben’s presence filling me with courage for what I have to do – for him and all the others taken from us so violently and too soon.

We have to convince the Senate to come together and pass commonsense gun responsibility reforms that will make our communities safer and prevent more tragedies like the one we never thought would happen to us.

When I packed for Washington on Monday, it looked like the Senate might not act at all. Then, after the President spoke in Hartford, and a dozen of us met with Senators to share our stories, more than two-thirds of the Senate voted to move forward.

But that’s only the start. They haven’t yet passed any bills that will help keep guns out of

From: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/04/13/weekly-address-sandy-hook-victim-s-mother-calls-commonsense-gun-responsi

Can The U.N. Ban America’s Guns?

By Breaking News

United Nations logo SC Can the U.N. Ban Americas Guns?

The rumor flashed across the Internet last winter: the Obama administration is going to use a United Nations arms treaty to get around the Second Amendment and ban all guns.

In the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings and the renewed push for “gun safety” (the current politically correct term) the rumor was all too believable. But was it true?

At the time the panic started, the answer was “no.” The U.N. had been working on an anti-gun treaty for years but had never actually produced a result. Last fall, Obama gave his support to the next step of the process. That was enough to set the rumor mill churning.

But as of April 2, 2013, the long-rumored treaty finally exists. All Second Amendment supporters should be aware of it — but need not panic. It’s dangerous of course. The Obama administration and long-time anti-gunners in the Senate would love to use it to curtail firearms. But whether this treaty will ever affect U.S. gun owners is up to us.

Read More at Lew Rockwell . By Claire Wolfe.

From: http://www.westernjournalism.com/can-the-u-n-ban-americas-guns/

Massachusetts girl raises money to send Sandy Hook teacher on Disney vacation

A Massachusetts girl declined birthday gifts in order to raise money for a teacher who risked her life during the mass shooting in December at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., MyFoxBoston.com reported.

Natalie Barros, 10, of Tyngsborough, Mass., decided she wanted to help teacher Kaitlin Roig after hearing Roig barricaded her first-grade students in a bathroom after gunman Adam Lanza opened fire inside the Connecticut elementary school.

“I set out to have Kaitlin have a smile on her face again,” Barros told MyFoxBoston.com. “I really wanted that to happen.”

Barros collected donations at her birthday in hopes of sending Roig and her fiance to Disney World.

Roig learned of Barros’ efforts, and the two met over ice cream last week.

“Who she was in person was beyond what’s the act she did,” Roig told MyFoxBoston.com. “It’s just so clear that she is full of life and love and happiness, and it just radiates out of her.”

Click for more from MyFoxBoston.com.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/national/~3/t1VlIplDPqc/

President Obama Tells Newtown Families He Will Keep Fighting for the Votes They Deserve

By Megan Slack

President Barack Obama talks on the phone with Nicole Hockley and families of the victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings in Newtown, Conn., in the Oval Office, April 11, 2013.

(Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Today, the Senate voted to move a step closer toward considering legislation that will help reduce gun violence. Shortly after the vote, President Obama made a call to family members of the victims of the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Press Secretary Jay Carney said in this morning’s press briefing that “the President congratulated the families on this important step forward, noting that the bipartisan progress would not have been possible without their efforts. He reiterated that much work remains, and pledged to continue fighting for the votes they deserve.”

The families are currently here in Washington, D.C. to ask Congress to pass common-sense measures to reduce gun violence.

President Obama is calling on all everyone who wants to prevent future tragedies like the one that happened at Sandy Hook to stand up and make their voices heard.

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From: http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2013/04/11/president-obama-tells-newtown-families-he-will-keep-fighting-votes-they-deserve

Kevin Michael Purfield Charged With Harassing Aurora Theater Shooting Victims’ Families

By The Huffington Post News Editors

PORTLAND, Ore., April 10 (Reuters) – An Oregon man with a history of mental distress was arrested on Wednesday on suspicion of harassing family members of some of the 12 people slain by a gunman who opened fire on moviegoers inside a Colorado, theater last summer, police said.
Kevin Michael Purfield, 45, of Oregon, is accused of contacting relatives of the Aurora, Colorado, victims through telephone calls, email and social media networks, police in Portland and Aurora said.
Portland Police Bureau Sergeant Pete Simpson said he had little information about Purfield’s background aside from the fact that law enforcement had previous contact with the suspect, including at least one “mental health call.”
A spokesman for the Aurora police, Frank Fania, said Purfield’s contacts with victims’ families numbered in the dozens, and started with the suspect offering unfounded conspiracies about the massacre.
“In the beginning it was this conspiracy theory stuff,” Fania said, “then it went away from the conspiracy theory into personally attacking the families, calling them names and hoping bad things would happen to them.”
A Facebook page and blog identified as belonging to Purfield stated, for example, that some coffins of the Aurora victims were empty. There were also discussions of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on America and the December 2012 mass shooting that left 20 children and six adults slain at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.
The suspect in the Aurora shooting rampage, James Holmes, 25, is charged with multiple counts of first-degree murder and attempted murder, and prosecutors announced last week that they would seek the death penalty if he were convicted.
The July 20 shooting spree, unleashed during a midnight showing of the Batman film “The Dark Knight Rises,” also left 58 people wounded and ranks with the Sandy Hook killings as one of the deadliest bursts of U.S. gun violence ever.
Aurora police contacted the Portland Police Bureau in February, seeking assistance in an investigation into the harassment reported by victims’ families.
Purfield was arrested without incident

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Biden: Threats To Block Gun Bill ‘embarrassing’

By Breaking News

WASHINGTON — Vice President Joe Biden says he refuses to believe a small group of senators will block a vote on gun legislation.

The vice president says it would be “embarrassing” if a filibuster would be the climax of a national tragedy like the shooting at Connecticut’s Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Read More at OfficialWire .

Photo Credit: Floyd Brown Creative Commons

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Obama Says He’s ‘determined As Ever’ For Gun Bill

By Breaking News

HARTFORD, Conn. — With time running out on the chance to pass gun control legislation, President Barack Obama on Monday warned Congress not to use delaying tactics against tighter regulations and told families of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims that he’s “determined as ever” to honor their children with tougher laws.

Obama’s gun control proposals have run into resistance on Capitol Hill, leaving their fate in doubt. Efforts by Senate Democrats to reach compromise with Republicans over expanding required federal background checks have yet to yield an agreement, and conservatives were promising to try blocking the Senate from even beginning debate on gun control legislation.

“The day Newtown happened was the toughest day of my presidency,” Obama said in an emotional speech from Connecticut’s capital, an hour’s drive from Newtown. “But I’ve got to tell you, if we don’t respond to this, that’ll be a tough day for me too.”

Some of the Sandy Hook families are making an attempt to push through the bill. Obama met with them privately before his speech at the University of Hartford Monday evening, then brought 12 family members back to Air Force One for the trip back to Washington. The relatives want to meet with senators who’ve yet to back the legislation to encourage their support in memory of their loved ones.

“Nothing’s going to be more important in making sure that the Congress moves forward this week than hearing from them,” Obama said. His eyes teared as he described Nicole Hockley, who lost her 6-year-old son, Dylan, saying how she asks him every night to come to her in her dreams so she can see him again.

Read More at OfficialWire . By Nedra Pickler.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Newtown Sends Out The Last Post-Shooting Donations

By The Huffington Post News Editors

HARTFORD, Conn. — Thousands of the toys and other gifts that poured into Newtown following the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School ended up going to children’s hospitals, mental health programs, victims of Superstorm Sandy; some are even destined even for homeless children in India.

And a lunch box, a backpack and a stuffed animal went to 9-year-old Rashid Ricketts, of Poughkeepsie, N.Y.

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More on Education

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Obama 'Determined' to Get Gun Bill

With time running out on the chance to pass gun control legislation, President Barack Obama today warned Congress not to use delaying tactics against tighter regulations and told families of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims that he’s “determined as ever” to honor their children with tougher laws. “The… …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Emails reportedly show history of illness in Adam Lanza's family

The mother of Newtown school gunman Adam Lanza reportedly told friends about a genetic disorder that killer her grandfather, nearly took her own like and had already manifested itself in her son.

In emails and private chats, Nancy Lanza said her son had been diagnosed with a form of Asperger’s syndrome a sensory perception disorder that prevented him from recognizing pain and led him to recoil from physical touch, the New York Daily News reports.

“Nancy indicated that Adam’s issues were genetic like hers,” friend Marvin LaFontaine told the newspaper.

Lanza, in hundreds of emails obtained by the newspaper, indicated that doctors had no explanation for the autoimmune disorder that killed her grandfather in just six weeks. Doctors found lesions on her brain in 1999 and Nancy Lanza characterized her illness as “like living on top of a time bomb.”

“I am carrying the gene for this type of self-destruct,” she emailed LaFontaine at the time. “My diagnosis was not good. I was going under the premise that I had a limited time left . . . about enough to get the boys settled in. . . . At one point I was trying to deal with the time frame of about 12 months.”

The disease had gone into remission, but Lanza told a friend in January 2012 it had “flared up.” By November, she realized her son’s troubles were deeper than just genetics. Just two weeks before the Newtown shooting, Nancy discovered pictures in her son’s room featuring dead bodies, but she did not confront him.

“One (drawing) had a woman clutching a religious item, like rosary beads, and holding a child, and she was getting all shot up in the back with blood flying everywhere,” LaFontaine said. “Nancy was disturbed, really disturbed, but didn’t confront him … She wanted to think it over.”

Adam Lanza, 20, fatally shot his mother before killing 26 more people during a rampage at Sandy Hook Elementary School on Dec. 14.

Click for more from the New York Daily News.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Senator Calls Violent Games a Negative Influence

California Senator Dianne Feinstein has linked violent video games to recent shootings and has stated that Congress may have to step in if the industry doesn’t change its actions.

She believes that games have “a very negative role for young people, and the industry ought to take note of that.” She went on to say, “If Sandy Hook doesn’t do it, if the knowledge of these video games this young man played doesn’t, then maybe we have to proceed, but that is in the future.”

The man responsible for the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School last year was known to be an avid gamer.

Games have been in the forefront of this kind of discussion before, including a 2011 ruling by the Supreme Court that protected them as free speech and recent comments from other senators.

Continue reading…

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney, 4/5/2013

By The White House

1:26 P.M. EDT

MR. CARNEY: Before I take your questions, I just wanted to let you know about some events next week related to the President's push for common-sense measures to reduce gun violence.

As the Senate returns from the Easter recess to begin considering such measures, the President, the Vice President and the First Lady will hold events outside of Washington D.C. and at the White House to encourage Americans to make their voices heard in this important debate. As you know, the President will visit Hartford, Connecticut, where he will meet with families affected by the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, and to give a speech reminding members of Congress that those who have been most affected by tragic gun violence deserve a vote on the measures currently being considered.

On Tuesday, the Vice President will hold an event with law enforcement officials here at the White House, echoing the President's call on Congress to pass common-sense gun legislation.

On Wednesday, the First Lady will visit her hometown of Chicago, where she will speak from her experience as a Chicagoan and a mother about the importance of providing young people with opportunities to achieve their full potential, including by allowing them to grow up in safe, violence-free communities.

And then on Thursday, Vice President Biden will appear on MSNBC's “Morning Joe” for a roundtable discussion with the show's hosts and experts with diverse opinions on the gun safety debate.

And with that, I will take your questions. Jim, Associated Press.

Q Budget question, and one other topic. The budget the President will propose incorporates what you have put up on the screen there, which is the President's offer to Speaker Boehner back in December. That offer was rejected by House Republicans, and I'm wondering what the President thinks has changed that would actually make this a viable proposal now, four months later, or even during the year, as that budget gets debated?

Q Well, I'll say a couple of things. One, it wasn't rejected by House Republicans. The Speaker of the House walked away from those negotiations, unfortunately. I think the offer the President made to Speaker of the House Boehner was widely viewed — appropriately — as a good-faith offer that met the Republicans halfway on the issues of revenue on the one hand, and entitlement reforms and savings from entitlement reforms on the other.

And as we have been saying all along, that offer stands. It has been available to Republicans ever since. And it is, I can confirm, a part of the President's budget proposal next week.

It is part of it because the President believes we need a broad, balanced approach to our fiscal challenges. We need a budget that reduces the deficit but also invests in infrastructure and education and innovation; that makes the investments that help the middle class grow; that protects middle-class …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House Press Office

NRA Attacks Connecticut ‘Sandy Hook Law’

By The Huffington Post News Editors

WASHINGTON — The National Rifle Association’s top two leaders on Thursday blasted Connecticut’s new gun control law aimed at preventing violence like the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre.

Wayne LaPierre, CEO of the pro-gun lobbying group, called Connecticut’s law, passed early Thursday, part of a “decade-long agenda against firearms” during an interview on Fox News. NRA president David Keene, meanwhile, told the conservative publication Newsmax that gun control laws like those passed in Connecticut and Colorado were “the real threats.” New York and Maryland also have toughened gun laws since the school slaughter in December.

The NRA opposes any restrictions on high-capacity magazines or military-style assault rifles, both now banned by the new Connecticut law. The law also provides funding for school safety and has stricter eligibility requirements for ammunition purchases. New gun control laws like the one in Connecticut and another recently passed in Colorado represent rare public losses for the powerful gun lobby, which helped to organize opposition to both bills, as well as large protests in Denver and Hartford.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Photo released of Newtown gunman by Connecticut college

A photo of the gunman who killed 20 first-graders and six adults at a Newtown, Conn., elementary school has been released by the college he attended several years ago.

The college identification photo of a wide-eyed Adam Lanza was released by Western Connecticut State University in Danbury in response to a records request by the media.

Among the newly released records, Lanza responded “none” to a question asking if he had any documented disabling condition.

The 20-year-old, who went on a shooting rampage at Sandy Hook Elementary School on Dec. 14, was said to have been diagnosed with Asperger’s, a disorder not associated with violence.

Lanza took his last class at the college in 2009. He declined to answer questions in 2008 about his gender and how he described himself.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Stop 'bad guys with guns' by implementing good policies

Tragedies involving children, such as the one at Sandy Hook Elementary School, fuel massive outrage and calls for immediate action to prevent similar atrocities. The National Rifle Association (NRA) has put forward a National Shield School Proposal which supports the placement of armed security in all schools. A new review by Gordon and Angela Crews from Marshall University in West Virginia and Catherine Burton from The Citadel in South Carolina attempts to find a balanced and unbiased view of the facts within this heated and emotional debate. Their paper, which appears in the American Journal of Criminal Justice, published by Springer, sets out what these proposals would mean to schools and offers some alternative suggestions. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org