Grief and anger as Florida prepares to
bury victims of school massacre
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[February 16, 2018]
By Bernie Woodall and Zachary Fagenson
PARKLAND, Fla. (Reuters) - As families prepared on Friday to bury
victims of another U.S. mass shooting, grief mixed with anger amid signs
of possible lapses in school security and indications that law
enforcement may have missed clues about the suspected gunman's plans.
One distraught mother who said she had just spent two hours making
funeral preparations for her 14-year-old child expressed disbelief that
a gunman could just stroll into school and open fire, and she appealed
to President Donald Trump to take action.
Nikolas Cruz, 19, identified as a former student at Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, who had been expelled for
disciplinary problems, walked into the school on Wednesday and opened
fire with an assault rifle, killing 17 students and facility members and
injuring 15 others, police said.
The shooting has raised questions among anguished parents about the
adequacy of school security measures and renewed a national debate on
Capitol Hill and elsewhere about the epidemic of gun violence in
American schools.
"How do we allow a gunman to come into our children’s school? How did
they get through security? What security is there?" Lori Alhadeff
shouted into the camera in an emotionally raw appearance on CNN.
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"The gunman, the crazy person, just walks right into the school, knocks
down the window to my child’s door and starts shooting, shooting her
...," cried Alhadeff, whose daughter Alyssa was among the dead.
Cruz, charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder, made a brief
initial court appearance on Thursday, in which he was ordered held
without bond.
"He's a broken human being," his lawyer, public defender Melissa
McNeill, told reporters. "He's sad, he's mournful, he's remorseful."
"PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL SHOOTER"
Cruz may have foreshadowed the attack in a comment on YouTube,
investigated by the FBI. The Federal Bureau of Investigation disclosed
it received a tip in September about the message that read: "I'm going
to be a professional school shooter," by a user named Nikolas Cruz.
However, FBI agents had no information pointing to the "time, location
or true identity" of the person behind the message, Robert Lasky,
special agent in charge of the FBI's Jacksonville office, told
reporters.
YouTube ultimately removed the material in question, and the FBI's
inquiry was dropped until the name Nikolas Cruz surfaced again in
connection with Wednesday's massacre.
Authorities say Cruz, identified as a former student at Stoneman Douglas
High who had been expelled for disciplinary problems, walked into the
school shortly before dismissal time, pulled a fire alarm and opened
fire as students and teachers streamed out of classrooms into the halls.
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Daniel Journey (C), an 18-year-old senior at Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School in Parkland, attends a community prayer vigil
for victims of yesterday's shooting at his school, at Parkridge
Church in Pompano Beach, Florida, February 15, 2018. Journey said he
lost two friends he had known and grown up with since they were
seven years old in the shooting. REUTERS/Jonathan Drake
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The sheriff said Cruz arrived at the school by way of the Uber
ride-sharing service and left the scene on foot, mixing in "with a
group that were running away, fearing for their lives."
He walked into a Walmart, bought a beverage at a Subway outlet
inside the store, then visited a McDonald's before he was spotted
and detained by a police officer in the adjacent town of Coconut
Creek, Israel said.
Former classmates have described Cruz as a social outcast with a
reputation as a trouble-maker, as well as someone who was "crazy
about guns." The sheriff has said some of the online and social
media activity Cruz engaged in was "very, very disturbing."
Wednesday's shooting ranks as the greatest loss of life from school
gun violence after the 2012 shooting rampage at Sandy Hook
Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, that left 20
first-graders and six adult educators dead.
"It is not enough to simply take actions that make us feel like we
are making a difference," Trump said at the White House in a speech
that emphasized school safety and mental health while avoiding any
mention of gun policy. "We must actually make that difference."
Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives criticized the
Republican leadership on Wednesday for refusing to take up
legislation on tightening background checks for prospective gun
buyers.
Some gun control proponents and legal experts said Wednesday's
shooting might have been averted if Florida were among the handful
of U.S. states with laws allowing police and family members to
obtain restraining orders barring people suspected of being a threat
from possessing guns.
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Cruz had recently moved in with another family after his mother's
November death, said Jim Lewis, a lawyer representing the family,
bringing his AR-15 along with other belongings.
The family believed Cruz was depressed, but attributed that to his
mother's death, not mental illness, Lewis said.
(Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee)
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