Thousands brave freezing cold in vigil
for Illinois shooting victims
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[February 18, 2019]
By Robert Chiarito
AURORA, Ill. (Reuters) - More than 2,000
people braved icy rain in sub-freezing temperatures in Illinois on
Sunday for a vigil paying respects to five people killed and five police
officers wounded by a factory worker who opened fire on Friday after
losing his job.
Solemn mourners stood before five white crosses with the names of the
dead that became a shrine to the victims bearing pictures and
hand-written remembrances outside the factory where the shooting took
place in Aurora, about 40 miles (64 km) west of Chicago.
"My heart is broken again for the family members of the victims," said
Mary Kay Mace, mother of the late Ryanne Mace, who was killed 11 years
ago in a mass shooting at Northern Illinois University.
"I'm living proof that you can survive it, however. It's a hard,
difficult trek but it can be done," said Mace, 55, who drove three hours
from Petersburg, Illinois, and wore a university pin to honor shooting
victim Trevor Wehner, a 21-year-old intern from NIU who was on his first
day on the job.
The other fatal victims were Josh Pinkard, the plant manager; Clayton
Parks, the human resources manager; Russell Beyer, a mold operator and
union chairman; and Vicente Juarez, a stock room attendant and fork lift
operator.
A sixth employee and five police officers responding to the scene were
wounded. The gunman himself was slain about 90 minutes later in a
gunfight with police who stormed the building.
Friday's bloodshed marked the latest outbreak of gun violence in a
nation where mass shootings have become almost commonplace, and came a
day after the first anniversary of the massacre of 17 people by a gunman
at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida.
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Mourners attend a vigil for five people killed in a shooting
incident at Henry Pratt Company in Aurora, Illinois, U.S. February
17, 2019. REUTERS/Robert Chiarito
Several local pastors spoke and the vigil drew people of many ages.
Barbara Fultz, a 72-year-old retired woman who has been living in
Aurora for more than 50 years, said her church, Main Baptist Church
in Aurora, had told members about the vigil and she has a cousin who
works at the Henry Pratt Company factory, a maker of industrial
valves.
"It's a tragedy all over," Fultz said. "We've never had anything
like this here. It's so sad."
Michelle Lamos, a 40-year-old healthcare worker, stood with her
14-month-old daughter.
"We need to come together. This is awful," Lamos said.
The gunman was a violent felon who obtained a state permit to buy a
firearm despite being legally barred from owning one, officials
said.
(Reporting by Robert Chiarito; Writing by Daniel Trotta; Editing by
Sandra Maler)
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