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Neighbors Raise Funds for Victims’ Families

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Debora and Rob Accomando’s sons don't go to Sandy Hook Elementary, buy they live in the tight-knit community of Newtown and wanted to do something to help.

The family knows some of victims' families, including their family of Jack Pinto, because the boys were on the same wrestling team. They wanted to do something other than cry and spent all day Saturday cooking to provide something for those affected, but realized they could do something even bigger by raising money.

“There are so many parents here of children who survived who are desperately shattered,” Rob Accomando said. "What are people going through? What is going to happen when the cameras finally leave and the spotlight fades?" Accomando asked.

As Debora and Rob sat at their dining room table, they realized that all 26 families would need money and they launched the My Sandy Hook Family Fund through a Web site that lets you start a donation page.

After posting it on Facebook, they raised $4,000 in the first few hours, then $11,000 a few hours after that. Rob has received nearly 2,500 email donations so far.

"This isn't some big charity organization. This is old school," Accomando said, likening his effort to a grassroots movement. "Neighbor to neighbor. Folks who are in the know. People who are going to be there when the cameras are gone and lights are out."

Their goal is $2.6 million, which would be $100,000 to each of the 26 families.

On the day Rob created the site, he reached out to some major accounting firms, including Deloitte & Touche and KPMG, not only to ensure legitimacy but also so the Accomandos could focus on helping families with things like funeral clothing.

"We just have the ability to do something unique because we're here," Rob said.
 



Photo Credit: AP

Obama Named Time Magazine Person of the Year

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Time magazine's Person of the Year is President Barack Obama.

Obama was picked for the title by besting a Pakistani teen activist blogger who survived an assassination attempt (Malala Yousafzai), the head of the world's most valuable company (Apple CEO Tim Cook), another country's president (Egypt's Mohammed Morsi) and the potent combination of a past U.S. president and possible future one (the Clintons).

Time's managing editor Rick Stengel announced the editors' selection on the "Today" show Wednesday and explained what earned Obama the nod.

The president was the first Democrat to win reelection with more than 50 percent of the popular vote since Franklin D. Roosevelt, and he won it despite still-high unemployment, Stengel noted.

"He's creating a new alignment, kind of a realignment like Ronald Reagan did 40 years ago," by engaging young voters and minorities and courting them into a coalition, Stengel said.

"I think we will start to see him talking from the heart about things he really cares about," he added.

As it has for the past 85 years, the editors at the weekly news magazine selected the person or group that had the greatest impact during the year, for better or worse. Last year's pick was the protestor.

Obama was named Person of the Year in 2008, too.

Sandy Hook Students to Return to Class on Jan. 2

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When Sandy Hook students return to class on Jan. 2, they will be greeted by a familiar face.

Donna Page, a former Sandy Hook principal who is now retired, will take over as principal, NBC Connecticut's Amanda Raus has learned.

Newtown and Monroe officials worked out a plan to allow students from Sandy Hook to use the former Chalk Hill Middle School in Monroe.

The school was shut down a few years ago, but it being cleaned up and prepared for children and teachers to use it.

Gov. Dannel Malloy used an executive order waiving state statutes that now makes the students' move to Monroe easier.

Free Admission for Children at Beardsley Zoo

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Children will be admitted to Beardsley Zoo for free from Wednesday, Dec. 26 through Friday, Dec. 28 in hopes that families will spend quality time together following the tragic events of last week in Newtown.

"Connecticut's Beardsley Zoo has been a family destination for 90 years," said Gregg Dancho, director of Connecticut's Beardsley Zoo. "Families from around our region are invited to visit their zoo and hopefully find some peace and comfort here over the holidays."

The zoo is located 20 miles from Newtown.

The zoo is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, but closed on Christmas, and New Year's Day.

Adult admission, for anyone 12 and older, is $12.

Regular admission for children, ages 3 to 11, and for seniors is $10. Children under 3 years old are admitted for free.
 



Photo Credit: Tad Motoyama

Former Supreme Court Nominee Robert Bork Dies

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Legal scholar and former Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork died Wednesday, NBC News has confirmed. He was 85.

Bork's son confirmed to the Associated Press that his father died of complications of heart problems at an Arlington, Va., hospital on Wednesday.

By the time President Ronald Reagan appointed him to the Supreme Court in 1987, Bork had served as a federal appeals court judge and as Solicitor General.

It was his unsuccessful nomination to the high court, however, that turned his into a household name — and eventually into the verb "to bork."

Almost four months after his nomination, the Democratic-controlled Senate voted against confirming Bork for appointment to the Supreme Court.

That rejection followed intense scrutiny of his originalist views on the Constitution and his conservative jurisprudence and a tough campaign against him.

It was fueled by a ferociously critical speech by Sen. Ted Kennedy opposing his confirmation, and it paved the way for the successful nomination of Justice Anthony Kennedy as a replacement.

Conservatives mourned Bork's death Wednesday, among them the chief executive of the Hudson Institute, the conservative think-tank where Bork was a fellow.

"Robert Bork was a giant, a brilliant and fearless legal scholar, and a gentleman whose incredible wit and erudition made him a wonderful Hudson colleague," Hudson Institute President and CEO Kenneth Weinstein said in a statement.



Photo Credit: File - AP

Secretary Duncan: Words Cannot Do Justice to the Courage

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U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan will be in Newtown on Wednesday to talk with staff of Sandy Hook Elementary School and attend the wake of Principal Hochsprung.

This morning, he posted a message on the U.S. Department of Education Web site about the local staff and teachers, as well as the impact the tragedy has had on those who educate nationwide. 
“At this time of unbearable grief over the senseless slaughter of 20 first graders and six school staff members, I want to take a moment to thank the many extraordinary educators school leaders and school principals who protected the children at Sandy Hook Elementary School,” Duncan said. “Words cannot do justice to the courage of Dawn Hochsprung, Mary Sherlach, Lauren Rousseau, Victoria Soto, Anne Marie Murphy and Rachel D’Avino. They made the ultimate sacrifice, literally laying down their lives to protect the children they taught and cared for. “ 

Had it not been for their quick and courageous response, even more people might have died, he said.

“Across the nation, the care and concern that teachers show for children is second only to the love of a parent. No profession is more deserving of our respect,” Duncan said. “We ask so much of our teachers, principals, and school staff. But no one could possibly ask for this kind of sacrifice.”
Duncan acknowledged that educators and school staff might be feeling fragile and nervous about their own safety.

“So I am extraordinarily grateful to our nation's teachers, school staff members, principals, and district leaders for the courage and caring they showed in the first few days back to school after the shootings. It is you who have done the hard work of caring for students. It is you who have fostered a sense of normalcy and safety, and let students express their concerns and emotions and fears,” Duncan said.

You can watch the full message here.

“The Department of Education’s first priority is to help the Newtown community cope in the aftermath of this horrific event. In the days and weeks ahead, we will work with state and local officials, as well as Congress, to do everything in our power to help Newtown begin the long process of recovery,” Duncan wrote in a post online about resources for schools to prepare for and recover from a crisis.


 

Police Investigate Home Invasion in Avon

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Avon police are investigating a home invasion at a single-family home on Jackson Road on Tuesday night.

Police received a 911 call at 7:40 p.m. reporting an armed residential robbery.

Three people were in the house when two males wearing all black and masks forced their way in, ordered everyone to the ground at gunpoint and demanded money, police said.

The residents complied and the suspects ran. Police did not find the intruders.

One resident suffered a minor asthma attack, but did not require hospitalization, police said. No other injuries were reported.

Anyone with information about the home invasion is asked to contact the Avon Detective Unit at (860) 409-4200. 

Zuckerberg Donates $500M to Silicon Valley Foundation

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One Silicon Valley charity got a huge Christmas present.

On Tuesday, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said (on his Facebook page, no less) that he is donating nearly $500 million in stock to the Silicon Valley Community Foundation with the aim of funding health and education issues.

"Two years ago, Priscilla and I signed The Giving Pledge," he wrote in his post, "committing to donate the majority of the money we earn to charity."

The foundation, headquartered in Mountain View, not too far away from Facebook in Menlo Park, now owns 18 million Facebook shares, valued at $498.8 million based on their Tuesday closing price.

The foundation touts itself as a place to help donors focus on their "charitable passions" and where "innovative philanthropic solutions" are offered to life's challenging problems. In 2011, the foundation had $2 billion in assets under management, and $470 million in contributions received.

CEO Emmett D. Carson was declining all media interviews. In a statement, he said, "Mark’s generous gift will change lives and inspire others in Silicon Valley and around the globe to give back and make the world a better place. We are pleased and honored that he has chosen to continue to partner with us to help him achieve his philanthropic goals.”

Carson uttered similar sentiments on Zuckerberg's Facebook post, adding, "This is a great inspiration for the next generation of philanthropists."

The foundation has won numerous awards for its charitable giving. In five years, the group has received more than $1 billion in contributions — not including Zuckerberg's — and awarded more than $1 billion grants locally and throughout the world.

This is Zuckerberg's largest donation to date. He pledged $100 million in Facebook stock to Newark, N.J., public schools in 2010, before his company went public earlier this year.

Later in 2010, he joined Giving Pledge, an effort led by Microsoft Corp. founder Bill Gates and Berkshire Hathaway Inc. CEO Warren Buffett to get the country's richest people to donate most of their wealth. His wife, Priscilla Chan, joined with him.
 

The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Convoy of Cruisers Delivers Cards to Boy Fighting Brain Cancer

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All a 6-year-old Virginia boy battling brain cancer and a spinal tumor wanted for Christmas this year was to be able to celebrate it and to receive Christmas cards from police officers from around the country.

His story has touched hearts all over the country and police departments from across New England not only answered the call, but also set up a convoy of more than 90 cruisers to hand-deliver the cards to Nathan Norman.

The hashtag they are using on Twitter is #cards4nathan.

They gathered at Burlington Mall in Burlington, Massachusetts on Wednesday morning and traveled through Connecticut, via Hartford.

 

The officers have Newtown on their minds and placed green ribbons on the cars in honor of the 20 first grade students and six staff members killed in the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School last Friday.

They passed slowly by Newtown on Wednesday.
 
Earlier this month, the Watertown Police Department honored Nathan by making him an honorary Watertown Officer.

When NBC Connecticut spoke with Nathan's parents earlier this month, they said the chance to be a police officer has made a world of difference for their son.

"If you live everyday like you're dying, this world would be a great place because you'd do things so differently," Bobby Norman said.

More than 15,000 people have liked the Nathan’s Christmas Facebook page and have posted that he is an inspiration.
 

 



Photo Credit: Facebook

Obama on Guns: Words Need to Lead to Action

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President Obama announced that he is making an administration-wide effort to solve gun violence and has tapped Vice President Joe Biden to lead an inter-agency task force in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticut.

Better Know the Enemy: Baltimore Ravens

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Every week during the season, we’ll scout out the Giants' next opponent. This week, that opponent is the Baltimore Ravens.  

In an alternate universe, Eli Manning never developed beyond the shaky inconsistency of his first few seasons and wound up being seen as a massive disappointment because he never took talented teams to the promised land. 

We know this because this universe has someone who already fits that description. Ravens quarterback Joe Flacco has had some success, including two trips to the AFC title game, but he has fallen well short of what people expected when he was drafted in the first round of the 2008 draft. 

In many ways, he's a rich man's Mark Sanchez. The highs are the same, but the lows of Sanchez have been mostly avoided by Flacco over the course of his career. 

Time after time, though, the Ravens have looked to Flacco to make the step from a guy who can win with a great team around him to a guy who can win when the rest of his team isn't doing all the heavy lifting and Flacco's failed every time. And, just like Sanchez, it has never been worse than this season. 

An aging Ravens team with some serious flaws asked Flacco to step up the aggressiveness and pace of the offense and got a series of flops in return. It hasn't been all his fault as the offensive line is a joke and wide receiver Torrey Smith, who could miss this game with a concussion, hasn't developed into the top receiver the Ravens need, but, again like Sanchez, there's only so many excuses you can make for a guy who keeps missing his opportunities. 

Flacco's not getting benched, but he is playing for a long-term deal after this season comes to an end and he hasn't done anything to make that advisable. The Ravens might franchise him in order to assure themselves of a halfway decent quarterback next season, but it is hard to see them saying they want to continue to build around a guy who simply hasn't improved. 

If Flacco wants to change that, beating the Giants at home and clinching the AFC North would be a very good way of going about it. If he doesn't, he may be battling Sanchez for jobs in the offseason. 

Here's some of the other Ravens to watch this weekend. 

Not Your Father's Ravens - Mainstream football pundits are the last to know, but the Ravens defense that they talk about in reverent tones just isn't that good anymore. Some of that has to do with injuries to Ray Lewis, Haloti Ngata and Terrell Suggs this season, but this is an older group that hasn't been able to strike gold as they try to augment and replace their longtime stars. 

With One Exception - Safety Ed Reed has been around as long as most of those other guys, but he hasn't seen the same dip in his play. Manning is advised not to do any of those lazy, back-footed heaves down the field because Reed is headed to the Hall of Fame because of how often he turns them into touchdowns. 

Rutgers' Shining Star - One of the reasons the Ravens fired offensive coordinator Cam Cameron last week was because he never seemed to figure out a way to make proper use of Ray Rice. Rice is the kind of back who has caused the Giants problems all season, but it won't make a difference if they continue to ignore him in favor of Flacco. 

Coaching Conundrum - John Harbaugh took over a good Ravens team in 2008, took them to the AFC Championship Game and elicited talk about greatness to come. The team hasn't improved over the ensuing years, though, and their regression this year raises the question of whether the Ravens need to make a change to take the next step.

Josh Alper is also a writer for Pro Football Talk. You can follow him on Twitter.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

YouTube Video of Child-Snatching Eagle is a Hoax

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A video on YouTube of a Golden Eagle snatching up a toddler turned out to be fake. Students from Montreal's 3-D technology school Centre NAD came forward to take credit for the viral video that appears to show an eagle snatching a toddler in a park.

The video shows a scene where a flying eagle swoops down, picks up a toddler with its talons and travels several feet before dropping the child and flying away.

Students Normand Archambault, Loïc Mireault and Félix Marquis-Poulin made the video in a production simulation workshop class, according to a statement from the school. The eagle and the toddler were created in 3D animation and added to the film, the school said.

The video was uploaded on Tuesday night and has received over 2 million views by late Wednesday.

Warning: Video contains graphic language

David Bird, a professor of wildlife biology at McGill University told the CBC that he doubted the authenticity of the video and said that he has never heard of an eagle snatching up a child.

"The public has nothing to fear from bald eagles in that regard of picking up their babies, and for that matter, even their pets," he said. 

Alex Hern of the New Statesman was also skeptical from the beginning. He analyzed the video frame by frame and noticed that the right wing of the eagle becomes transparent three seconds into the video.

"'This video is unbelievable' was clearly my subconscious being more right than I thought, because I actually don't believe this video is true," Hern said. 

Newtown's Police Chief Offers Sympathies to Victims' Families

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Newtown Police Chief Michael Kehoe released a statement for the first time since Friday's tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

Chief Michael Kehoe and his officers have been working to process the crime scenes nearly around the clock. In the statement, Kehoe praises the teachers who gave their lives trying to save their students.

"They became first responders to unimaginable chaos and violence. Their actions under fire to protect the children inspire us all," Kehoe said. "Equally inspiring was the courage of our children in helping their classmates."

Kehoe also praised his officers, as well as firefighters and emergency medical personnel who responded to the school in the moments after the shooting began.

In a town trying to find a way to return to normal, Kehoe tried to put parents' minds at ease.

"I would like to reassure the people of Newtown that our schools are safe. The staff of Sandy Hook Elementary School had taken all reasonable precautions to provide a safe learning environment to the faculty and students of the school. Those precautions clearly saved lives."

The following is Chief Kehoe's statement in its entirety:

The Newtown Police Department wishes to express its deepest sympathies to the families of those lost in the senseless tragedy that visited Sandy Hook Elementary School and to the entire Town of Newtown on Friday, December 14, 2012.

First, let me offer my praise to our teachers and school staff They became first responders to unimaginable chaos and violence. Their actions under fire to protect the children inspire us all. Equally inspiring was the courage of our children in helping their classmates. Our police, fire, and emergency medical personnel reacted quickly and without hesitation, rapidly responding to Sandy Hook Elementary School. Their professionalism was heartwarming to witness; our community is proud of them.

I appreciate the many area police departments and the Connecticut State Police, who have provide immediate assistance in our time of need. The unconditional support of the law enforcement community as we investigate and recover has been overwhelming.

Processing multiple crime scenes in Newtown, conducting countless interviews, and analyzing all of the evidence is very daunting and time-consuming task. Newtown Police Officers are working with state and federal authorities to thoroughly and professionally analyze all aspects of this crime as we seek answers.

I would like to reassure the people of Newtown that our schools are safe. The staff of Sandy Hook Elementary School had taken all reasonable precautions to provide a safe learning environment to the faculty and students ofthe school. Those precautions clearly saved lives.

I thank the community for its support ofthe Newtown Police Department. We much appreciate the outpouring of food, gifts and expressions of support to our agency.

The Newtown Police Department will work with our community partners to restore a sense of security and normalcy to Newtown. Our law enforcement professionals are committed to helping the community through this difficult period. It is my honor to be associated with such fine people.



Photo Credit: Getty Images

The Future of School Security

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The tragedy at Sandy Hook elementary will stand as one of those before-and-after days in America -- things will never be the same at schools across Connecticut and beyond.

"This was like our 9/11 for school teachers," Richard Cantlupe, an American history teacher at Westglades Middle School in Parkland, Fla., told the Associated Press.

Officials across the country are taking measures to make students and parents feel as safe as possible. From Los Angeles to Newtown, school districts heightened security this week -- placing police officers outside schools and reviewing security procedures.

“I think it’s important that at this particular time we’re able to get everybody [to] feel good about schools, that they can feel safe at schools," said Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck, who said every K-8 school in the city would be visited by a police officer each day. "That’s my job and we’ll make sure that it happens.”

But some schools are also looking at long-term solutions to beef up security -- drastic changes that would revamp school security as we know it, much like airport security was revamped after 9/11.

Sandy Hook could make getting into a public school far more difficult.

Mike Dorn of Safe Havens International, a non-profit campus safety center, has been working in school safety for three decades. He sees controlling access as the chief way in which schools can ensure their students' safety.

Now he thinks administrators will be able to implement changes that would have been impossible a week ago.

"There are many school superintendents and principals who last week wanted to put better access control in their schools, that have been told they can't, because the community would be in an uproar," said Dorn, who thinks such initiatives will now encounter far less resistance,

Dorn is a proponent of a high-tech system called Security Alert for Education (SAFE). With this system, teachers wear a pendant that amplifies their voice during lectures -- but also has a panic button button that allows them to immediately alert 911 during an emergency. Cameras mounted in classrooms are integrated into the system, as well.

Scot Trower, superintendent of the Ryal School in Ryal, Okla., "out in the middle of nowhere,"  had the SAFE System installed in 2010. An encounter a decade ago with a man with a gun in his back pocket demanding to pick up a student played into Trower's decision to implement SAFE.

Just last week, there was an incident at Ryal that required him to put the school on lockdown.

"We didn't have to use (the SAFE System), but it sure made everybody feel a lot better that they had it," said Trower, who has begun the process of having better access control installed at his school. He's also scheduled a meeting for early January to review his school's emergency response system.

Better access control won't keep everyone out. In Newtown, the front door of Sandy Hook Elementary was locked, per school policy -- but shooter Adam Lanza forced his way into the school, according to officials.

For instances like that, Trower is also prepared to take a controversial step: Carrying a gun to school. Since the Sandy Hook massacre, lawmakers in several states have discussed legislation to allow teachers at staff members to carry concealed weapons, including Oklahoma.

"If that law passes, and my school board is in favor of it, and they adopt that policy… It's my first priority, to protect those children, and I'll do whatever I have to do," Trower said. "And if the law gives me the ability to do that, I will absolutely take advantage of that to protect my kids."

In Harrold, Texas, where the remote location makes teachers de facto first responders, they've been carrying guns since 2008.

"Many people can learn how to effectively and safely guard others with firearms," Harrold, Texas Superintendent David Thweatt told KNBC.

While Dorn clearly feels keeping schools secure is a priority, he also urges people to maintain some perspective. He points out that even in the wake of Sandy Hook, on average there are more school deaths from lightning strikes than mass murderers.

"It's important to note that we've reduced the numbers dramatically since the 1970s, so we've already seen a reduction," Dorn said. "I think we could cut the (school) homicide rate in half. There are a lot of children who have not died because of Columbine."

Similarly, Dorn believes that Sandy Hook will renew the country's commitment to school safety.

But whatever security solutions schools settle on, Dorn stressed that they must move forward with a clear head and proper training.

"We just hope schools move thoughtfully when they do this, because there's a lot of great equipment out there, but it has to be complimented by heightened staff awareness," said Dorn.

Though Trower is a proponent of carry/conceal, SAFE System and access control, he says the best way to prevent tragedies like Sandy Hook from happening is to talk to the kids. A report done by the Secret Service in response to the Columbine shooting revealed that a surprising number of shooters shared their plans with classmates.

"If our kids don’t feel comfortable communicating to the teachers and have those kinds of relationships ...  that's what can avert these kinds of things," said Trower.

"My basic philosophy of education is, if a kid doesn’t feel safe coming to school, or if a kid doesn’t like coming to school… they're not going to learn," Trower said. "Right now, across this country, there's a lot of school going on where kids are sitting in fear... We have to be proactive to keep these things from affecting us."



Photo Credit: AFP/Getty Images

Hartford Terminates Firefighter Facing Drug Charges

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The Hartford Fire Department has terminated a firefighter accused of running a drug factory.

Rafael Diaz, 37, was arrested Aug. 23 after police raided his home on Douglas Street in Hartford. Officers found cocaine, marijuana, hallucinogenic mushrooms and ecstasy pills inside Diaz's home, according to police.

Hartford Fire Chief Edward Casares, Jr. made the decision to terminate Diaz after a full review of the criminal charges against the firefighter, according to a statement released by the Hartford Fire Department.

Diaz was a Hartford firefighter for 14 years. He has pleaded guilty to all charges and is due in court in February.


A History of Crime, Mass Shootings and Gun Control

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America's struggle over gun violence and the right to bear arms has been raging for decades. Here's a look at key events in the United States' long, tortured relationship with crime and guns:

  • 1791: The Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was adopted. It read, “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”
  • 1911: New York State passed the Sullivan Act, one of the first pieces of gun control. It required a permit to carry a concealed weapon, and remains law.
  • 1934: The National Firearms Act, passed in response to a string of crimes using automatic weapons, levied a tax on the manufacture and sale of firearms, including machine guns, shotguns and certain rifles. It is still in effect.
  • 1938: The Federal Firearms Act was passed, requiring gun dealers to obtain a license and maintain records on all their sales. It also made it illegal to sell a gun to a convicted criminal.
  • 1963: President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. Crime rates began a steep climb.
  • 1965: Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. were assassinated.
  • 1968: President Lyndon Johnson signed the Gun Control Act, which placed more stringent regulations on gun sales, including a ban on selling rifles and shotguns by mail.
  • 1972: The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms was created.
  • 1975: The violent crime rate peaked. The National Rifle Association creates a lobbying group. That same year, it successfully fought an effort by Sen. Edward Kennedy to have ammunition regulated as a “hazardous substance.”
  • 1980: Violence rates peaked again.
  • 1981: President Ronald Reagan was shot and his press aide James Brady seriously wounded.
  • 1984: A gunman armed with an Uzi submachine gun killed 21 people and wounded 19 at a McDonald’s in San Ysdiro, Calif. The crack era began.
  • 1986: The Firearms Owners Protection Act passed, easing restrictions on in-person purchases of guns by people from out of state and limiting inspections of licensed dealers by the ATF.
  • 1989: A gunman wielding an AK-47 rifle killed five children and injured 29 others on a schoolyard in Stockton, Calif.
  • 1993: President Bill Clinton signed the Brady Bill, which imposed a five-day waiting period on the purchase of a gun and required local law enforcement to conduct background checks on all potential buyers.
  • 1994: Clinton signed the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, including the Assault Weapons Ban, which prohibited, for 10 years, the manufacture and sale of semiautomatic weapons with magazines capable of holding 10 or more rounds.
  • Congress banned the Centers for Disease Control from promoting gun control and effectively stopped it from funding research on gun violence.
  • 1997: The Supreme Court found the Brady Bill’s local background checks unconstitutional.
  • 1999: Two students at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., went on a rampage at their school, killing 12 classmates and one teacher.
  • 2001/2002: John Allen Muhammed and Lee Boyd Malvo murdered 15 people in a series of sniper shootings in the Washington D.C. area.
  • 2004: The Assault Weapons Ban expired and Congress chose not to renew it.
  • 2005: Congress granted immunity to the firearms industry from civil suits in cases where a gun was used in a crime.
  • 2007: Seung-Hui Cho, a Virginia Tech student with a history of mental problems, killed 32 people in two attacks on the school’s Blacksburg campus.
  • 2007: In response to the Virginia Tech shooting, Congress passed the NCIS Improvement Amendments Act, authorizing $1.3 billion to improve states’ systems to find and track people trying to buy guns – a so-called “gun-buyer database.” It did not apply to sales at gun shows by unlicensed vendors.
  • 2008: The Supreme Court invalidated Washington D.C.’s 32-year-old ban on handguns. The city responded with new laws that revived the ban while abiding to the strictures of the court’s ruling.
  • 2009: Maj. Nidal M. Hasan allegedly went on a rampage at Fort Hood, Texas, killing 12 soldiers and one civilian.
  • 2009: Michael McLendon killed 10 people and himself in a shooting spree that spanned two southern Alabama towns.
  • 2011: Rep. Gabrielle Giffords was among several people shot at an event in Tuscon, Ariz. Six others were killed, including a judge and a young girl.
  • 2011: New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg sent undercover investigators to an Arizona gun show to show how easy it was to buy handguns from unlicensed vendors without background checks. Bills by several Democratic members of Congress attempt to ban high-capacity handguns, close the so-called gun-show loophole and prevent gun sales to people on terrorist watch lists. All the proposals were defeated.
  • 2012: Florida teenager Trayvon Martin is shot and killed by a neighborhood watch volunteer, who invoked the state’s 2005 “Stand Your Ground” law as a defense.
  • 2012: James Holmes allegedly opened fire on a crowded movie theater in Aurora, Colo., killing 12 people and wounding 58.
  • 2012: White supremacist Wade Michael Page killed six people in a Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wisc.
  • 2012: Adam Lanza killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., before taking his own life. He was also believed to have killed his mother.

Sources: Facts on File News Services, Philip Cook, Washington Post, CNN



Photo Credit: NBC10 Philadelphia - Catherine Brown

Will Newtown Prompt Gun Reform in Washington?

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The never-ending and seldom-evolving debate over gun control has arguably reached its moment of truth: If the massacre of 20 schoolchildren in Newtown, Conn., doesn’t prompt America to clamp down on firearms, then perhaps nothing will.

Other recent mass shootings – and there have been many before Newtown – have had little discernible effect on the public’s appetite for tougher gun laws. In Washington, the issue has been treated like a political third rail.

But the murders of first-graders seem to have shaken something loose. Pro-gun politicians, including some Republicans, say they’re now at least willing to discuss gun control. President Barack Obama, who during his first term was noncommittal on gun control and in two instances chose to expand gun rights, first called on lawmakers to “take meaningful action to prevent tragedies like this.” He then set a January deadline for a task force led by Vice President Joe Biden to produce a set of "concrete proposals" to curb gun violence and vowed to push legislation "without delay."

The question -- similar to the negotiations over the fiscal cliff – is if a sharply divided Congress can agree on a bill.

“The opportunity right now is like nothing we’ve ever had before,” said John Hudak, a public policy expert at the Brookings Institution. “Whether the right groups and forces in Congress capitalize on that opportunity is another story.”

The fact that there’s even the potential to pass some kind of gun control legislation is a big deal.

The subject of reform comes up every time there’s a spasm of gun violence: shootings at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin and a movie theater in Colorado this year, the assassination attempt on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Arizona last year, 2009 rampages in Ft. Hood, Texas, Binghamton, N.Y., and Alabama.

No piece of legislation came close to a vote.

Even after the shooting of Trayvon Martin in Florida last spring, an incident that sparked debate over so-called "Stand Your Ground" laws, reform advocates could not muster any movement.

Gun-control advocates blame the National Rifle Association, one of the most powerful lobbying groups in Washington, which has effectively framed the debate as a battle for the constitutional right to bear arms. Supporters of those rights – hunters, marksmen, people who carry guns for protection – say the vast majority of guns are owned by law-abiding citizens, and limiting gun sales would only help criminals. In recent years, the public has largely sided with the gun-rights camp.

The last time a mass shooting sparked new firearms regulation was in 2007, after the killing of 32 people by a mentally disturbed student at Virginia Tech. That attack led to a law that helps states identify potential gun buyers with mental-health problems. The measure was politically viable in part because it did not include an outright ban on any particular weapon.

The last significant gun prohibition was the assault-weapons ban of 1994, passed in response to a string of mass shootings, including a 1989 schoolyard massacre in Stockton, Calif. The law prohibited the manufacture and sale of semiautomatic weapons with magazines capable of holding 10 rounds or more. The law listed several makes and models that were off-limits, including the popular AR-15 rifle, a version of which was used by Newtown shooter Adam Lanza.

The 1999 killing of 12 students at Columbine High School in Colorado occurred during the ban; one assault-style rifle the shooters used was bought by exploiting a loophole that allowed sales at gun shows.

The ban expired in 2004, and, in a reflection of how opinion had shifted, Congress chose not to renew it.

Seven states, including Connecticut, where the Newtown shooting took place, have imposed their own assault weapons bans.

The rifle Lanza wielded, a .223-caliber Bushmaster, along with the handgun with which he killed himself, were all legally owned by his mother. Lanza is presumed to have shot her to death before heading to Sandy Hook Elementary School on the morning of Dec. 14.

Now, in wake of that attack, Democrats are again urging a reinstatement of the assault weapons ban. And for the first time in 20 years, they might actually do it.

The reason, Hudak said, is that the NRA really has no way to respond. After prior mass shootings, the group has argued that allowing more people – college students, high school teachers, school guards -- to carry guns would prevent such attacks. Besides, the vast majority of murder weapons are handguns, not assault weapons.

But this time, there is no such alternative, other than putting guns in elementary schools.

“There’s no discussion to win here,” Hudak said. “There’s nothing to turn the tide against the pure disgust and frustration at what’s happened.”

It remains to be seen if the shift in Washington since Friday is mirrored among the general public.

Crime policy analysts say gun-control advocates risk losing their window of opportunity if they push a bill that asks too much.

Philip Cook, a Duke University professor who has spent decades researching gun violence and crime policy, said the smart move by the gun-control advocates would be to seek a middle-ground proposal that reinstates the ban on large magazines and doesn’t touch the issue of particular guns or other military-style accessories.

Most but not all gun owners would back such an approach, he predicted.

“If you want legislation that doesn’t impair legitimate uses but has the potential for reducing the body count, limiting the size of magazines is the way to go,” Cook said. “I think it’s realistic and plausible. And I think it has the great advantage of having a logical connection of some larger purpose.”

A more innocuous proposal, if all else fails, would be to increase funding for states’ systems that allow them to cross reference criminal records with mental health records to weed out people who shouldn’t buy guns, Cook said. There’d be little resistance to that, he said.

Hudak agreed. From the perspective of gun-control advocates, anything they can accomplish should be considered a victory. He pointed to New Jersey Sen. Frank Lautenberg, who suggested such an approach this week.

“That’s the obstacle: to craft legislation in a narrow way that even gun rights people can get behind but also that people can understand,” Hudak said.

Grant Duwe, a criminologist who co-wrote a book about mass shootings, agreed that it’s entirely possible for Congress to pass some kind of post-Newtown gun control legislation. But he questioned whether it would have any real impact on the frequency of mass shootings.

His own research shows that gun control laws have little deterrent effect. He thinks the debate needs to shift to mental health care: More than half of the perpetrators of mass shootings in his study had some kind of mental illness, and a third sought help before their crimes.

“The point that I would make is that from empirical evidence, any gun law that might pass would have mainly symbolic impacts," Duwe said. "Whether it has any substantive impact in reducing mass shootings is very debatable.”



Photo Credit: AP

Hundreds of Toys for Sandy Hook Elementary Students

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People from around the country have traveled to Newtown to offer their help to the community after the school shooting on Friday. Others have donated to charities or helped set up funds in the victims' honor. One man from the deep south decided to take it one step further.

Jay Roberts would not let the tragedy at Sandy Hook dampen his Christmas spirit.

He could not make the trip to Connecticut from his home in New Orleans, so he did the next big thing he could think of.

Roberts contacted the Toys R' Us in Milford and bought $19,000 worth of toys, one gift for each of the students in Sandy Hook Elementary School. The truckload was dropped off in town on Wednesday evening.

"I called at 11:30 a.m. this morning and it had been delivered already within seven hours. I must say that Toys R' Us did a great job," said Roberts.

Roberts is the owner of Water and Seward Products in Bridge City, Louisiana. He says he wished he could have made the drop himself, but is unable to because of his work schedule. He felt he had to do something for these children.

"Cause those children don't deserve what they had to go through and are going through," he said.

For this Santa, the hope is that one gift could bring a little happiness to the children thousands of miles away.

"I wish them a Merry Christmas and a Happy Holiday season," said Roberts.

1 Dead, 33 Hurt in Massive Pileup in N.Y. State

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A tractor-trailer hauling debris from Sandy slammed into several cars on a major highway on Long Island in New York on Wednesday afternoon, causing a massive pileup in which one person was killed, police say. 

The truck, driven by 42-year-old Raymond Simoneau of Rockingham, Vt., was going eastbound on the Long Island Expressway when it struck several cars near exit 68 in the town of Shirley just before 3 p.m., authorities say. 

The collision set off a chain-reaction pileup, and a total of 35 vehicles smashed into one another, authorities said. The tractor-trailer and two additional vehicles caught fire.  

One driver described the crash unfolding next to him while he was on the freeway.

"All we heard was crashing behind us, it sounded like thunder," said Jimmy Batjley. "Looking back, all I saw was glass and metal, and they went right past us, at least 40 miles per hour." 

"If you can imagine all the cars were lined up, and [the tractor-trailer] just came right in and just pushed that entire line," said Batjley. He said the tractor-trailer driver was pulled out before the truck burst into flames. 

Aerial footage provided by News12 Long Island showed the trailer partly incinerated at dusk, alongside at least two cars that appeared to be blackened and burned. Multiple other vehicles, including a box truck, were scattered nearby, apparently having collided into one another or the guardrail.

A 68-year-old woman driving a Toyota Camry was killed in the crash, police said. An additional 33 people were injured, including a 57-year-old man who is in serious condition.

Those injured were transported to area hospitals, including Peconic Bay Medical Center in Riverhead, Brookhaven Memorial Hospital in East Patchogue, Stony Brook University Hospital and St. Charles Hospital in Port Jefferson.

At Peconic Bay, where 18 of the victims were taken, most of the injuries were minor. Three of those hurt were children, and the oldest was 61 years old, according to spokesman Demetrios Kadenas. All but one of the patients were released by Wednesday night. 

The tractor-trailer and several of the vehicles involved in the crash are being impounded for safety checks.

Investigation is ongoing.



Photo Credit: AP

Man Arrested in Sandy Hook School in Va. in "Rifle" Scare

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A man was arrested at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Strasburg, Va., Wednesday, according to the Shenandoah County Sheriff’s Office.

Christopher Garret Johnson, 33, walked into the school with a 4-foot long two-by-four labeled “High Powered Rifle” about 11:40 a.m., the sheriff’s office said.

He was met by school staff, then detained by a sheriff’s school resource officer. He was arrested and taken into custody without incident.

No one was injured.

The man was apparently trying to make a point about security at the school five days after the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in which a man shot and killed 20 children and six adults before killing himself.

"He made general statements about school safety and safety awareness," a Shenandoah County officer said. "But the reality was, it was disruptive."

Johnson faces disorderly conduct charges for the behavior officials called "inappropriate, at best."



Photo Credit: Cannon Smith, NBCWashington.com
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