[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 179 (Thursday, December 10, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8573-S8575]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THIRD ANNIVERSARY OF SANDY HOOK TRAGEDY
Mr. MURPHY. Madam President, next week we will mark the 3-year
anniversary, for lack of a better word, of the massacre at Sandy Hook,
CT. Senator Blumenthal will be joining me on the floor momentarily. I
wanted to come to the floor to speak to our colleagues for a few
moments about what this week will mean to us in Connecticut and the
challenge it presents to all of us.
I want to open by speaking about one of the young men who perished
that day--a little first grader by the name of Daniel Barden. Daniel
was a really, really special kid. I talk about him a lot when I am
speaking on Sandy Hook because I have gotten to know his parents pretty
well over the years, so I feel like I know Daniel pretty well. Now that
I have a little 7-year-old first grader at home, too, I, frankly, feel
closer than ever before to the families such as the Bardens who are
still grieving.
Daniel had this sense of uncanny empathy that, now as a father of a
7-year-old, I know is, frankly, not normally visited upon children that
age. Daniel just loved helping people in big and small ways; he was so
preternaturally outward in his sympathy for others.
There is a story his dad likes to tell about the challenge of going
to the supermarket with Daniel because when they would leave, Daniel
always liked to hold the door open for his family. But then he wouldn't
stop holding the door open because he wanted to hold it open for all of
the rest of the people who were leaving the grocery store. So the
family would get all the way to the car, and they would look back and
they wouldn't have Daniel because he was still holding the door open.
It was small things like that that made him such a special kid.
His father, Mark, wrote one day: ``I'm always one minute farther away
from my life with Daniel, and that gulf keeps getting bigger.'' His
mother, Jackie, in the months and years following Daniel's death,
developed a habit of what grief counselors call defensive mechanisms.
She would sometimes pretend that Daniel was at a friend's house for a
couple hours, simply in order to give herself the strength to do simple
household chores like cooking dinner or returning emails. The only way
she could do it is if she pretended for a small slice of time that
Daniel was actually still alive.
It is hard to describe for my colleagues here today the grief that
still, frankly, drowns Sandy Hook parents and the community at large.
It is total, it is permanent, and it is all-consuming. But for many of
those parents and many of those community members, the grief now is
mixed with a combination of anger and utter bewilderment, all of it
directed at us, in the Senate and in the House of Representatives.
On December 14, Adam Lanza walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School
armed with a weapon that was designed for the military--designed to
kill as many people as quickly as possible. He had 30-round magazines,
not designed for hunting or for sport shooting but to destroy as much
life as quickly as possible. Importantly, he left at home his lower
round magazines. And the design of his weapons worked--to a tee. In
approximately 4 minutes, he discharged
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154 rounds, and he killed with ruthless efficiency: 27 people shot, 26
dead, including 20 first graders.
Here are their names: Rachel D'Avino, 29; Dawn Hochsprung, 47; Anne
Marie Murphy, 52; Lauren Rousseau, 30; Mary Sherlach, 56; Victoria
Leigh Soto, 27.
And the students: Charlotte Bacon, Daniel Barden, Olivia Engel,
Josephine Gay, Dylan Hockley, Madeleine Hsu, Catherine Hubbard, Chase
Kowalski, Jesse Lewis, Ana Marquez-Greene, James Mattioli, Grace
McDonnell, Emilie Parker, Jack Pinto.
It keeps going: Noah Pozner, Caroline Previdi, Jessica Rekos, Avielle
Richman, Benjamin Wheeler, and Allison Wyatt.
There are a handful of kids who aren't on that list, because there
were children in Victoria Soto's classroom who were able to escape,
likely--as investigators believe--when Adam Lanza had to reload his
weapon to put another 30 bullets in it.
So 3 years later, as we grieve those 26, we are still having these
awful, searing questions to ponder: What would have happened if Lanza
didn't have an assault rifle? Would he even have had the perverse
courage to walk into that school if not aided by the security of having
a high powered killing machine? Would less kids have died? What if his
cartridges had six or 10 bullets instead of 30? Would more kids be
alive if someone had been able to stop him while he fumbled with
another reload?
The facts of Sandy Hook are hard to hear over and over, but they are
important because they should have educated us on ways that we could
come together to make another mass shooting less likely. But we ignored
Sandy Hook, and it happened again and again. This year, there have been
more mass shootings than there have been days in the year: 9 in
Charleston, 5 in Chattanooga, 9 again in Roseburg, 14 in San
Bernardino.
As I sat at that firehouse with Senator Blumenthal that afternoon in
Sandy Hook, as the news rolled into those parents that the children
they loved wouldn't be coming home, if someone had told me that day
that we would do nothing--that our response as a Congress and as a
country would be utter silence--I wouldn't have believed it--no way.
But if somebody then told me that it would happen again and again and
again and we still wouldn't do anything, I would have collapsed in
disbelief.
I am going to tell my colleagues, that is how the families feel.
Whatever we think is the best way to stop this carnage--changing our
gun laws, giving more resources to law enforcement, changing our mental
health system to get more help to those who are becoming unhinged and
thinking about settling their real or imagined grievances with
violence--do something to honor those children and adults. Do something
to show there is an ounce of compassion as we sit here 3 years after
the bloody massacre at Sandy Hook.
Our mental health system is broken. We have closed down 4,000
inpatient beds since the recession began. It is harder than ever for
families to get the help they need. If you read the report on Adam
Lanza, you will see a very troubled young man who was utterly failed by
the behavioral health system that stood around him.
Stronger gun laws do work. They absolutely would have prevented some
of those kids from dying. And the data is irrefutable. This mythology
that you are safer with more guns has zero basis in fact. The data
tells us that in States that have tougher gun laws, they have less gun
deaths. In States that have higher rates of gun ownership, they have
more gun deaths. Stronger gun laws work.
To be honest, the burden is not just on us; it is also on the
administration. I have called, along with many of my colleagues, on the
administration to take some steps, if Congress won't, to make sure that
those who are truly gun dealers, though they might not have a brick-
and-mortar store--those who are selling guns with frequency at places
such as gun shows or on the Internet--have to do background checks, a
recognition that they are dealers just like people who have stores in
your downtown.
So my plea, 3 years after this tragedy that utterly transformed that
community, is for us to recognize that there is no other country in the
world that would live with this level of slaughter. There is no other
nation in the world that would accept 80 people dying every day from
preventible gun violence and mass shooting after mass shooting and not
even try to fix it. That is what is so offensive to me, and 3 years
later that is what is so hard to understand for the families whom we
represent in Sandy Hook, CT.
If you don't want to believe me, I am going to close the exact same
way I closed 2 years ago on the 1-year anniversary. I am kind of
ashamed that I have to read this letter again because every single word
of it still applies 2 years later, when the epidemic of mass shootings
in this country hasn't abated but simply grown. It is from a mom whose
child survived, and I will close with it.
In addition to the tragic loss of her playmates, friends,
and teachers, my first grader suffers from PTSD. She was in
the first room by the entrance to the school. Her teacher was
able to gather the children into a tiny bathroom inside the
classroom. There she stood, with 14 of her classmates and her
teacher, all of them crying. You see, she heard what was
happening on the other side of the wall. She heard
everything. She was sure she was going to die that day and
did not want to die for Christmas. Imagine what this must
have been like. She struggles nightly with nightmares,
difficulty falling asleep, and being afraid to go anywhere in
her own home. At school she becomes withdrawn, crying daily,
covering her ears when it gets too loud and waiting for this
to happen again. She is 6.
And we are furious.
Furious that 26 families must suffer with grief so deep and
so wide that it is unimaginable.
Furious that the innocence and safety of my children's
lives has been taken.
Furious that someone had access to the type of weapon used
in this massacre.
Furious that gun makers make ammunition with such high
rounds and our government does nothing to stop them.
Furious that the ban on assault weapons was carelessly left
to expire.
Furious that lawmakers let the gun lobbyists have so much
control.
Furious that somehow, someone's right to own a gun is more
important than my children's rights to life.
Furious that lawmakers are too scared to take a stand.
She writes:
I ask you to think about your choices. Look at the pictures
of the 26 innocent lives taken so needlessly and wastefully,
using a weapon that never should have been in the hands of
civilians. Really think. Changing the laws may
``inconvenience'' some gun owners, but it may also save a
life, perhaps a life that is dear to me or you. Are you
really willing to risk it? You--
Speaking to us--
have a responsibility and obligation to act now and change
the laws.
I hope and I pray that you do not fail.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Connecticut.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Thank you, Madam President.
I am honored to follow my colleague and friend Senator Murphy in an
effort that has involved both of us, our minds and our hearts, from the
day we stood together on December 14, 2012, in Newtown, Sandy Hook. We
have stood together and worked together with the families and community
that so inspired us with their strength and courage.
If I have one overriding image and message in my mind and heart, it
is those families most directly affected by the deaths of 20 beautiful
children and sixth grade educators, the families in the reverberating
circle of people so deeply touched, hurt, and harmed by the evil on
that day, and the people who exemplified the good of that day, the
first responders, the firefighters and police, who saw things no human
being should ever have to witness and emerged also deeply hurt and
harmed. The courage and strength of Newtown, that community, and the
families will always inspire me.
I have worked on gun violence prevention for many years, a couple of
decades before December 14, 2012. I was the attorney general of the
State of Connecticut and a State legislator advocating for the assault
weapon ban and other gun violence prevention measures. Then, as
attorney general, I defended the assault weapon ban when it was
challenged in court, tried the case, and we successfully argued it in
the State supreme court. So I knew intellectually and abstractly why we
need in this Nation and in Connecticut stronger measures to stop gun
violence. The experience of that day left a
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searing mark on my heart and on my conscience, so it became for me the
passion and priority it is today, and I will not rest as a Member of
this body and as a human being until this Nation does better to make
America safer and to prevent the kind of tragedy we saw on that day.
I will never forget being at that firehouse on that afternoon, but I
will also never forget that evening at St. Rose of Lima Church when the
community came together to light a candle rather than curse the
darkness.
I had a conversation with one of the parents who lost a child. It was
either that night or in the grief-filled days thereafter, when I said
to her at some point: When you are ready, I would like to talk to you
about what we can do about this. She said to me: I am ready now.
That is the courage we have seen in the last 3 years from those
families. It is the courage we saw this morning at an event in the
Capitol. It is the courage we have seen again and again from Newtown,
from all over the country, loved ones and victims of all of the
places--they become kind of landmarks that we recite. There are 30,000
deaths every year from places whose names we could never recite here
because it would be too long and because they are the mundane places
that all of us go.
As my colleague Senator Murphy said this morning, all of us are just
one second away from becoming victims. The fact is we are all touched
by gun violence and we are all harmed and hurt by it.
I will never forget that evening. I will never forget also the day on
the floor of this House when the Senate failed to approve a commonsense
package of gun violence prevention measures, universal background
checks, banning illegal trafficking, a ban on assault weapons, the
mental health initiative, and from the Gallery someone shouted down:
Shame. They may have said: Shame on you. There is no record of it
because we record only what happens on the floor, but on that day the
most profound and eloquent comment was those three words: ``Shame on
you.''
Shame on us in the U.S. Senate. We are complicit by our inaction.
Congress is complicit by its silence. Moments of silence have their
place, but silence by inaction here is complicity. It is not only the
failure to act, it is also the obstruction that has been placed in the
way of knowledge and research. The so-called rider--nobody outside the
U.S. Capitol would talk about riders, an amendment that stops the
government from doing research--literally research, fact gathering,
investigation on gun violence. The cause of 30,000 deaths every year in
this country cannot be researched by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
In fact, we face a public health crisis in this country. If it were
Ebola or influenza or polio, facing these kinds of epidemics or feared
epidemics in this country, we would react with drastic and effective
measures, including quarantine, that would mobilize this Nation. The
response of the Congress to the epidemic of gun violence is to bar
research by the CDC and other public health authorities. The very same
public health community that could help us understand and take action
is gagged and straitjacketed by the U.S. Congress. Even the initial
author of that amendment restricting research, former Congressman Jay
Dickey, a Republican from Arkansas, said he has regrets. ``I wish we
had started the proper research and kept it going all the time,'' he
said.
The Congress owes the American people more, but this promise I can
make. We are not going away. We are not abandoning this effort. We will
not be silenced. We will not be inactive. We are not giving up.
Twelve years it took to pass the Brady bill, after the President of
the United States was almost assassinated just a few miles from here
and his Press Secretary, Jim Brady, was paralyzed. It took 12 years to
pass, with the support of President Reagan, and we need to be prepared
for that kind of marathon.
President Reagan famously said: ``Facts are stubborn things.'' We
cannot deny the facts that drive this debate because laws do work. We
come here every day with the presumption that what we do makes a
difference, that the laws we pass make a difference. Gun violence
prevention laws do work.
When the shooter at Sandy Hook had to change magazines, children
succeeded in escaping. If he had been barred from having the assault
weapon, had it been banned, unable to bring it to the site of that
horrific tragedy, it might have made a difference.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent for just 1
minute.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. BLUMENTHAL. If the shooter in Charleston had been barred, as he
should have been because he was ineligible, rather than having the
opportunity to purchase weapons as a result of the 72-hour rule
loophole, it might have made a difference there. We can't say for
certain.
We know there is no panacea, no magic solution, but the loved ones of
the families of Sandy Hook, San Bernardino, Colorado Springs, Roseburg,
Roanoke, Charleston, and Lafayette have to make a difference here.
Honor them with action is what we should do; inaction is complicity. We
owe the American people better. We need to keep faith with its values
and keep faith with America.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
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