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Sandy Hook families sue Newtown

Jazzy

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Sandy Hook families sue Newtown

Families of two victims in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting have filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the town of Newtown, Conn., and its board of education, alleging security measures at the school weren't adequate.

The two families' motivation was solely to improve school security for future students in the Newtown school district, Donald Papcsy, an attorney for the families, said in a statement on Monday.

For years schools have been trying to find ways to become more safe and prevent the next shooting, but the task is easier said than done, expert say, especially in a way that doesn't scare young students or disrupt the learning environment.

On its website, the National Association of School Psychologists offers a list of ways a school can make itself a safe learning environment, including installing an alarm system and/or closed-circuit television monitoring system, minimizing blind spots, trimming trees and shrubs to limit outside hiding places, mixing faculty and student parking, and securing fences with heavy-duty padlocks.

In Newtown, the gunman, Adam Lanza, parked his car less than 100 feet from the school entrance on Dec. 14, 2012. He entered through doors near the school's main offices, where he killed the principal and school psychologist. He then entered two classrooms and killed 20 students and six educators, before fatally shooting himself, according to state police. Before going to the school, Mr. Lanza killed his mother in their Newtown home.

According to the lawsuit, a teacher in one of the two classrooms where students were killed was a substitute, didn't have a key to the classroom door, and didn't receive training on the security protocols. The lawsuit also charges the town with negligence for not having bulletproof glass on the school's front windows, not having doors that could be locked from the inside, and not having parking lot security.

Katherine Newman, provost of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and co-author of the book "Rampage: The Social Roots of School Shootings," says that while quick security upgrades like bulletproof glass might help against an attack similar to the Newtown shooting – when an assailant came from outside the school – most school shootings are very different and involve students who are already past security and inside the school.

Kenneth Trump – president of National School Safety and Security Services, a school security consulting firm – wrote a blog post last week describing how technological "quick-fixes" and investments in physical security equipment wouldn't be able to solve the school safety issue.

Other efforts to address school safety have focused on trying to increase communication and awareness among educators and students, so potential threats are identified and people can receive help before a shooting happens.

Most school shooters fit the profile of Adam Lanza, Newman says, and she believes that many could be stopped by being identified and treated long before they reach the point of taking a gun to school. Lanza's parents, educators, and others missed signs of how serious his mental health problems were, according to reports by state police and the state child advocate.

Your thoughts on the wrongful death lawsuit against the town of Newtown, Conn.? Are they to blame for what happened?
 
The city is not to blame and neither is the school, nor is the gun manufacturer.  But they are attempting to tackle an issue that cannot be so easily approached with a lawsuit.  It is the culture of our country, this stigma on mental health and the IMMENSE lack of resources for people who truly need help.  Had Adam Lanza been put in the right facilities, been given the right treatment, been diagnosed properly even, this might've been different.  I mean, even down to the fact that his mother kept weapons in the house with a son who, although maybe not physically violent toward her, showed signs of mental health issues that could possibly trigger something.  This was a huge, huge mistake on the mother's part, and now she is and many other people are dead, including the person who did it.
 
Dee said:
The city is not to blame and neither is the school, nor is the gun manufacturer.  But they are attempting to tackle an issue that cannot be so easily approached with a lawsuit.  It is the culture of our country, this stigma on mental health and the IMMENSE lack of resources for people who truly need help.  Had Adam Lanza been put in the right facilities, given the right treatment, diagnosed properly even, this might've been different.  I mean, even down to the fact that his mother kept weapons in the house with a son who, although maybe not physically violent toward her, showed signs of mental health issues that could possibly trigger something.  This was a huge, huge mistake on the mother's part, and now she is and many other people are dead, including the person who did it.

Excellent post and I have nothing more to add. :tup:
 
I just feel horrible for these people, you know? They want something to hold onto, some sort of "target", I suppose, in order to find some justice for the many children and other loved ones who died in that tragic accident. I can't imagine dropping my kid off at school and then being notified that they've been murdered because of some teenager who wasn't given the proper treatment he needed, the right kind of environment, etc. He made a very bad decision and now several lives are gone that barely even had a chance. Who can they blame now that the main suspect is dead? Where do they go from there, just...try to get on with their lives? Yeah, easier said than done.
 
this is sad and horrible at the same time...

especially when people still believe that shooting was real...

the government already gave those people millions of dollars of tax payers money as well as the international community...

now, they want to sue, for what?
 
Webster said:
+freezy said:
especially when people still believe that shooting was real...now, they want to sue, for what?

Haven't we already shot the 'Sandy Hook was a hoax' thing down already, my friend? :| :rolleyes:


nope...

they are wrong on many issues and never brought up a lot of issues...

they just cherry-picked and put forth false information to make it seem like they debunked the whole hoax point of view...

there's still a lot of things that makes no sense, a lot of people caught lying and a lot of lies in the official police report...
 
TRUE LIBERTY said:
Webster said:
+freezy said:
especially when people still believe that shooting was real...now, they want to sue, for what?

Haven't we already shot the 'Sandy Hook was a hoax' thing down already, my friend? :| :rolleyes:

Yes we have. I can at least appreciate the good conspiracy theories but this one is beyond horrible. It is actually crude and disgusting when children have died.

how do you know if any children died? :|


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQVRlEe2A94


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmTY8NTvPUw


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezeU3IKH2Eg


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-9i20HESX8


Top Ten Reasons: Sandy Hook Was an Elaborate Hoax
http://memoryholeblog.com/2014/01/10/top-ten-reasons-sandy-hook-was-an-elaborate-hoax/
 
Because they were shot and killed and stupid conspiracies of children who vaguely and in some no way resemble the poor children who died. Just disgusting.


2012-12-17T041439Z_01_TOR311_RTRMDNP_3_USA-SHOOTING-CONNECTICUT.jpg




Charlotte Bacon, 6

Charlotte Bacon never met an animal she didn’t love, and from the age of 2 wanted to be a veterinarian. The energetic redhead practiced tae kwon do weekly with her father and brother and “relished kicking and throwing punches!” her family said.

“The family will forever remember her beautiful smile, her energy for life, and the unique way she expressed her individuality, usually with the color pink,” her family said.

On Friday, her mother gave into her pleas and let her wear a special new outfit to school, a pink dress and boots.
View Story
As investigators hunt for answers, wrenching rites begin in Newtown

Amid incalculable loss, this grieving town began the task of burying the young victims of Friday’s shooting rampage at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

A Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn.

Her family said Charlotte had “left a place in her entire extended family’s hearts that will never be replaced.”

Her uncle, John Hagen, said she was “going to go some places in this world.”

“This little girl could light up the room for anyone,” he said.

Daniel Barden, 7

Daniel Barden, the youngest of three children, was “the light of his family’s life,” a fearless spirit who earned his ripped jeans and missing two front teeth.

“Words really cannot express what a special boy Daniel was. Such a light. Always smiling, unfailingly polite, incred­ibly affectionate, fair, and so thoughtful toward others, imaginative in play, both intelligent and articulate in conversation: in all, a constant source of laughter and joy,” the family said.

Daniel loved spending time with his family, riding waves at the beach, playing the drums in a band with his brother and sister, and making s’mores around the bonfire with his cousins. His funeral will be Wednesday.

Engel Family/Tim Nosezo, via AP

Olivia Engel, 6

Olivia Engel loved school and excelled at math and reading, her family said. She loved to draw and design things, and she loved to laugh.

“She was insightful for her age and had a great sense of humor,” her family said. “She laughed a lot and always lit up a room, including the people around her.”

She played tennis and took art classes, loved her swimming and ballet lessons. Olivia was a great big sister, her family said, who was “always very patient with her 3-year-old brother, Brayden.” She was learning her rosary, and led grace every night at dinner. She was a grateful child who was ­always appreciative, a smiling 6-year-old who, in her father’s words, had a lot to look forward to.

On Friday, a longtime family friend said, Olivia was excited to go to school, then get home and make a gingerbread house.

Josephine Gay, 7

Josephine Gay was nicknamed “Boo” because she looked like the character in the animated children’s movie “Monsters, Inc.,” according to a Facebook post by Carole Laude Pechi.

Josephine had a beaming smile, friends said. She celebrated her seventh birthday last Tuesday.

She enjoyed riding her bike and selling lemonade at a stand that she would set up in her neighborhood.

Sinde Candella, who used to live nearby, said Josephine’s parents, Bob and Michelle, are loving and devoted.

“May God be with you and may he hold Josephine in his arms in heaven,” she posted on Facebook.

Josephine loved the color purple. In her memory, neighbors hung purple balloons on their mailboxes and gates.

Dylan Hockley, 6

Dylan Hockley moved from Britain to Newtown with his parents, Nicole and Ian, and brother, Jake, two years ago. The 6-year-old’s mother recently described the area as “a wonderful place to live,” according to The Telegraph news­paper in Britain. Dylan’s “beaming smile would light up any room and his laugh was the sweetest music,” his parents said. Their son struggled with learning difficulties and “was so proud when he read us a new book every day.”

His 8-year-old brother was at the school and survived. Theresa Moretti, Dylan’s grandmother, said she found out that the boy had died in a panicked phone call from her daughter. “She kept saying ‘Mum, how do you tell an 8-year-old his 6-year-old brother is dead and not coming back?’ ”

Madeleine Hsu, 6, was an “upbeat and kind” young girl, a neighbor said.

“She was a sweet, beautiful little girl,” neighbor Karen Dryer told the Wall Street Journal.

Catherine Hubbard, 6

Catherine ­Hubbard will be remembered for her love of animals and constant smile, her family said in her obituary.

“Her family prays that she, all the students of Sandy Hook Elementary, and all those affected by this brutal event find peace in their hearts,” it reads.

In a statement, the family said it was deeply saddened by the loss of their “beautiful daughter,” and sent their prayers to the families of other victims. They expressed gratitude to emergency workers, teachers at Sandy Hook, and the authorities and asked for privacy in their grief.

“We ask that you continue to pray for us and the other families who have experienced loss in this tragedy.” ­Funeral services have been planned for Thursday.

Chase Kowalski, 7

Chase Kowalski loved playing baseball with his dad, riding his ­bicycle, and just being outside. He was always in motion, and ­always smiling, neighbors said.

“He did nothing but smile,” neighbor Suzanne Baumann said. “He was the apple of his parents’ eye.”

In an obituary, his family recalled him as an “amazing son, brother, and grandson whose heart was only filled with love for all the people he touched.”

A fun-loving, energetic boy with a “true love of life,” Chase ran in many community road races and completed his first triathlon at the age of 6. He had a deep love for baseball, and could often be found playing in his yard.

“We are thankful to the Lord for giving us seven years with our beautiful, loving son,” the family wrote. “It is with heavy hearts that we return him to our Lord.”

Jesse Lewis, 6

Jesse Lewis had hot chocolate with his favorite breakfast sandwich — sausage, egg, and cheese — at the neighborhood deli before going to school Friday morning.

“He was imaginative and full of ­energy,” family friend Lisa Dismont said. “He was a little character. He just liked to be goofy. His favorite thing was to act like an old man. He’d pull his trousers up to his chin and walk hunched over with a scowl on his face.”

Jesse liked to play farmer and was learning to ride horses, friends said.

“We’re all trying to grapple with what happened,” Dismont said. “We’re all going to miss little Jesse. He was very perceptive, very inquisitive, just a very happy little boy.”

Ana Marquez-Greene, 6

Ana Marquez-Greene was an “incredibly loving and spunky kid” who loved to sing and dance, a family friend said. Noah Baerman described the 6-year-old as vivacious and affectionate and the product of two loving parents.

She loved to sing and play piano, CNN reported.

The girl’s grandmother, Elba ­Marquez, said the family moved to Connecticut only two months ago from Canada. She had just visited their new home, describing the quiet town as a “beautiful place.”

“What happened does not match up with the place where they live,” she said.

On Facebook, Ana’s father said he was trying to “work through this nightmare.”

“I love you, sweetie girl,” he wrote.

James Mattioli, 6

James Mattioli, fondly called J, was an energetic, loving friend to all, his family said in his obituary.

He loved baseball and basketball and would wear shorts and a T-shirt in any weather. He grabbed gel to spike his hair and loved to sing at the top of his lungs, once asking how old he had to be to sing on a stage.

He loved to dive off the diving board and proudly rode his bike with no training wheels. James loved his big sister and wanted to do everything she could do.

He was born four weeks early, and his family would often quip it was because he was hungry. He loved hamburgers with ketchup, his father’s omelets with bacon, and his mother’s french toast. He liked Subway, and wanted to know how old he needed to be to order a foot-long sandwich.

He adored spending time with his dad doing yard work, the family wrote, and watching him grill burgers on the deck.

“If dad was outside, James wanted to be right there with him,” they wrote.

Grace McDonnell, 7

Grace McDonnell was the “love and light” of her family. Her parents, Lynn and Chris McDonnell, said they could not believe the outpouring of support they have received.

Their daughter was the center of their lives and was always smiling, they said.

“Words cannot adequately express our sense of loss,” her family said.

Her grandmother, Mary Ann McDonnell, told the Boston Herald she is devastated. The little girl used to love playing dress-up with her grandmother’s jewelry.

“Gracie’s gone; the little girly girl is gone,” the grandmother told the newspaper during an interview. “They kept saying: ‘They can’t find her. They can’t find her.’ All day long, I was praying she would be OK.”

“She was a wonderful little girl,” she said in the interview. “I think everybody should know about these beautiful children whose lives were cut short.”

Her grandmother said Grace loved art projects, soccer, gymnastics, and playing with her King Charles Spaniel, Puddin. She had a 12-year-old brother, Jack.

“A little baby like that - I just hope she didn’t suffer,” her grandmother said.

Emilie Parker, 7

Emilie Parker could quickly cheer anyone up with her bright smile, her family said. The 7-year-old loved drawing and writing cards.

Her father, Robbie Parker, said his daughter was always smiling and was adventurous, except when it came to food.

Her father is now faced with having to explain the death to his two other children, ages 3 and 4.

He said the world is a better place because of his daughter’s life.

“I’m so blessed to be her dad,” he said.

Jack Pinto, 6

Jack Pinto was a boy full of energy. The 6-year-old was on the town’s wrestling team and loved the New York Giants.

“From the moment Jack arrived in this world, he commanded all the attention in a room,” family friend Mary Radatovich said. “Who could ignore that beautiful energy, the sparkle in his eye, or that spirit that clearly said, ‘I am here and I am something special’? As soon as Jack started to move, it was: ‘Look out, world! Here I come!’ ”

The joyful little boy was buried Monday.

“In life and in death, Jack will forever be remembered for the immeasurable joy he brought to all who had the pleasure of knowing him, a joy whose wide reach belied his six short years,” his family said.

Jack especially loved Giants wide receiver Victor Cruz, who on Sunday wrote, “Jack Pinto, My Hero,” on his cleats.

“I was going to do whatever I can to honor him,” Cruz said.

Cruz will give the gloves he wore during Sunday’s game to the Pinto family.

“There’s no words that can describe the type of feeling that you get when a kid idolizes you so much that unfortunately they want to put him in the ­casket with your jersey on,” Cruz said. “I can’t even explain it.”

Noah Pozner, 6

When Noah Pozner’s mom told him she loved him, the 6-year-old would respond, “Not as much as I love you.”

The young boy celebrated his birthday two weeks ago and was best friends with his twin sister, Arielle, who survived the shooting, and their older sister, ­Sophia.

“They were always playing together; they loved to do things together,” said Noah’s uncle, Alexis Haller of Woodinville, Wash.

Noah, “smart as a whip,” loved to read and figure out how things worked. He was gentle, but could be rambunctious, his family said.

“He was just a really lively, smart kid,” Haller said. “He would have ­become a great man, I think. He would have grown up to be a great dad.”

Noah’s funeral was Monday.

Ray Horvath, 65, a teacher for a ­local nonprofit that provided tutoring for 60 children at the elementary school, knew the young boy.

“Noah was such a little pain in the neck, but in a good way,” he said. “Whenever you criticized him, he would just look back up at you with those big beautiful eyes and say: ‘What? What did I do wrong?’ ”

Caroline Previdi, 6

Caroline Phoebe Previdi was a first-grader who loved to draw and dance. Her smile brought happiness to everyone she touched. The 6-year-old belonged to St. Rose of Lima Catholic Church in Newtown, where a burial Mass will be celebrated Wednesday.

Jessica Rekos, 6

Jessica Rekos loved everything about horses, her parents said. She read books about them and wrote stories of her own about them, too. For Christmas, she asked Santa for new cowgirl boots and a cowgirl hat, and she dreamed of having a horse of her own when she turned 10.

Her family recalled Jessica as a “creative, beautiful little girl” who loved playing with her little brothers.

She spent time writing in her journals, making up stories, and doing ­research on orca whales, one of her passions after seeing the movie “Free Willy.”

The firstborn, Jessica was “our rock,” her parents said.

“She had an answer for everything, she didn’t miss a trick, and she outsmarted us every time.” A thoughtful planner, she was “our little CEO.”

“We cannot imagine our life without her. We are mourning her loss, sharing our beautiful memories we have of her, and trying to help her brother T understand why he can’t play with his best friend,” they said.

Funeral services are planned for Tuesday.

Avielle Richman, 6

Avielle Rose ­Richman, daughter of Jennifer Hensel and ­Jeremy Richman, was born Oct. 17, 2006, in San ­Diego and moved to Connecticut with her family last year.

Those who knew her said she had a spitfire personality, infectious smile, and beautiful spirit.

Avielle loved music, horseback riding, archery, kung fu, swimming, ice skating, and super hero adventures.

She had a pony named Betty and two cats. She celebrated her sixth birthday in October.

Benjamin Wheeler, 6

Benjamin ­Wheeler was “an irrepressibly bright and spirited boy whose love of fun and excitement at the wonders of life and the world could rarely be contained,” his family wrote in his obituary.

“His rush to experience life was headlong, creative, and immediate,” it read.

He was a devoted fan of his older brother, Nate, and the two of them ­together filled the house with the noise of four children.

He loved soccer, smiling and laughing as he moved the ball, nearly always at full tilt.

He was becom­ing a strong swimmer and loved his lessons.

Eager to learn, he could not wait to get to school to see his teacher and his growing group of friends. Earlier in December, Ben performed at a piano recital.

Sitting still long enough to play one piece “was an accomplishment he reveled in.”

He loved the Beatles, lighthouses, and the Number 7 train to Sunnyside, Queens.

Before school Friday, he told his mother he still wanted to be an architect but also wanted to be a paleontologist.

“Because that’s what Nate is going to be, and I want to do everything Nate does,” he said.

Allison Wyatt, 6

Allison Wyatt was recalled as well ­behaved and loving.

She was a very shy girl. She was quiet and kept to herself, but she would smile at things.

“If a kid did something funny, she’d be laughing,” said day-care teacher Kate Capellaro of All for Kids in Ridgefield, where Wyatt and her sister, Lauren, were sometimes dropped off by their mom.

When her mom left, Allison would cry sometimes.

“She would come and put her head down on your shoulder if she was ­upset,” Capellaro said.

“It would make her feel better. She was such a sweet and caring girl. She loved everything. Every time I close my eyes, all I ever see is her face, and it just breaks my heart knowing she’s no longer here.”


http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2012/12/18/profiles-children-killed-sandy-hook-elementary-school/U1HrEgjzJ6KrOdceDsX6hJ/story.html
 
you completely avoided the evidence and the videos...
------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1oymbwSNL8
 
+freezy said:
you completely avoided the evidence and the videos...

------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1oymbwSNL8

Just like you say there is evidence refuting that it happened, there is hard scientific factual evidence backing it up and yet you refuse to believe the dead bodies of children and adults were real. You refuse to believe a young man made a very serious, very tragic and devastating decision that affected not just a handful of lives, but 26 individual families who had absolutely no idea this was going to happen. Would you refute that the shooting here at Reynolds High School in Troutdale, OR was real? Would you refute that three gunmen came into Rosemary Anderson HS here in Portland and shot up the school, fortunately only injuring and not killing anyone? Would you refute that what happened in Marysville, WA, Blacksburg, VT, Conway, AK was real? What makes those school shootings any different than what happened in Newtown, CT? I'll tell you what was different--the number of dead, which was immense for a school shooting, as well as where it took place and how young the victims were. This isn't any different than what's taken place at several schools that haven't been argued to be "conspiracies" for gun control.

So what is different?
 
actually, it's them, the government, that are hiding evidence and that's a fact...

they, the truthers, are only putting forth substantial evidence by investigation work...

the evidence is strong and leave even more questions about what really happened...
 
+freezy said:
you completely avoided the evidence and the videos...

------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1oymbwSNL8

Thats not evidence, that is kooky crapola.
 
+freezy said:
actually, it's them, the government, that are hiding evidence and that's a fact...

they, the truthers, are only putting forth substantial evidence by investigation work...

the evidence is strong and leave even more questions about what really happened...

I never thought I'd be quoting Obama of all people, Freezy, but....
hey-sudipto-stop-speaking-nonsense.jpg
 
or maybe you should stop being so gullible to believe in the government's/media's nonsense? :|
 
+freezy said:
or maybe you should stop being so gullible to believe in the government's/media's nonsense? :|

No, I go by the Occam's Razor's philosophy of life, Justice...and I've slagged on government (and the media, for that matter) way too many damn times to take what they say w/out copious amounts of salt.
 
TRUE LIBERTY said:
+freezy said:
you completely avoided the evidence and the videos...



------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1oymbwSNL8

Thats not evidence, that is kooky crapola.


actually, body language expert's testimony's have been evidence in a court of law...  :hello:  :tup:
 
Webster said:
+freezy said:
or maybe you should stop being so gullible to believe in the government's/media's nonsense? :|

No, I go by the Occam's Razor's philosophy of life, Justice...and I've slagged on government (and the media, for that matter) way too many damn times to take what they say w/out copious amounts of salt.

Learn something new everyday. "Entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily." Plus the fact I agree with what you said.
------------------------------------------------------------------
+freezy said:
TRUE LIBERTY said:
+freezy said:
you completely avoided the evidence and the videos...




------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1oymbwSNL8

Thats not evidence, that is kooky crapola.


actually, body language expert's testimony's have been evidence in a court of law...  :hello:  :tup:

I am not even talking about body language I am talking about this whole conspiracy idea no children died. And some how our government got a whole school of administrators and teachers to stay silent. Cops, and emergency rescue were all kept silent also. And then the federal government goes through all this trouble to pull off a hoax and keeps the kids who were supposedly not killed right there in the same school and does not move them to new locations. And then every child in school keeps there mouth shut also to the press or FACEBOOK. And then all of the press stays silent including FOX the channel the left hate so much. But it makes for a good X-Files movie.
 

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