Deadly Brown Shooting Spurs Calls for Action on Guns
Jessica
Corbett for Common Dreams
A suspect ("person of interest") was arrested just before 5 AM at a hotel in Coventry. Shelter in place orders were lifted at 7 AM. Tonight, he was identified as Benjamin Erickson, 24, from Wisconsin. Police say they found two handguns in his hotel room. NEW: Just after 11 PM, Providence Mayor Brett Smiley and police officials held a unscheduled briefing to say that Erickson was being released, noting that it was unfortunate his name was released. That means there is NO suspect in custody and the killer is still on the loose.
“Our hearts are with the victims, survivors, their families,
and the entire community of Brown University and the surrounding Providence
area in this horrific time,” said Brady president Kris Brown in a statement. “As
students prepare for finals and then head home to loved ones for the holidays,
our all-too-American gun violence crisis has shattered their safety.”
“Guns are the leading cause of death for youth in this
nation. Only in America do we live in fear of being shot and killed in our
schools, places of worship, and grocery stores,” she continued. “Now, as
students, faculty, and staff hide and barricade themselves in immense fear, we
once again call on lawmakers in Congress and around the country to take action
against this uniquely American public health crisis.
We cannot continue to allow politics and special interests to take priority
over our lives and safety.”
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| THIS is the misinformation posted by Trump just two hours after the shooting. Local and university officials scrambled to correct this malicious interference. At 6 PM, he posted a retraction that blamed Brown University police for having "reversed their previous statement." There was no such previous statement. |
The law
enforcement response is ongoing and Brown remains in lockdown, according to a 9:29 pm
Eastern update on the university’s website. Everyone is urged to shelter in
place, which “means keeping all doors locked and ensuring no movement across
campus.”
The Ivy League university’s president, Christina H. Paxson,
said in a public message that “this is a deeply tragic day for Brown, our
families, and our local community. There are truly no words that can express
the deep sorrow we are feeling for the victims of the shooting that took place
today at the Barus & Holley engineering and physics building.”
US Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) said on social media that
he was “praying for the victims and their families,” and thanked the first
responders who “put themselves in harm’s way to protect all of us.” He also
echoed the city’s mayor, Brett Smiley, “in urging Rhode Islanders to heed only
official updates from Brown University and the Providence Police.”
In a statement, US Sen. Jack Reed (D-RI) also acknowledged everyone
impacted by “this horrific, active, and unfolding tragedy,” and stressed the
importance of everyone listening to law enforcement “as they continue working
to ensure the entire campus and surrounding community is safe, and the threat
is neutralized.”
The state’s two Democratic congressmen, Brown alumnus Seth Magaziner and Gabe
Amo, released similar statements. Amo also said that “the scourge of mass shootings is
a horrific stain on our nation. We must seek policies to ensure that these
tragedies do not strike yet another community and no more lives are needlessly
taken from us.”
Elected officials at various levels of government across the country sent their condolences to the Brown community. Some also used the 389th US mass shooting this year and the 230th gun incident on school grounds—according to Brady’s president—to argue that, as US House Democratic Whip Katherine Clark (Mass.) put it, “it’s past time for us to act and stop senseless gun violence from happening again.”
New York City’s democratic socialist mayor-elect, Zohran Mamdani, noted that
this shooting occurred just before the anniversary of the 2012 massacre
at Sandy Hook Elementary
School in Newtown, Connecticut:
This senseless violence—once considered unfathomable—has become nauseatingly normal to all of us across our nation. Tonight, on the eve of the anniversary of the Sandy Hook shooting, we find ourselves in mourning once again.
The epidemic of gun violence stretches across America. We reckon with it when we step into our houses of worship and out onto our streets, when we drop our children off at kindergarten and when we fear if those children, now grown, will be safe on campus. But unlike so many other epidemics, we possess the cure. We have the power to eradicate this suffering from our lives if we so choose.
I send my deepest condolences to the families of the victims, and to the Brown and Providence communities, who are wrestling with a grief that will feel familiar to far too many others. May we never allow ourselves to grow numb to this pain, and let us rededicate ourselves to the enduring work of ending the scourge of gun violence in our nation.
Fred Guttenberg has been advocating against gun violence
since his 14-year-old daughter was among those murdered at Marjory Stoneman
Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida nearly eight years ago. He said on
social media that
he knows two current students at Brown and asserted that “IT DOESN’T NEED TO BE
THIS WAY!!!”
Students Demand Action similarly declared: “Make no mistake: We DO NOT have to live and die
like this. Our lawmakers fail us every day that they refuse to take action on
gun violence.”
Gabby Giffords, a former Democratic congresswoman from
Arizona who became an activist after surviving a 2011 assassination
attempt, said that “my heart breaks for Brown University.
Students should only have to worry about studying for finals right now, not
hiding from gunfire. Guns are the leading cause of death for young people in
America—this is a five-alarm fire and our leaders in Washington have
ignored it for too long. Americans are tired of waiting around for Congress to
decide that protecting kids matters.”
John Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety, warned that “we either take action, or we bury more of
our kids.”
The Associated Press noted that “Rhode Island has some of the strictest gun
laws in the US. Last spring the Democratic-controlled Legislature passed an
assault weapon ban that will prohibit the sale and manufacturing of certain
high-powered firearms, but not their possession, starting next July.”
Gun violence prevention advocates often argue for federal
restrictions, given that, as Everytown’s latest analysis of
state-level policies points out, “even the strongest system can’t protect a
state from its neighbors’ weak laws.”
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