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As Ohio Governor Mike DeWine spoke at a community gathering after the Dayton shooting, the crowd erupted in chants of “Do something.”
USA TODAY

DAYTON, Ohio – In the wake of Dayton’s mass shooting Sunday, Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine was shouted down by a crowd of vigil attendees wanting action.

As he took the stage in the Oregon District of Dayton, the location of Sunday’s mass shooting, and commented on the size of the crowd gathered, he was met with chants.

“Do something!” the crowd chanted over and over.

“We’re here tonight because we know that we cannot … we know that we cannot … ease the pain of those families who have lost someone,” said DeWine, a Republican, as the chants grew. “We also know that we want to do something.”

Nine people were killed and 27 injured when a suspected gunman opened fire at the Oregon District. The gunman was killed by police.

DeWine has been working on a “red flag law,” which would permit police or relatives to petition a court to remove guns from people deemed dangerous. Several states passed them after the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida.

But DeWine is trying to thread a needle with Second Amendment advocates concerned about due process rights and a GOP-controlled Legislature that has shown little interest in gun control.

DeWine’s history with firearms-related legislation is mixed. 

In Congress, DeWine’s support of gun control, such as background checks at gun shows, earned him an “F” rating from the NRA. In 2006, the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence endorsed DeWine in his U.S. Senate race.

He improved to a “C” in 2014, after his first term as Ohio’s attorney general. 

9 dead, 27 injured: Dayton vigil turns into campaign for gun control: ‘When do we want it? Now!’; gunman’s sister among 9 dead

The suspect: Ohio shooting: Police have identified 24-year-old man as suspect who killed 9 in Dayton shooting

But during the GOP primary for governor in 2018, DeWine was not the first choice of gun groups. They preferred his lieutenant governor and one-time rival Jon Husted or even former Lt. Gov. Mary Taylor, who proudly donned her rifle at a 2018 gun-rights rally on the Statehouse steps.

DeWine and Husted joined forces on the GOP ticket. Husted’s presence eased some gun rights advocates’ fears that DeWine might act like former Gov. John Kasich. Kasich signed every Second Amendment bill that crossed his desk and then suddenly started advocating for gun restrictions. 

In the end, the National Rifle Association endorsed DeWine’s bid for governor over Democrat Rich Cordray, former leader of the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

“This is a vigil tonight, a vigil for the people we have lost,” Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley said. “There will be time for action.”

Follow Cameron Knight and Jessie Balmert on Twitter: @ckpj99 and @jbalmert

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/08/05/dayton-shooting-vigil-mike-dewine-chants/1919624001/

Updated at 9:40 a.m. ET

President Trump will deliver remarks this morning from the White House in response to the deadly shootings over the weekend in El Paso and Dayton that killed 29 people.

In what might be a preview of his speech, Trump, in a series of tweets called on Congress to pass gun control legislation, saying the victims shouldn’t die in vain.

“Republicans and Democrats must come together and get strong background checks, perhaps marrying…this legislation with desperately needed immigration reform,” Trump tweeted.

“We must have something good, if not GREAT, come out of these two tragic events!” Trump concluded.

The alleged shooter in El Paso is believed to be the author of an anti-immigrant manifesto. It’s not clear why, in the wake of that, Trump is now talking about linking gun legislation with immigration reform. Those have been two of the most politically intractable issues in recent years, with bipartisan efforts ultimately failing.

Stalled congressional efforts on gun violence

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) called on Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) to bring the Senate, which is out on recess, back “for an emergency session to put the House-passed universal background checks legislation on the Senate floor for debate and a vote immediately.”

Earlier this year the Democratically-controlled House passed two bills aimed at making the background check system more stringent, with the support of a handful of Republicans. One would require background checks for all person to person gun sales. The other would extend the amount of time gun dealers must wait for a response from the federal background check system. It is currently three days and the House bill would make it ten days. The Senate has not moved to take up either measure.

President Trump disembarks Air Force One with First Lady Melania Trump, on Aug, 4, 2019 after two mass shootings over the weekend. Trump has called for “strong background checks” in response to the shootings.

Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images


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President Trump disembarks Air Force One with First Lady Melania Trump, on Aug, 4, 2019 after two mass shootings over the weekend. Trump has called for “strong background checks” in response to the shootings.

Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images

In the wake of the shootings, Senator Pat Toomey (R-Penn.) tried to revive legislation he co-sponsored following the Sandy Hook school shooting to close what’s known as the “gun show loophole.”

“While no law will end mass shootings entirely, it’s time for Congress to act to help keep our communities safer,” Toomey tweeted. “We should start by passing bipartisan proposals such as my legislation with Senator Joe Manchin to expand background checks to all commercial firearm sales.”

The 2013 Toomey-Manchin bill was the last major bipartisan effort at new gun control legislation and it failed to overcome a filibuster in the Senate.

In remarks Sunday in New Jersey on his way home from a weekend at his Bedminster golf resort, President Trump talked about mental health as a factor in the shootings. That’s something he has done after past mass shootings as well. And it might also hint at an avenue for possible legislation. Trump ally Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) is calling for a red-flag law, also known as an extreme risk protective order. Some states, including California, have passed such laws allowing law enforcement to temporarily take guns away from people deemed a risk to themselves or others. President Trump’s daughter and senior advisor Ivanka Trump endorsed the idea as well on Sunday.

Trump’s language on immigration

Since launching his presidential campaign four years ago, President Trump has vilified people coming to the country illegally, referring earlier this year to migrants seeking asylum as an “invasion.” The manifesto believed to have been posted by the alleged shooter in El Paso use similar language, saying “this attack is a response to the Hispanic invasion of Texas.”

In a statement, the FBI said the El Paso attack “underscores the continued threat posed by domestic violent extremists and perpetrators of hate crimes.”

Trump alluded to that as he spoke to reporters Sunday. “Hate has no place in our country,” Trump said. “And we’re going to take care of it.”

But critics have pointed to Trump’s own language as part of the problem. In a speech delivered from the Oval Office urging action on his proposed border wall, Trump, as he frequently does painted immigrants as murderers, though crime rates among undocumented immigrants are lower than in the general population.

“Day after day, precious lives are cut short by those who have violated our borders,” Trump said before highlighting high profile cases of violence. “How much more American blood must we shed before Congress does its job?”

At a rally in Panama City Beach, Florida in May Trump was again talking about the “invasion” of immigrants and a caravan of migrants near the border when he asked “But how do you stop with those people?” Someone in the audience shouted loudly “shoot them.” Trump heard the person, chuckled and joked “only in the panhandle you can get away with that statement.”

Administration officials push back on the idea that Trump or his rhetoric have any responsibility to bear, saying the only people responsible for these mass shootings are the men shooting the guns.

In a later tweet Monday morning, Trump seemed to blame the media for the rise in mass shootings. “Fake News has contributed greatly to the anger and rage that has built up over many years,” Trump wrote.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/08/05/748190808/trump-calls-for-strong-background-checks-following-el-paso-and-dayton-shootings

  • 8chan, the website where the suspected El Paso gunman posted a hate-filled screed, was down on Monday.
  • The site wasn’t available after its website security and network provider Cloudflare said it would no longer provide services for 8chan.
  • Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince wrote in a Monday blog post that 8chan had “proven themselves to be lawless and that lawlessness has caused multiple tragic deaths.”

8chan, the website where the suspected El Paso gunman posted a hate-filled screed, was down on Monday after its website security and network provider Cloudflare said it would no longer provide services for the controversial site.

“8chan has repeatedly proven itself to be a cesspool of hate,” Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince said in a Monday blog post.  

8chan, in a tweet posted late Sunday, acknowledged the decision from Cloudflare and said it expected “some downtime in the next 24-48 hours while we find a solution.” Several checks of the 8chan website Monday morning showed it was down. But the  news website Vice reported Monday that 8chan’s administrators said they had secured the services of a provider called BitMitigate and were back online, although not in all parts of the world. 

Cloudflare’s Prince said the company made the decision to pull its support for 8chan because “they have proven themselves to be lawless and that lawlessness has caused multiple tragic deaths.” The web security company noted that other alleged shooters — including  a suspect gunman at a synagogue in Poway, California — had posted angry letters on 8chan, and described a culture of an unmoderated “hate-filled community.”

“We reluctantly tolerate content that we find reprehensible, but we draw the line at platforms that have demonstrated they directly inspire tragic events and are lawless by design,” Prince wrote. “8chan has crossed that line. It will therefore no longer be allowed to use our services.”

8chan is a megaphone?

Separately, 8chan founder Fredrick Brennan told the New York Times that the site should be shuttered in the wake of the latest shooting. The publication called the service a “megaphone for gunmen.”

“Shut the site down,” Brennan told the newspaper. “It’s not doing the world any good. It’s a complete negative to everybody except the users that are there. And you know what? It’s a negative to them, too. They just don’t realize it.”

Brennan started the site as a more free-wheeling alternative to 4chan, which he viewed as too restrictive. Since he founded it in 2013, it’s become a gathering site for conspiracy theorists and extremists. 

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/8chan-down-after-cloudflare-suspends-account-in-wake-of-el-paso-shooting-and-manifesto/

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) — High school classmates of the gunman who killed nine people early Sunday in Dayton, Ohio, say he was suspended for compiling a “hit list” of those he wanted to kill and a “rape list” of girls he wanted to sexually assault.

The accounts by two former classmates emerged after police said there was nothing in the background of 24-year-old Connor Betts that would have prevented him from purchasing the .223-caliber rifle with extended ammunition magazines that he used to open fire outside a crowded bar. Police on patrol in the entertainment district fatally shot him less than a minute later.

Both former classmates told The Associated Press that Betts was suspended during their junior year at suburban Bellbrook High School after a hit list was found scrawled in a school bathroom. That followed an earlier suspension after Betts came to school with a list of female students he wanted to sexually assault, according to the two classmates, a man and a woman who are both now 24 and spoke on condition of anonymity out of concern they might face harassment.

“There was a kill list and a rape list, and my name was on the rape list,” said the female classmate.

A former cheerleader, the woman said she didn’t really know Betts and was surprised when a police officer called her cellphone during her freshman year to tell her that her name was included on a list of potential targets.

“The officer said he wouldn’t be at school for a while,” she said. “But after some time passed he was back, walking the halls. They didn’t give us any warning that he was returning to school.”

Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Schools officials declined to comment on those accounts, only confirming that Betts attended schools in the district.

The discovery of the hit list early in 2012 sparked a police investigation, and roughly one-third of Bellbrook students skipped school out of fear, according to an article in the Dayton Daily News.

It’s not clear what became of that investigation. Chief Michael Brown in Sugarcreek Township, which has jurisdiction over the Bellbrook school, did not return calls Sunday about whether his agency investigated the hit list.

Though Betts, who was 17 at the time, was not named publicly by authorities at the time as the author of the list, the former classmates said it was common knowledge within the school he was the one suspended over the incident.

Drew Gainey was among those who went on social media Sunday to say red flags were raised about Betts’ behavior years ago.

“There was an incident in high school with this shooter that should have prevented him from ever getting his hands on a weapon. This was a tragedy that was 100% avoidable,” he wrote on in a Twitter post on Sunday.

Gainey did not respond to messages from AP seeking further comment, but the name on his account matches that of a former Bellbrook student who was on the track team with Betts.

Former Bellbrook Principal Chris Baker said he “would not dispute that information” when the Daily News asked him Sunday about the hit list suspension. He declined to comment further to the newspaper and the AP was unable to reach him.

Betts had no apparent criminal record as an adult, though if he had been charged as a juvenile that would typically be sealed under state law.

“There’s nothing in this individual’s record that would have precluded him from getting these weapons,” Dayton Police Chief Richard Biehl said Sunday.

Not everyone who went to school with Betts had bad things to say. Brad Howard told reporters in Bellbrook on Sunday that he was friends with Betts from preschool through their high school graduation.

“Connor Betts that I knew was a nice kid. The Connor Betts that I talked to, I always got along with well,” Howard said.

Mike Kern, a customer at the gas station where Betts used to work in Bellbrook, said he hasn’t seen Betts in about a year.

“He was the nicest kid you could imagine,” always friendly, Kern said. “I never heard him talk about violence, say a racist word, or anything like that.”

He said they sometimes played trivia at a bar near the gas station, and Betts often knew the answers on questions about current events and pop culture.

“He was real smart,” Kern said. “He knew all the answers.”

___

Biesecker reported from Washington. AP reporters Reese Dunklin in Dallas, John Seewer in Bellbrook and Michael Kunzelman in Silver Spring, Maryland, contributed to this report.

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Source Article from https://www.yahoo.com/news/classmates-ohio-shooter-kept-hit-033305480.html

August 5 at 7:56 AM

The FBI insists it is fully engaged in combating the threat of violence from white supremacists, but some former federal officials charge that the government is still coming up short in the face of a strain of American terrorism that now seems resurgent.

The weekend massacre at a Walmart and shopping center in El Paso has focused public debate once again on the issue, after federal prosecutors called it an act of domestic terrorism.

In recent congressional testimony, senior FBI officials said they were conducting about 850 domestic terrorism investigations — a decrease from a year earlier, when there were roughly 1,000. The category covers more than just racist violence, but officials say such motivations are a large part of their domestic terrorism caseload.

Yet by other measures, the threat of white nationalist violence appears to be rising. Between October and June, there were about 100 arrests of domestic terrorism suspects — and if that trend continues, the total for 2019 would outpace the prior year, when there were about 120 such cases. The year before that, about 150 domestic terrorism suspects were arrested.

“We will bring the full resources of the FBI to bear in the pursuit of justice for the victims of these crimes,” FBI Director Christopher A. Wray said in a statement issued late Sunday night.

In congressional testimony two weeks ago, Wray said the FBI is focused on the issue.

“We, the FBI, don’t investigate ideology, no matter how repugnant,” he said. “When it turns to violence, we’re all over it.”

That poses particular challenges in the world of white supremacists, who often do not belong to specific groups but instead find congregations of similar-minded people online and feed each other’s anger and hate.

That general lack of centralized groups or leaders among many white supremacists presents legal challenges to investigators, according to law enforcement officials. And in some cases, it shortens the time span from when a person may adopt extremist views and when they commit violence — what terrorism investigators call the “flash to bang.”

“The current racially motivated violent extremist threat is decentralized and primarily characterized by lone actors,” Michael McGarrity, an FBI assistant director, told lawmakers at a hearing in June.

So far, that appears to be the case for the suspect in El Paso, who investigators believe wrote a screed that professed admiration for white supremacist killers. Detectives have not yet found evidence indicating he was part of a larger group of conspirators, though they are still investigating.

Some veteran counterterrorism experts said the FBI and the federal government have done too little, despite concerns that have been building for more than a decade.

Dave Gomez, a former FBI supervisor who oversaw terrorism cases, said he thinks FBI officials are wary of pursuing white nationalists aggressively because of the fierce political debates surrounding the issue.

“I believe Christopher A. Wray is an honorable man, but I think in many ways the FBI is hamstrung in trying to investigate the white supremacist movement like the old FBI would,” Gomez said. “There’s some reluctance among agents to bring forth an investigation that targets what the president perceives as his base. It’s a no-win situation for the FBI agent or supervisor.”

Gomez said that reluctance stems in large part from the public criticism President Trump has launched against the FBI over the course of the bureau’s investigation into Russian election interference and the president’s ­conduct.

“I don’t think there’s any faith by the FBI right now that the Justice Department is an independent law enforcement organization,” he said. “I think the FBI is up to the challenge of investigating white nationalism and white supremacy as a domestic terrorism threat, they just have to be allowed to do it.”

An FBI spokesperson disputed those claims, noting that the agency assigns resources to reflect its assessment that domestic terrorists are a persistent threat. The official also denied that there is distrust between the bureau and the Justice Department, saying the two agencies work closely together.

The FBI said it “remains concerned that U.S.-based domestic violent extremists could become inspired by these and previous high-profile attacks to engage in similar acts of violence,” and asked the public to report any suspicious behavior they see online or elsewhere.

Daryl Johnson, a former analyst for the Department of Homeland Security whose 2009 memo warning of a growing threat of domestic terrorism led to a political backlash, said elected officials have been afraid to address the issue.

“Here we are 10 years later, this threat is still alive and well and in some respects is actually growing. It’s very concerning,” he said. “I’m still in disbelief that the federal government response seems to be lacking. People that we elect seem to lack political willpower to tackle this issue and call it out and do something about it.”

FBI data shows that hate crimes rose 17 percent in 2017, for their third consecutive increase, though officials cautioned that part of the increase is due to more police departments providing data than in previous years. FBI data on 2018 hate crimes is expected to be released in November.

Johnson, who wrote a book called “Hateland” about American extremists, said the government has pulled back grant programs for combating such violence at a time when they should have been beefing up such efforts.

“We’re in this heightened state of activity where we have mass shootings and bomb plots, and yet there’s no political willpower and everybody seems to be burying their head in the sand rather than try to tackle the issue,” Johnson said.

Experts say the way federal authorities investigate and prosecute terrorism suspects — particularly domestic terrorism suspects — hides the extent of the threat.

Under federal law, suspects plotting support for a group such as the Islamic State can be charged with the crime of providing criminal support to an overseas terrorist organization. There is no corresponding charge for providing material support to a domestic terrorism group.

Instead, domestic terrorist suspects who are not accused of a specific act of violence are typically charged with other crimes, such as drug or gun violations, and many of those cases are brought in state, not federal, court, meaning the general public often never hears that a domestic terrorism suspect has been ­arrested.

Some law enforcement officials have argued that Congress should enact a law that would make material support for domestic terrorism a crime. Others say that such a move could be struck down by the courts and that current laws are enough to deliver the most severe punishments possible.

In announcing Sunday that federal officials were considering filing hate-crime charges against the accused El Paso gunman, U.S. Attorney John F. Bash noted that such charges could carry a death sentence.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/fbi-faces-skepticism-over-its-anti-domestic-terror-efforts/2019/08/04/c9c928bc-b6e0-11e9-b3b4-2bb69e8c4e39_story.html

By:
WHIO.com

Updated: Aug 4, 2019 – 5:37 PM

DAYTON, Ohio

The Dayton police officers who engaged a shooter in the Oregon District early Sunday morning have been identified.

>> Read more trending news

Video shows the officers stopping the suspect moments before he would have entered Ned Pepper’s bar.

The six officers are:

  • Sgt. William C. Knight, sworn in Feb. 14, 1997
  • Officer Brian Rolfes, sworn in April 8, 2016
  • Officer Jeremy Campbell, sworn in Aug. 5, 2016
  • Officer Vincent Carter, sworn in April 8, 2016
  • Officer Ryan Nabel, sworn in April 8, 2016
  • Officer David Denlinger, sworn in April 8, 2016

It is not known which officer shot and killed the suspected shooter, identified as Connor Betts 24, of Bellbrook.

All the officers are on administrative leave, which is protocol for officer-involved shootings.

Nine people were killed during the incident and 27 were injured.

Source Article from https://www.wftv.com/news/trending-now/dayton-ohio-shooting-video-shows-officers-stopping-suspect-as-he-tries-to-enter-bar/972812542

Media captionA soldier and a baseball coach recall how they tried to save children from the El Paso shooting

President Donald Trump has said “hate has no place” in the US after 29 people were killed in two mass shootings over the weekend, amid accusations that he bears some responsibility.

An attack on a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas left 20 dead, while nine died in a shooting in Dayton, Ohio.

Mr Trump said “perhaps more has to be done” to stop such attacks.

But critics said he was part of the problem, citing his anti-immigrant rhetoric and opposition to gun control.

A 21-year-old white man arrested over Saturday’s shooting in Texas is believed to have posted an online document calling the attack a response to “the Hispanic invasion” of the state.

The motives of the Ohio gunman, who killed his sister and eight others on Sunday before being shot dead by police, are unclear.

Speaking to reporters, Mr Trump said mass shootings needed to be stopped.

“This has been going on for years, for years and years in our country and we have to get it stopped,” he said.

He went on to link both attacks to a “mental illness problem”, saying the gunmen were “very, very seriously mentally ill”.

Investigators have not made any comments about the mental state of the two gunmen.

Texas prosecutors say the El Paso shooting is being treated as “a domestic terrorist case” and they are “seriously considering” hate crime charges.

Media captionDonald Trump spoke to reporters before boarding Air Force One

What happened in El Paso?

The gunman opened fire on a crowded Walmart on Saturday with an assault-style rifle, and surrendered after being confronted by police officers outside the store.

The mass shooting, believed to be the eighth deadliest in modern US history, took place in a city where most of the population of 680,000 is of Hispanic descent.

In addition to the 20 fatalities, 26 people were injured in the shooting.

Image copyright
Getty Images

Image caption

A sign in support of El Paso, near the scene of the shooting

The Walmart, near the Cielo Vista Mall, was full of shoppers buying back-to-school supplies at the time of the shooting, and witnesses described scenes of chaos as customers fled for their lives.

Security camera images of the attacker show an armed man in a dark T-shirt wearing eye glasses and what appear to be ear protectors.

The victims have not yet been named by police, but Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said six Mexican nationals were among the dead and seven others were injured.

Media captionPolice were filmed responding to the shootings

The suspect has been named by US media as Patrick Crusius, a resident of the city of Allen, in the Dallas area, about 650 miles (1,046km) east of El Paso.

He has been charged with capital murder, meaning he could face the death penalty.

He is believed to be the author of a text posted on 8chan, an online message board frequently used by the far right, which says “this attack is a response to the Hispanic invasion of Texas” and talks about “cultural and ethnic replacement brought on by invasion”.

The four-page document, reportedly posted some 20 minutes before police received the first emergency call from the Walmart, also expresses support for the gunman who killed 51 people in Christchurch, New Zealand, in March.

US cyber security firm Cloudflare said it would terminate 8chan as a customer following the attack.

“The rationale is simple: they have proven themselves to be lawless and that lawlessness has caused multiple tragic deaths,” Cloudflare chief executive officer Matthew Prince wrote in a blog post.

Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard said the attorney general was considering litigation claiming that terrorism was committed against Mexicans in the shooting. Such an action could lead to the extradition of the gunman, he said.

“For Mexico, this individual is a terrorist,” he told reporters.


What happened in Dayton?

Connor Betts, 24, opened fire in a popular nightlife district in the early hours of Sunday morning.

Security camera footage shows dozens of people racing through the doorway of the local Ned Peppers nightclub.

Seconds later, the gunman is seen running towards the venue and being hit by police gunfire as he reaches the door.

Police said he had worn body armour and came carrying extra ammunition for his assault rifle with high-capacity magazines.

Media captionCCTV footage captures moment of Dayton shooting

“Had this individual made it through the doorway of Ned Peppers with that level of weaponry, there would have been catastrophic injury and loss of life,” said Dayton Police Chief Richard Biehl.

Officials said it was too early to speculate about motives for the attack.

But responding to questions about a possible racial element to the killings, Mr Biehl said there was nothing to suggest a “bias motive”.

Media captionDayton shooting witness: “As you came outside, you saw the bodies”

Police said the rifle was ordered online from Texas and there was nothing in the gunman’s history that would have stopped him from buying the gun legally.

His sister Megan was among the dead.

Police listed all nine of those who died. They were:

  • Lois Oglesby, 27
  • Megan Betts, 22
  • Saeed Saleh, 38
  • Derrick Fudge, 57
  • Logan Turner, 30
  • Nicholas Cummer, 25
  • Thomas McNichols, 25
  • Beatrice Warren Curtice, 36
  • Monica Brickhouse, 39

Twenty-seven people were injured in the attack.

What has the reaction been?

The shootings have given renewed momentum to gun control debate and put fresh scrutiny on the president’s rhetoric.

“He’s an open avowed racist and is encouraging more racism in this country,” Democratic presidential candidate and El Paso native Beto O’Rourke told CNN.

“Our president isn’t just failing to confront and disarm these domestic terrorists, he is amplifying and condoning their hate,” tweeted fellow Democratic presidential hopeful Pete Buttigieg.

Democratic Senator Bernie Sanders said Mr Trump’s language “creates a climate which emboldens violent extremists.”

But acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney rejected the Democrats’ allegations and attributed the attacks to “sick” individuals.

“There’s no benefit here in trying to make this a political issue, this is a social issue and we need to address it as that,” he told ABC.

Media captionAfter the Las Vegas attack in October 2017 the BBC looked at how US mass shootings are getting worse

Mr Trump, who has made curbing illegal immigration one of the key points of his presidency, has previously made derogatory comments about Mexican migrants and has called large groups of migrants trying to reach the US an “invasion”.

In recent weeks, Mr Trump has been accused of racism after his attacks on members of Congress who are members of racial or ethnic minorities.

In 2017, the president said he would “never, ever infringe on the right of the people to keep and bear arms”.


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Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-49230861

The founder of 8chan, an internet messaging board that is a haven for extremist content online, is calling for the site to be shut down in the wake of a mass shooting in El Paso, Texas which left 20 people dead and dozens more injured.

Fredrick Brennan, a software developer who founded the site in 2013 but cut ties with it in December, told the Washington Post on Sunday that the site is a “receptive audience for domestic terrorists.”

“Once again, a terrorist used 8chan to spread his message as he knew people would save it and spread it,” Brennan told the Post. “The board is a receptive audience for domestic terrorists.”

He added that the site’s owners should “do the world a favor and shut it off.”

Brennan’s comments come as authorities say they are investigating an anti-immigrant manifesto which circulated online in the hours before the deadly El Paso shooting. El Paso Police Chief Greg Allen told reporters on Saturday that they are working to determine whether the suspected shooter had penned the racist document.

Police identified the suspect as a 21-year-old white male from Allen, Texas. The manifesto expresses discriminatory views towards Hispanic people and conveys a fear that Hispanic people would take over Texas and turn the state into a “Democrat stronghold.”

A Justice Department official said the case was being treated as a “domestic terrorist” case. Another mass shooting occurred in Dayton, Ohio just hours after the El Paso attack, and left 9 dead and 27 wounded.

Read more: Authorities are investigating an anti-immigrant manifesto they believe the El Paso shooting suspect may have written

Brennan had previously spoken out against 8chan in March in the wake of the deadly shooting in Christchurch, New Zealand which left 51 people dead and 49 others injured. The suspected shooter, a 28-year-old white male, penned a 74-page racist manifesto in the hours leading up to the attack. He has not been formally identified.

“It was very difficult in the days that followed [the Christchurch shooting] to know that I had created that site,” he told the Wall Street Journal in March. “It wouldn’t surprise me if this happens again.”

Brennan on Twitter said racist manifestos are often posted and spread on 8chan because the site utilizes a “receptive, sympathetic audience” that helps proliferate content, and moderation on the site is “lax to non-existent,” allowing hateful content to percolate without consequence.

Flowers and mementos are seen at a makeshift memorial outside Walmart, near the scene of a mass shooting which left at least 20 people dead, on August 4, 2019 in El Paso, Texas.
Mario Tama/Getty Images

CloudFlare, on online security service that hosted 8chan on its network, announced on Sunday night it would be terminating its service with 8chan in response to the shootings.

“We just sent notice that we are terminating 8chan as a customer effective at midnight tonight Pacific Time,” Matthew Prince, the co-founder and CEO of CloudFlare, wrote in a blog post on Sunday evening. “The rationale is simple: they have proven themselves to be lawless and that lawlessness has caused multiple tragic deaths.”

The service cited the manifesto posted before the El Paso shooting, along with bigoted content posted to the site which praised the Christchurch shooting and an “open letter” posted to the site by the gunman who opened fire in a California synagogue in April, as reasons to terminate its involvement with the site.

“8chan has repeatedly proven itself to be a cesspool of hate,” Prince wrote.

CloudFlare explained that while terminating its services with 8chan may cause temporary disruption to the site’s operations and may leave it vulnerable to cyber attacks, the site may still be able to remain online using a competitor’s services.

“While removing 8chan from our network takes heat off of us, it does nothing to address why hateful sites fester online.”

Brennan expressed support for the move on Twitter and thanked CloudFare for taking action against 8chan.

“Finally this nightmare might have an end,” he wrote.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/8chan-founder-frederick-brennan-shut-down-el-paso-shooting-2019-8

The gunman who fatally shot nine people — including his sister — and injured more than two dozen others in Dayton, Ohio, early Sunday was reportedly suspended during his high school years for compiling a “hit list” of those he wanted to kill and a “rape list” of girls he wanted to sexually assault.

Conner Betts, 24, who was killed by police less than a minute after he opened fire outside a crowded bar, showed signs of hostility years before Sunday’s violent outburst, according to former classmates.

Betts was reportedly suspended in his junior year at Bellbrook High School after a list of names was found scrawled on a wall in a school restroom, the former classmates said. In an earlier suspension, Betts came to school with a list of female students he wanted to sexually assault.

OHIO SHOOTING VICTIMS INCLUDE GUNMAN’S SISTER, MOTHER OF TWO WHO WAS A NURSING STUDENT

“There was a kill list and a rape list, and my name was on the rape list,” one female classmate told the Associated Press.

“There was a kill list and a rape list, and my name was on the rape list.”

— Female former classmate of Dayton gunman

Shoes are piled outside the scene of a mass shooting including Ned Peppers bar, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2019, in Dayton, Ohio. (Associated Press)

During her freshman year, the former cheerleader said she received a phone call from a police officer who informed her that her name was included on a list of potential targets.

“The officer said [Betts] wouldn’t be at school for a while,” she said, referring to the boy’s suspension. “But after some time passed he was back, walking the halls. They didn’t give us any warning that he was returning to school.”

OHIO GUNMAN HAD BULLETPROOF VEST, WAS STOPPED WITHIN 30 SECONDS OF OPENING FIRE OUTSIDE BAR, POLICE SAY

“They didn’t give us any warning that he was returning to school.”

— Female former classmate of Dayton gunman

The discovery of the hit list in early 2012 prompted a police investigation and caused roughly one-third of students to skip school out of fear for their safety, according to the AP report.

EL PASO, DAYTON COULD DEFINE AUGUST — A HISTORICALLY TURBULENT MONTH

Betts had no apparent criminal record as an adult, though if he had been charged as a juvenile those offenses would typically be sealed under state law.

“There’s nothing in this individual’s record that would have precluded him from getting these weapons,” Dayton Police Chief Richard Biehl said Sunday.

“There’s nothing in this individual’s record that would have precluded him from getting these weapons.”

— Dayton Police Chief Richard Biehl

Former Bellbrook Principal Chris Baker said he “would not dispute that information” when asked about the hit list suspension, according to the Dayton Daily News. Baker, who resigned this summer, declined to speak further on the matter.

A former middle school classmate told the local paper that Betts had an unusual obsession with killing and death. Betts, she said, once told her that he fantasized about tying her up and slitting her throat.

“He knew it wasn’t normal,” she said. “He and I talked at length about him getting help.”

“He knew it wasn’t normal. He and I talked at length about him getting help.”

— Former classmate who claims she was threatened

The woman said she and her parents informed Bellbrook police about the chilling confession, but said that she felt she wasn’t taken seriously.

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Background checks of Betts’ social media conducted by the Daily News also discovered alleged writing of phrases such as “All Shall Be Annihilated,” “Absolute Carnage” and “Bloody Massacre.”

Demoy Howell, who said he and Betts participated in Bellbrook’s Junior ROTC military program, remembered friends saying Betts made them feel threatened and uncomfortable.

“He was always a bit of an oddball,” Howell said. “He had a dark sense of humor — jokes about people dying. He would wear all black. I remember sensing a dark energy around him.”

“I think this is less of a hate crime and more of an ‘I hate everybody’ crime,” he added. “I honestly feel more comfortable now knowing that he’s gone.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/dayton-ohio-shooting-suspect-hit-list

In the aftermath of the mass shooting in El Paso, Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard posted a video on Twitter, promising to take legal action against the United States for failing to take measures to protect Mexican citizens.

Twenty people were killed at the Walmart in El Paso on Saturday morning, of whom three were Mexican nationals. Nine of the 26 who were wounded were Mexican citizens, according to NBC News.

“The president has instructed me to ensure that Mexico’s indignation translates into … efficient, prompt, expeditious and forceful legal actions for Mexico to take a role and demand that conditions are established that protect … Mexicans in the United States,” Ebrard said.

El Paso straddles the U.S.-Mexico border and is a popular crossing point between the two countries. The city boasts an 80% Hispanic population.

The shooter’s motive for the attack appears to have been a hatred for Hispanics. In a manifesto he allegedly wrote, the gunman described his hope to stop the “Hispanic invasion of Texas,” and claimed he was inspired by the mass shootings in two Christchurch, New Zealand, mosques that killed 51 people and injured 49.

He added that his beliefs “predate Trump and his campaign.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/mexico-to-take-legal-action-against-us-after-three-mexican-nationals-die-in-el-paso-shooting

A mom of two studying to be a nurse, a graduate student learning to care for cancer survivors — and the shooter’s own sister — were among the victims of the Dayton, Ohio, massacre.

Connor Betts, 24, killed nine people when he opened fire on a packed street lined with bars and restaurants around 1 a.m., including his little sister, 22-year-old Megan Betts, his youngest victim, authorities said. It is unclear whether Megan was an intended target, they said.

Megan Betts was an environmental-science student at Wright State University and set to graduate next year, according to her Facebook page.

Logan Turner, who previously attended the college, also was killed, authorities said.

“Sweet and smart” Turner had just celebrated his 30th birthday Tuesday and was out with friends at the time of the shooting, his mother, Danita Turner, told WHIO-TV.

“He was very generous and loving and the world’s best son,” she said.

Another victim was nursing student Lois Oglesby, 27, who left behind a newborn and an older daughter, said childhood pal Derasha Merrett to the station.

“She was a wonderful mother, a wonderful person,” Merrett said. “I have cried so much, I can’t cry anymore.”

Also slain was Nicholas Cumer, 25, who was in town from Pennsylvania for an internship at the Maple Tree Cancer Alliance, a treatment center in Dayton.

Cumer, a graduate student in Saint Francis University’s Master of Cancer Care program, “ loved his patients and served them well, with a loving and caring spirit,” Alliance said in a statement.

Victim Thomas McNichols, 25, was a dad of two girls and two boys ranging in age from 2 to 8. He was remembered by his aunt as a “gentle giant.”

When McNichols, a factory worker, got off work Saturday, he and his aunt snacked on Twizzlers together before he went out to the Oregon District, where the shooting occurred, with a cousin, she said.

“Everybody loved him. He was like a big kid,” the aunt, Donna Johnson, told the station. “When all of the movies come out — “Batman,” “Black Panther” — he would get all his nephews and take them to the movies.”

Another victim, Derrick Fudge, 57, was out with his son Dion Green, his son’s fiancee and several others when he was killed.

“They were all just down there enjoying themselves and had stepped out of, I think, one of the clubs and were in a line to get some food,” said the victim’s sister, Twyla Southall. “His son is very distraught.”

Friends Beatrice Warren-Curtis, 36, who went by Nicole Curtis, and Monica Brickhouse, 39, were also out together when they were killed, another woman, Brittany Hart, wrote on Facebook.

Also killed in the rampage was 38-year-old Saeed Saleh.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/08/04/these-are-the-victims-of-the-dayton-mass-shooting/

A controversial video of President Trump speaking at a rally in Florida in May is resurfacing on social media amid the news of two mass shootings on Saturday in Texas and Ohio.

In the video, Trump is seen smiling and joking after a supporter at the rally yelled that Border Patrol should ‘shoot’ migrants at the border. The supporter’s yell was in response to Trump’s question of how to deal with migrants when the US can’t use violence.

“Don’t forget: We don’t let them, and we can’t let them, use weapons. We can’t,” Trump told the crowd. “Other countries do. We can’t. I would never do that. But how do you stop these people? You can’t.”

“Shoot them!” the supporter in the audience shouted. Some in the crowd clapped and cheered, while others grimaced.

Trump can be seen smirking and shaking his head, perhaps as a reaction to the absurdity of the supporter’s yell. Trump them joked “That’s only in the Panhandle you can get away with this stuff,” Trump said. “Only in the Panhandle,” referring to the Florida panhandle.

The video is resurfacing on social media amid two mass shootings in Texas and Ohio, one of which is said to be racially charged against migrants.

The suspected shooter in the Texas attack, which took place at a Walmart in El Paso, was arrested and his home is being searched. Authorities are investigating a manifesto that was potentially posted online by the shooter before the attack.

At the Texas shooting, 20 people were killed and 26 injured. Of those killed and injured, three Mexican nationals were killed, and six injured.

The shooter in the Ohio attack, where nine people were killed and 26 were injured, was killed by police. There is no motive identified at this time.

Source Article from https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-shoot-them-video-resurfacing-after-texas-ohio-mass-shooting-2019-8

EL PASO, Texas — When an outsider came to El Paso and shattered the sense of security Joel Martinez had always felt in his hometown, he grabbed his family and huddled in a closet.

Their home is down the street from the Walmart where 20 people were killed and 26 wounded by a gunman who walked in Saturday during back-to-school shopping time and opened fire.

Text messages and news reports flooded Martinez’s cellphone. Soon, the shutters in their home began shaking as police and news helicopters whirled overhead. Martinez feared he and his wife Zylene, 32, and their boys Jovani, 4, and Mikey, 7, were in danger.

“We’ve lived here all our lives and for the first time, I felt — get in the closets,” said Martinez, 32. “I started preparing. I was in the military so it was, start getting ready, anxiety, turn the TV down.”

Full coverage of the El Paso and Dayton mass shootings

Martinez and his wife, both born and raised in El Paso, left a bunch of bright yellow daisies Sunday at a makeshift memorial near the Walmart, which remained cordoned off by police.

A sign in support of El Paso a day after a mass shooting that left at least 20 people dead on Aug. 4, 2019.Mario Tama / Getty Images

On Sunday, as law enforcement officials continued the grim task of identifying victims, residents of El Paso and Juarez, its sister city across the U.S.-Mexico border, tried to take stock of how they went from the center of President Donald Trump’s hard-line immigration stance and anti-Latino rhetoric to being the target of a mass shooter.

Robert Chavez, 65, an El Paso native retired from Immigration and Customs Enforcement after a 27-year career, shopped Sunday at another Walmart not far from the shooting scene. He was apprehensive and alert for threats.

“What did he come over here for? I guess he had to come somewhere where there’s more Latinos,” Chavez said about the gunman. “He shouldn’t have made a trip anywhere.”

Shooter ‘was trying to slap us in the face’

El Paso residents bridge many divides in their daily lives because they share a border with Mexico.

They regularly navigate differences in citizenship and government through commonalities in language, culture and history but were left groping to understand how division within their own country brought horror to their city.

“There was like a lot of shooting happening because it was on the news and on Facebook,” Gia Nuñez, 7, blurted out while she and her father loaded groceries into a cart at another Walmart.

Her father, Adrian Nuñez, 40, always goes to the Walmart where the shooting occurred, and when she saw what happened on the news, she called to check on him, she said. Adrian, who works the graveyard shift, had worked overtime. Feeling tired, he decided to put off the grocery shopping trip he was going to make the morning of the shooting.

“I had a feeling something like this was going to happen eventually,” Nuñez said. “Ever since all the mass shootings have occurred and nothing has been done, I just said something would happen here. I was just hoping it wouldn’t be a school.”

Nuñez said he believes Trump is conveying messages of hate and division, and that combined with anti-Latino rhetoric and a lack of stricter gun control laws, is creating a lethal mix.

El Paso, with its shopping center and its largely Mexican and Mexican American patrons were a “clear cut target” for the shooter and maybe a product of Trump’s “rivalry” with Beto O’Rourke, said Nuñez, referring to the city’s former congressman who is now a Democratic candidate for president. The two held dueling rallies in El Paso in February, when Trump was pushing for money from Congress to build a border wall.

The shooter was “trying to slap us in the face and say, ‘Hey, you think you are such a safe city? Here you go,” Nuñez said.

For Latinos, a clear-cut act of hate

Before prosecutors said they would treat the deadly shooting as an act of domestic terrorism, the Congressional Hispanic Caucus already had deemed it one, based on an anti-Latino, anti-immigrant screed believed to have been posted by the suspect in the shooting, who is in custody.

The posting discusses a “Hispanic invasion” and rails against “racial mixing.” The document also took aim at both political parties, and its author said the views were developed before Trump’s presidency.

Caucus chairman Joaquín Castro, D-Texas, twin brother of Democratic presidential candidate Julián Castro, said the language in the document “is consistent” with Trump’s description of Latino immigrants as “invaders” and said the deadly shooting was “a tragic reminder of the dangers of such rhetoric.”

Since the launch of his 2016 campaign, Trump has focused rhetoric and policies on Latinos and immigrants, even though for the 2020 election, he has formed Latinos for Trump and his campaign has said he wants to expand his Latino support.

More recently, he told four women in Congress, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who is Puerto Rican, to go back to their countries. Three were born in the U.S. and the fourth, a Somali refugee, is an American citizen.

“This vile act of terrorism against Hispanic Americans was inspired by divisive racial and ethnic rhetoric and enabled by weapons of war,” Castro said. “Hispanic Americans and immigrants have been directly and violently attacked. This crime was intentional violence to strike fear in our communities, for our lives and for our families.”

Rep. Veronica Escobar, D-Texas, told National Public Radio that the mass shootings the nation has seen are not just “an epidemic of guns,” but also, “an epidemic of hate” and residents of the city and county that are about 83 percent Latino did feel targeted.

“He came here to hurt us,” Escobar said.

Julián Castro, the only Latino candidate in the presidential race, said Trump’s rhetoric has contributed to the “toxic brew of the white nationalism” in America.

George P. Bush, Texas land commissioner and the son of Jeb Bush, the former governor of Florida and 2016 presidential candidate, has not been openly critical of Trump, but he said on Twitter that “fighting terrorism remains a national priority.”

“And that should include standing firm against white terrorism here in the U.S.,” said Bush, who noted he served in Afghanistan as a naval officer.

Outside the police line at Walmart on Sunday, Gabriel Gonzalez, 21, handed out bottles of cold water and soda from an ice chest in the bed of a Ford pickup truck. He had the Mexico and United States flags on each side of the truck’s rear.

“For all those people who think like him, there’s not much you can do,” Gonzalez said, referring to the suspect in the shooting. “We’re here. My family’s here. There’s a bunch of Hispanics that are going to stay here. Might as well get used to it.”

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/latino/el-paso-shooting-border-city-goes-being-target-rhetoric-target-n1039111

The CEO of Cloudfare announced on Sunday that the U.S. company is terminating its services for 8chan following the deadly mass shooting in El Paso, Texas.

“In the case of the El Paso shooting, the suspected terrorist gunman appears to have been inspired by the forum website known as 8chan,” a company statement read. “Based on evidence we’ve seen, it appears that he posted a screed to the site immediately before beginning his terrifying attack on the El Paso Walmart killing 20 people.”

It continued, “We reluctantly tolerate content that we find reprehensible, but we draw the line at platforms that have demonstrated they directly inspire tragic events and are lawless by design. 8chan has crossed that line. It will therefore no longer be allowed to use our services.”

The decision comes after the suspect in the shooting allegedly wrote an anti-immigrant manifesto outlining a desire to stop the “Hispanic invasion of Texas,” which was posted to 8chan ahead of the attack. The gunman then proceeded to shoot and kill 20 people at a Walmart on Saturday, wounding over two dozen more.

“Nearly the same thing happened on 8chan before the terror attack in Christchurch, New Zealand,” the company said. “The El Paso shooter specifically referenced the Christchurch incident and appears to have been inspired by the largely unmoderated discussions on 8chan which glorified the previous massacre.”

The site will lose DDoS protection at midnight Sunday. However, the company noted that the move may not mean the end of 8chan.

“Unfortunately the action we take today won’t fix hate online. It will almost certainly not even remove 8chan from the Internet. But it is the right thing to do,” it said.

Police are treating the shooting as domestic terrorism and are seeking the death penalty.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/cloudfare-pulls-support-for-8chan-after-el-paso-shooting


John Locher/AP Photo

LAW AND ORDER

Amid the horrors of a mass shooting, it’s easy to forget that guns are social glue—and gun control efforts that don’t account for that will fail.

August 04, 2019

Austin Sarat is Associate Provost and William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence & Political Science. He is an editor (with Andrew Poe) of The Lives of Guns (Oxford University Press).

Jonathan Obert is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Amherst College. He is an editor (with Andrew Poe) of The Lives of Guns (Oxford University Press).

The two mass shootings this weekend have inflamed a gun-control debate that never seems to go away and never seems to get resolved.

In the span of less than 24 hours, El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, joined a morbid parade of American cities and towns—places such as Littleton, Colorado; Virginia Beach, Virginia; San Bernardino, California; Las Vegas; and Pittsburgh—as sites of tragic, mass shootings. In the not quite eight months of 2019, there have been seven such attacks. After each one, political leaders of all stripes send their thoughts and prayers to the families of the victims, and Democrats and Republicans offer radically different responses.

Story Continued Below

Democrats decry inaction on gun regulation. They blame the National Rifle Association and the gun lobby and claim, as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi put it Sunday morning, “The Republican Senate’s continued inaction dishonors our solemn duty to protect innocent men, women and children and end this epidemic once and for all.”

Republicans counter that gun laws aren’t the problem and that mental illnesses lead to gun violence. In the immediate aftermath of mass killings, shooters frequently are branded social misfits. Thus people who know Patrick Crusius, the alleged perpetrator of the carnage in El Paso, described him as “quiet, antisocial and a bit ‘strange.’”

“Guns,” we are told, “don’t kill people. … People kill people.”

High-mindedly, Americans see themselves as locked into a perpetual stalemate over the meaning and limits of the Constitution’s guarantee of a right to bear arms. Somewhat less high-mindedly, liberals see gun owners as captured by the NRA, and pro-gun conservatives feel anxious about the possibility of Washington bureaucrats stripping them of their capacity for self-defense.

But America’s stalemate on guns runs deeper than that. It’s also based on an important mistake that both sides make about guns themselves and their role in society.

The view of guns as neutral tools, a view shared by conservative defenders of gun rights as well as liberal advocates of gun regulation, misses a crucial fact about guns and gun ownership. It wrongly assumes that the distribution of guns and their presence in their owners’ lives are a totally independent facts that don’t shape the opportunities and choices of the people who use them.

But increasingly, research into the culture and political views of gun owners is painting a very different portrait. Gun owners’ politics don’t generally fall into lockstep with the NRA—but guns themselves are woven into people’s lives in ways that go far beyond a tool. This suggests that the path to gun law reform won’t be as simple as liberals might hope or conservatives might fear.

One of the most authoritative and interesting surveys of the attitudes of gun owners was conducted by the Pew Research Center in 2017. That survey shows the vast majority of Americans who own guns are not members of the NRA and that most favor some form of gun control. However, most refrain from pushing for greater regulation of guns because they neither trust the government nor believe that it will protect them. They often resent the disdain for their way of life of the kind expressed by President Barack Obama when he suggested they “cling to guns or religion” as a way of expressing “antipathy to people who aren’t like them … as a way to explain their frustrations.” They see themselves as on their own in a dangerous world.

The sale, manufacture, distribution, purchase and production of guns, as well as the views of their owners, are, in part, responses to the perceived weakness of the government and the perceived need for constant vigilance and a concomitant interpersonal fear. As dangerous weapons, guns offer a form of direct power in a world where trust and civic belonging are in short supply. The Pew poll reported that 67 percent of gun owners said protection is a major reason they own a gun; 38 percent cited hunting, 30 percent listed sport shooting, and 13 percent listed gun collecting as major reasons.

But culturally, guns aren’t just a reaction to anxieties. In a way gun control advocates rarely consider, but gun owners may find obvious, they’re a meaningful social asset for their owners. In a fragmented society, guns connect people at a time when making connections is ever more difficult.

In part because of their danger and allure and in part because they’re the center of a sporting culture with deep American roots, guns draw adherents together in contexts like expos, gun ranges, and online chatrooms. At the recreational level, participants can indulge in hobbyist debate and discussion; on a political and cultural level, they can also forge a shared commitment to armed citizenship.

Gun owners bond over their shared fear of diffuse and unpredictable threats of contemporary life. The Pew survey concluded: “Many, but not all, gun owners exist in a social context where gun ownership is the norm. Roughly half of all gun owners say that all or most of their friends own guns. … In stark contrast, among the non-gun owning public, only one-in-ten say all or most of their friends own guns.”

Those social connections help organize gun owners’ lives and make them meaningful. Seen in this light, as sociologist David Yamane puts it, “Guns are normal and normal people use guns.”

As we mourn the victims in El Paso and Dayton and demand that the perpetrators be brought to justice, America’s political leaders, especially those who seek more stringent regulation, must recognize that guns are, for many of those who own them, something more than mere instruments of deadly force. They express and change the way people understand their own political identities and the powers they have as citizens. Guns help make some visions of society possible while destroying others. For their owners, guns are the material embodiments of good citizenship.

Any real gun law reform is going to need to take this community and value system into account. Liberals need gun owners as allies. Today, in the wake of more mass shootings, good citizenship requires that the millions of gun owners who say they support gun regulation do more than think about their own way of life. They need to turn that support into vocal activism. In so doing, they may help bring about changes necessary to protect the communities that we all share.

In order for them to be willing to do so, gun owners need assurance that liberal gun reform advocates will not march down a slippery slope from red-flag laws, regulating semi-automatic weapons and large capacity magazines and closing the gun-show loophole to intrusive regulations that start to break down a culture that millions of people value greatly—one that enriches their lives and whose roots go back before America’s founding.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2019/08/04/mass-shooting-gun-culture-227502

Since GamerGate, 8chan has become a catchall website for internet-based communities whose behavior gets them evicted from more mainstream sites. It hosts one of the largest gatherings of supporters of QAnon, who claim that there is an international bureaucracy plotting against the Trump administration. And it has been an online home for “incels,” men who lament being “involuntarily celibate,” and other fringe movements.

“8chan is almost like a bulletin board where the worst offenders go to share their terrible ideas,” said Jonathan Greenblatt, the chief executive of the Anti-Defamation League. “It’s become a sounding board where people share ideas, and where these kinds of ideologies are amplified and expanded on, and ultimately, people are radicalized as a result.”

8chan has been run out of the Philippines by Jim Watkins, a United States Army veteran, since 2015, when Mr. Brennan gave up control of the site.

The site remains nearly completely unmoderated, and its commitment to keeping up even the most violent speech has made it a venue for extremists to test out ideas, share violent literature and cheer on the perpetrators of mass killings. Users on 8chan frequently lionize mass gunmen using jokey internet vernacular, referring to their body counts as “high scores” and creating memes praising the killers.

Mr. Brennan, who has a condition known as brittle-bone disease and uses a wheelchair, has tried to distance himself from 8chan and its current owners. In a March interview with The Wall Street Journal, he expressed his regrets over his role in the site’s creation, and warned that the violent culture that had taken root on 8chan’s boards could lead to more mass shootings.

After the El Paso shooting, he seemed resigned to the fact that it had.

“Another 8chan shooting?” he tweeted on Saturday. “Am I ever going to be able to move on with my life?”

Mr. Watkins, who runs 8chan along with his son, Ronald, has remained defiant in the face of criticism, and has resisted calls to moderate or shut down the site. On Sunday, a banner at the top of 8chan’s home page read, “Welcome to 8chan, the Darkest Reaches of the Internet.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/08/04/technology/8chan-shooting-manifesto.html

Twenty people were killed and more than two dozen were injured when a gunman opened fire Saturday afternoon at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas. Authorities have yet to release a list identifying those killed or injured in the shooting.

Prosecutors are pursuing a civil rights hate crime investigation and domestic terrorism charges against the suspect, identified by authorities as 21-year-old Patrick Crusius. He was arrested without incident and has reportedly been cooperating with law enforcement.

Arturo Benavides

The goddaughter of “Nino” Arturo Benavides confirmed to CBS News that he was among those killed. The 60-year-old was reportedly at the cash register checking out when the suspect entered the Walmart and opened fire.

Arturo Benavides, 60, was killed Saturday, August 3, 2019, when a gunman opened fire in a Walmart in El Paso, Texas.

Family of Arturo Benavides


Jordan Anchondo

Jordan Anchondo, a mother of three, apparently died while protecting her 2-month-old son during the shooting, The Associated Press reports. Anchado dropped her 5-year-old daughter off at cheerleading practice before heading to Walmart to pick up school supplies with her husband, Andre.

Her sister, Leta Jamrowski, told AP that the 2-year-old was being treated for broken bones, which were likely the result of Jordan falling on top of the child.

“From the baby’s injuries, they said that more than likely my sister was trying to shield him,” Jamrowski said. “So when she got shot she was holding him and she fell on him, so that’s why he broke some of his bones. So he pretty much lived because she gave her life.”

Andre has not been accounted for.

Jessica Coca Garcia and Memo Garcia

Jessica Coca Garcia and Memo Garcia were wounded while fundraising for their 5-year-old son’s baseball team. The couple was near the front doors of the Walmart when the suspect reportedly shot them. Jessica’s mother, Norma Coca, told AP her daughter was shot three times in the leg and her son-in-law was shot twice in the leg and once in the back.

Jessica is in stable condition, while Memo is in critical condition. The couple’s son and their 11-year-old daughter were with them but were not shot.

El Paso shooting being investigated as hate crime and domestic terrorism

Mexican citizens killed and injured

According to Mexican Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard, seven Mexican citizens were killed and seven others were injured in the shooting.

Ebrard tweeted the names of the seven who died: Sara Esther Regalado; Adolfo Cerros Hernández Aguascalientes; Jorge Calvillo García; Elsa Mendoza de la Mora; Gloria Irma Márquez Juárez; María Eugenia Legarreta Rothe; Ivan Filiberto Manzano.

Of the injured, three have been identified by Mexican authorities: 45-year-old, Mario de Alba Montes, who was shot in the back; 44-year-old Olivia Mariscal Rodriguez, who sustained chest and hand injuries; 10-year-old Erika de Alba Mariscal, who was injured in the leg. All are being treated a the UMC Hospital in El Paso.

A friend of Mario De Alba confirmed he was shot in the back but is in stable condition at a nearby intensive care center.

El Paso residents place flowers at a makeshift memorial for the victims of the Saturday mass shooting at a shopping complex in El Paso, Texas, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2019.

Andres Leighton / AP


Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/el-paso-texas-mass-shooting-what-we-know-about-the-victims-of-the-el-paso-shooting/