Monday, June 10, 2013

Mass Shooting #3

Source material: http://www.cnn.com/2013/06/10/justice/california-college-gunman/?hpt=hp_t2

What would compel a man
                  to 
                take
his father's and his brother's lives

and then spray bullets at
his former college,
killing three other people
in the next 13 minutes?

The Friday afternoon

R
 A
  M
   P
    A
     G
      E

in Santa Monica, California, ended
only when police shot
dead the suspect, John Zawahri.

Over the weekend,
 bits and pieces emerged about 23-year-old.

But with his death –
a day shy of his 24th birthday –
the central question may remain unanswered.

He had suffered mental health issues
and was hospitalized a few years ago
after allegedly talking about harming someone,
a law enforcement source said.

Police had contact with him in 2006 –
but because he was in high school, and therefore a juvenile
at the time,

police couldn't disclose more.

And as recently as 2010,
he attended Santa Monica College –
where he met his chaotic end in the school library.

Police say the spate of violence
 that left this beachfront city reeling on Friday
 involved as many as six incidents over 13 minutes.

It started at the Zawahri family house on Yorkshire Avenue
shortly before noon, and ended a mile away in the college library
where students were studying for finals.

Officers were dispatched to the house to respond
to reports of shots fired.

 There, they found the 1,000-square-foot home
 in flames.

Inside, firefighters would later find two bodies
 in a back room –
that of Zawahri's father, Samir, and his brother Chris.
Both had been shot.

Outside the house,
police came across
 an injured woman who too had been shot: Deborah Fine.

Fine told CNN she was driving
when she saw the gunman pull over another woman
and hold a rifle
to her head.

"I thought to myself,
'What are you doing?
 Why are you pointing this gun at her?'

 And so I put on my accelerator,
I hit the gas,
 and I got in between the two of them," she said.

The bold move quickly turned the gunman's attention to Fine.
"I'll never forget his eyes.
 They were just
so intense and so cold," she said.

"That's when he raised his rifle."
The bullets struck
Fine
three to four times
across her body.

With blood
pooling around her,
 she slumped over
 and played dead
 in hopes that the gunman would stop.

When neighbors rushed to the scene,
 Fine had one plea:
"Please, I don't want to die.
 I have twins.
 Just please open my car door," she said.

Fine
still
has pieces of shrapnel inside her body.

Fine had interrupted
the gunman's carjacking.
But the gunman's rampage
was just beginning.

He got into the carjacked vehicle
and forced his victim to drive the short distance
to Santa Monica College.

During their ride, 911 calls poured in,
keeping police on the gunman's path.

As the car headed toward the campus of the community college,
where 30,000 students are registered,
 he opened fire on a passing bus, slightly wounding three people.

He then got out and shot into a red Ford Explorer,
 carrying 26-year-old Marcela Franco
and her father, 68-year-old Carlos Navarro Franco.

They were on campus to get textbooks for Marcela.
Carlos Franco worked as a groundskeeper at the college.
He died shortly after the shooting.
"Carlos worked really hard.
He worked beyond the age of retirement...
so that he could support his daughters and especially Marcela,"
who was about to graduate, relative Margret Quinonez Perez said.

Marcela Franco wanted to be a clinical psychologist.
 She was taken off life support Sunday.
"We spent last 48 hours like (in) a cocoon.
Nobody else in there
-- just us," Quinonez Perez said.

"We were loving her,
telling her how much we loved her.
We're going to miss her."

The Santa Monica College Foundation established
to help the family.

Relatives want to give
the father and daughter proper burials.

"'Broken'
is not a strong enough word to describe us," Quinonez Perez said.

After shooting into the SUV,
the gunman abandoned his hijacked vehicle –
leaving the driver unhurt.

Dressed in black and wearing a ballistic vest,
he then walked the campus, "shooting as he went along,"
Santa Monica Police Chief Jacqueline Seabrooks said.

Outside the school library, he saw a woman
and
"executed
 her,"
Seabrooks
 said.

Her death was the fifth of the rampage.
 Her name was not released.

By all accounts,
the gunman was ready to inflict
 maximum harm.

He had about
1,300 rounds of ammunition
and multiple firearms, Seabrooks said.

He went into the school library
and fired several times
at terrified patrons who were hiding in a safe room.

Police said it was "miraculous"
that they were not wounded.

Jasmine Franco was in a classroom next to the library –
waiting for her English class to start.

"You could hear rumbling,
a lot of rumbling,
it sounded like an earthquake or something,"

she said, referring to the sounds of gunfire
 mixed with the footfalls of people running.

Inside the library, Priscilla Morales and her friends hid.

"I was so scared and thought literally
I was going to die,"
she said.

By then,
the gunman had returned to the main area of the library,
he was met with three police officers.

"Drop it!" Morales said she heard police say.

Then she heard gunshots
and a man's screams.
Officers had shot and killed Zawahri.

The rampage was over,
but the questions remain.

Sunday, May 12, 2013

Mass Shooting #2

Source Material: http://www.cnn.com/2013/05/12/us/louisiana-shooting/index.html

Abdul Aziz believes
 he was standing right next to a shooter
Sunday when gunmen opened fire
 at a Mother's Day parade in New Orleans, injuring 19 people.

"Everyone around me,
 except me,
 was shot,"

 he said. "I was pretty fortunate to get away."

Aziz, 33,
photojournalist, was at the second-line parade
when gunfire broke
out at the corner of Frenchman Street and North Villere Street.

Second-line parades,
which involve dancing and brass bands,
are a New Orleans tradition.
They happen most every Sunday,
except during the hottest months in summer,
 according to Aziz.

"We turned
off of a main thoroughfare to a smaller residential street, and that's
 when the shots rang out.

 I was standing,
 I believe,
right next to the shooter.
I saw muzzle flash
, but unfortunately I didn't get a chance to see
who the shooter was," he said.

People panicked and ran.
Aziz,
who has worked in the Middle East,
 started taking pictures.

He sent those images to CNN iReport.

"It's a little jarring
when you see these types of things on the home front,"

he said."I'm sad.
 I love this city.

We're plagued by crime,
 and it's just not getting better
 no matter what
 we do."

According to police,
 19 people were injured in the shooting,
 including two children.
Ten men
 and seven women were
 among the victims.

The children suffered
graze wounds. Other injuries
 ranged from minor
to severe.

Shots were fired from different guns,
and officers saw three suspects
running from the scene, police said.

One of the suspects was described
 as an African-American male,
 approximately 18 to 22 years old,
wearing a white T-shirt
and blue jean shorts.

No one is in custody.

"This is an extremely
unusual occurrence,
and we're confident that we will make swift
 arrests," said Remi Braden, a police spokeswoman.

Police Superintendent Ronal Serpas told CNN affiliate WVUE
that it appears "two or three people
just, for a reason unknown to us, started shooting
at,
 towards
, or in
 the crowd."

He asked anyone with information to call authorities.
New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu
 echoed that request, challenging the community
 to get involved.

"It's important for us, as I have said, to change
 the culture of death
on the streets of New Orleans
 to a culture of life,

and it's going to take an all-hands-on-deck approach,"
 he said.

"These kinds of incidents are
 not going to go unanswered.
We're going to be very,
 very aggressive.

 There were hundreds of people
 out there today, so somebody
knows who did
this."


Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Seeking Justice (2 poems)



Author's Note:  I've never combined two poems in the same post before but these works seemed so related to me I figured I would try it.  The following are found poems.  Both are electronic communications from allies whose words and opinions I've come to value.

Picture of Me, Unbeknowst


This  is   icture is a picture of me taken the day of SMUG vs. Lively 
trial.   It was taken without my knowledge by someone from Mass 
Resistance, aLGBT hate group, who was there to support equally
anti-LGBT pastor Scott Lively as his lawyer motioned to dismiss a
 lawsuit broughtby a Ugandan LGBT group.   They also hate me, 
personally, because  I don't fit their warped stereotype of an 
LGBT person.


Source material: Mike Volkman's response to my Facebook post.  This response was sent at approximately midnight on January 15, 2013 EST.

So they like lipstick
lesbians and bull dykes;
 those are okay to hate
in the normal way,

but you are way off the charts
and they just don't know how to protect
the world from you?
 What kind of prayers can they come up
 with for your salvation?

 They can't figure that one out.
 
Breathe and Entreat 
Author's Note: I was supposed to attend this trial, but ongoing health concerns prevented my attendance.  This poem is my attempt to invoke the good well of the universe on behalf of Charles.

Source material: Daniel Keefe's e-mail of January 15, 2013 at 7:29 PM EST
 

Hello Friends - 

We are on the home stretch
of the Commonwealth v. Charles Wilhite trial.

 The prosecution, led by
Assistant District Attorney Blake Rubin
 finally rested their case today.

 Rubin belabored EVERYTHING
 day after day after day,
proving little.

Today, the defense introduced their case
 with refreshing crispness and punch.  

Tomorrow (Wednesday) the defense will rest
 their case, both sides will present closing arguments ,
and the judge will ask the jury to deliberate. 

We are so close to the end, but we are not there yet.
 We need to maintain our presence at the courthouse
tomorrow.  

Please join us a second-to-last time
 in the courtroom (the final time will be when the jury
announces the verdict) to show the world our support
for Charles and his family.  

We will be congregating on the sidewalk
outside the courthouse at 8:00 am for
a quick energizing loud and vibrant rally,
followed by court proceedings at 9:00am.  
Join us when you can!  
If you can't attend, you can do other things:
post on facebook, tweet, send positive vibes, pray.   

So many people have attended parts of the trial
(i'd guess there have been close to 150 different people).  
Thank you to everyone who has attended, in body
 and in spirit.

 We are almost there!  
Charles is almost there.  He has been
unjustly
imprisoned for 3 years, 3 months, and 29 days.

 We have heard this quote
 many times over the course
 of this campaign,
but now, on the birthday of Martin Luther King Jr,
it takes on special meaning: 

"The arc of the moral universe is long,
but it bends toward justice."  

keeping my fingers crossed - 
Dan 

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Mass Shooting #1

Source material:  First Malala, now teachers shot on bus   The Times UK  on January 03, 2013 12:00AM

GUNMEN
 on motorcycles sprayed
 a van carrying community centre
 employees with bullets yesterday,
 killing five female teachers
and two aid workers,
but sparing a child
 they took out of the vehicle
 before opening fire.

They were working
 at a centre in Swabi,
 a small city about 60km
 from Islamabad in the volatile
 Khyber Pakhtunhwa province,
 where gun and bomb attacks
 have been launched before on people
working to educate women.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Well Said...


Source material: Laurilie Plato of  LETHBRIDGE, CANADA, her comment on this petition on change.org

I am a parent with Asperger's
 who has children
 with Asperger's.

I am also studying psychology
and have access to the latest 
research in medical journals.

 Not one study has been done
 to prove that there is a cure
 for autism.

 Definitive research
 into the causes or a cure
 are impossible
 at this point because
there are too many factors involved.

 Mr. Best is not presenting
a "new idea".

He is presenting lies.
spreading hate and fear
and giving parents of children
with Asperger's false hope
in a cure that does not exist.