Annapolis mourns victims of newspaper shooting

Flowers, US flags and messages adorn on June 29, 2018, a makeshift memorial for five people killed at the Capital Gazette newspaper on June 28, in Annapolis, Maryland.
Jarrod Ramos suspected of carrying out a deadly assault on the newspaper office in Annapolis had barricaded a back door in an effort to “kill as many people as he could kill,” police said Friday. / AFP PHOTO / Mandel NGAN /

 

 

by Cyril Julien
Agence France Presse

ANNAPOLIS, United States (AFP) — Flowers, a notebook, a newspaper tied with white ribbon: these are some of the items placed at a makeshift memorial near the newsroom where a gunman shot dead five people in the US city of Annapolis.

The shooting rocked Annapolis — the capital of Maryland — a city of less than 40,000 residents where employees of the small local newspaper are known to many.

“The people who worked here are our friends, our neighbors, our colleagues, so it’s sort of like a part of us has been taken with their death as well,” said Christine Feldmann.

“This paper represented everything great about this country: democracy and community. And to think someone would try to stop that and murder five innocent people is just horrific and makes me feel very hopeless, unfortunately.”

She placed flowers on the memorial in a commercial area dotted with retail stores, restaurants and a lingering police presence following the shooting.

 

(COMBO) This combination of pictures created on June 29, 2018 shows the victims of the June 28 shooting in Annapolis, Maryland (L-R) four images obtained from The Capital Gazette, Assistant Editor and Columnist Rob Hiaasen, Editorial Page Editor Gerald Fischman, writer John McNamara, Special Publications Editor Wendi Winters, and a family photo via the Baltimore Sun of
Gazette sales assistant Rebecca Smith.
Jarrod Ramos suspected of carrying out a deadly assault on a newspaper office in Annapolis had barricaded a back door in an effort to “kill as many people as he could kill,” police said Friday. / AFP PHOTO / Capital Gazette AND Family Photo via Batimore Sun / HANDOUT 

 

On Thursday, a gunman armed with a shotgun and smoke grenades blasted through the door of the Capital Gazette, then killed four journalists and a sales assistant.

The suspect has been identified as Jarrod Ramos, who had a long-standing grudge against the paper over a 2011 article about a criminal harassment case brought against him by a former high school classmate.

The shooting hit especially close to home for Mike Driscoll, who worked at the Capital Gazette in the administrative department and as a freelancer.

It’s “like I lost family. I don’t think I know anyone still there, but still, I lost family,” Driscoll said.

– ‘Heartbreaking’ –
In the center of the city, a postcard-worthy area of cobblestone streets and red brick buildings, Diann Alaiz said she was “shook,” because “Annapolis is safe to me.”

“I never thought something like that would happen here. We’re just really a tight community and it has pretty much shaken everyone around here,” the souvenir shop owner said.

She said it was “heartbreaking” to see the names of the victims in the newspaper a day after the shooting.

“They were the local hometown paper and still are… there’s nothing that’s changed about that,” said Annapolis resident Tom Wenger.

The shooting has rekindled the long-running debate over gun control in the United States, where the right to bear arms is constitutionally guaranteed.

The shotgun used in the shooting was legally purchased, according to police.

“A firearm, you know, (it’s) in the national DNA, so they’re never gonna go away,” Driscoll said.

“But there needs to be responsibility. They don’t solve any problems, they just create more. And if you can’t handle a gun in an honorable, mature way, you know, you shouldn’t be allowed to have ’em.”

Despite the tragedy, Driscoll said, the newspaper will persevere.

“The paper has been published this morning, we are back. That means the bastards did not win, and they never will,” he added.