Baltimore Sun

In newsrooms, silence falls

Journalist­s, Arundel officials, schools, others remember Capital Gazette shooting victims

- By Tim Prudente and Erica L. Green tprudente@baltsun.com twitter.com/tim_prudente

For as long as anyone can remember, they rang the bell.

Capital Gazette editors rang their newsroom bell to summon staff and plan stories. Their tradition stretched back decade.

“Starting with today,” Editor Rick Hutzell told his staff, the survivors, “every time we ring that bell, we’re going to think of our friends.”

And yet, their bell rested back in their newsroom, now a crime scene. Their five friends were dead. The rest gathered Thursday in a temporary newsroom to remember their slain colleagues. It was 2:33 p.m., precisely one week after the attack.

“All five people were murdered right around me,” said photograph­er Paul Gillespie, a 17-year veteran of the newspaper. “I don’t know the end of the story. … I don’t know why he stopped shooting.”

The gunman killed editor Rob Hiaasen, 59; writer Wendi Winters, 65; editorial page editor Gerald Fischman, 61; sportswrit­er John McNamara, 56; and sales assistant Rebecca Smith, 34.

Police arrested Jarrod Ramos, who had a long-standing grudge against the newspaper. Officers say they found the 38-yearold Laurel man hiding beneath a newsroom desk with a shotgun. Ramos is charged with five counts of murder.

In the days after the attack, the grieving journalist­s worked on. But at 2:33 p.m. Thursday, their phone calls ended, their typing stopped. Silence filled the room.

Their moment of silence was matched in newsrooms around the country.

Reporters hushed 30 miles north at The Baltimore Sun, which owns the Capital Gazette. Newsrooms halted at the Louisville Courier-Journal, the Indianapol­is Star, The Oklahoman, and elsewhere.

“The tragedy … tears at our hearts, tugs at our compassion and calls forth our fears for the safety of all those on the front lines of truth, accountabi­lity and journalist­ic pursuit,” wrote the presidents of The American Society of News Editors and Associated Press Media Editors.

Professors gathered in the atrium of the journalism school at the University of Maryland, College Park. Fischman and McNamara graduated from the school; Hiaasen taught there.

“It’s comforting to have everybody together,” Dean Lucy Dalglish said. “It’s horrible to think that you would have to do this. Everybody feels like there’s more of a sense of community.”

At the Anne Arundel County government building, employees stopped, too. “Five of our friends, neighbors and colleagues were brutally murdered in an act of pure evil,” County Executive Steve Schuh said. “Our hearts go out to the families of those five beautiful individual­s, and so do our prayers.”

Marjorie Rock remembered the awful sights. She watched from her dentist office beside The Capital newsroom, seeing the paramedics carry out the victims. Later, she recognized one face on the TV. “I saw John,” she said, still haunted. Across the county, police and firefighte­rs gathered at flagpoles to reflect. Police Lt. Ryan Frashure said it helped them move toward closure. Anne Arundel County Schools participat­ed, too.

The case against Ramos was proceeding slowly, Frashure said. The alleged gunman has remained uncooperat­ive. “We still have a lot of questions that need to be answered,” Frashure said.

In their temporary newsroom, Hutzell addressed his staff. He said he spoke to the University of Maryland about new ways to train young journalist­s in dealing with threatenin­g readers.

“This person followed some of our reporters for years on social media,” he said. “Howdoyou deal with somebody like this?”

ISince the massacre, newspapers have sent help. Journalist­s from Chicago, Allentown, Pa., and Norfolk, Va., arrived in Annapolis and Baltimore. Photograph­er Josh McKerrow found it heartening to hear the the reinforcem­ents typing.

As they spoke Thursday, no one noticed University of Maryland professor Karen Denny slip outside.

Hutzell told those gathered about the history of the newspaper and its bell. “We’re part of a chain that stretches back more than a century,” he said. “When we’re gone, they’ll hear that bell and they’ll know what it means.”

Then Denny returned and handed him , an old brass bell with a wooden handle she had borrowed from a nearby antique store.

The grieving journalist­s lit five white candles. They bowed their heads. Hutzell stepped forward. Ring … ring … ring … ring … ring.

Then, silence.

 ?? BRIAN WITTE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People pause for a moment Thursday next to a memorial outside the Capital Gazette offices in Annapolis, where five newspaper workers were shot to death last week. Journalist­s around the country observed a moment of silence in commemorat­ion.
BRIAN WITTE/ASSOCIATED PRESS People pause for a moment Thursday next to a memorial outside the Capital Gazette offices in Annapolis, where five newspaper workers were shot to death last week. Journalist­s around the country observed a moment of silence in commemorat­ion.

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