Baltimore Sun

Capital Gazette journalist awarded Carnegie Medal posthumous­ly

Winters honored for heroism during newsroom shooting

- By Lilly Price

Wendi Winters, a reporter and editor who died in the shooting at the Capital Gazette newsroom in Annapolis, was posthumous­ly awarded the highest honor for civilian heroism in the U.S. and Canada, the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission announced Monday.

Survivors credit Winters for saving their lives when she picked up a trash can and recycling bin and charged a gunman who blasted through the glass doors of the newspapers’ office on June 28, 2018. Winters was shot and killed trying to protect her colleagues. Four other employees were killed in the shooting: Rebecca Smith, Rob Hiaasen, Gerald Fischman and John McNamara.

“We’re honored that people are still rememberin­g what she did as an act of heroism,” said Summerleig­h Geimer, her daughter.

Trif Alatzas, publisher and editor-in-chief of Baltimore Sun Media, which includes The Capital, thanked the commission for recognizin­g her.

“Wendi’s brave actions that awful day helped save the lives of many of our treasured colleagues and for that we are forever grateful,” he said. “She is more than deserving of this honor. We will never forget what she did that day, the incredible work she did to inform the Annapolis community during her journalism career and her commitment to telling the important stories about the people who live there. Thank you to the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission for recognizin­g her.”

The Carnegie Hero Fund Commission was created in 1904 by Andrew Carnegie to recognize outstandin­g acts of selfless heroism performed in the United States and Canada. The commission awards the Carnegie Medal to those who risk their lives while saving or attempting to save the lives of others.

Around 80 people are honored with a Carnegie Medal each year and approximat­ely 10% of the awards are posthumous. Winters is one of 17 people honored this quarter. Awardees or their survivors also receive a grant of $5,500.

There were 11 people in the office during the shooting; six survived. The gunman had barricaded the office’s alternate entrance, trapping people inside and forcing them to hide under their desks. Winters charged forward holding a trash can and recycling bin. Winters shouted something like, “No! You stop that!” or “You get out of here!” The confrontat­ion gave other employees time to run or hide.

Winters was 65 and lived in Edgewater and was a proud Navy mom, church youth adviser, Girl Scout leader and Red Cross blood drive coordinato­r and volunteer. Her children started the Wendi Winters Memorial Foundation to organize and promote programs that support local journalism, journalist­s and news organizati­ons. They host blood drives in her honor as she regularly donated blood.

Winters posthumous­ly received the regional Maryland-Delaware-D.C. Press Associatio­n’s first Courage in Journalism award in 2019.

They hope to put her name up for considerat­ion for the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom during President-elect Joe Biden’s administra­tion. Maryland’s entire congressio­nal delegation asked President Donald Trump to award Winters the honor posthumous­ly in 2018.

The U. S. S e nat e approved legislatio­n this month known as the Fallen Journalist­s Memorial Act, co-sponsored by Sen. Ben Cardin, a Maryland Democrat. The act authorizes the Fallen Journalist­s Memorial Foundation to begin planning and raising funds to create a national memorial that honors slain journalist­s.

The bill now heads to President Donald Trump’s desk for approval.

The Fallen Journalist­s Memorial Foundation announced plans for the memorial more than a year ago, near the one-year mark of the mass shooting at the Capital Gazette newsroom.

Another memorial to honor the five slain Capital Gazette staffers called “Guardians of Free Speech” is set to be unveiled in Newman Park in Annapolis in 2021 on the third anniversar­y of the shooting.

The second part of the trial of the manconvict­ed of murdering Winters, Fischman, Hiaasen, McNamara and Smith was reschedule­d for three weeks starting June 2021, overlappin­g the three-year mark of the deadliest attack on journalist­s in American history. While he was convicted for the murders, the trial on his sanity will determine whether he spends the remainder of his life in a state prison or is committed indefinite­ly to a secure psychiatri­c facility.

 ??  ?? Winters
Winters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States