Dayton Daily News

Angry Fla. teens demand new gun laws

Florida statehouse swarmed by teens, including survivors of Feb. 14 attack.

- By Brendan Farrington, Gary Fineout and Tamara Lush

A week after a shooter slaughtere­d 17 people in a Florida high school, thousands of angry teenagers swarmed into the state capitol on Wednesday, calling for changes to gun laws, a ban on assault-type weapons and improved care for the mentally ill.

The normally staid Florida statehouse filled with students, including more than 100 survivors of the Feb. 14 attack at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, on the edge of the Everglades. Many held signs, chanted slogans and burst into lawmakers’ offices demanding to be heard.

They were welcomed into the gun-friendly halls of power, but the students’ top goal — a ban on assault-style rifles such as the weapon used in the

massacre — was taken off the table a day earlier, although more limited measures are still possible.

Many protesters complained that lawmakers were not serious about reform, and they cautioned that they would oppose in future elections any lawmaker who takes campaign contributi­ons from the National Rifle Associatio­n.

“We’ve spoke to only a few legislator­s and ... the most we’ve gotten out of them is, ‘We’ll keep you in our thoughts. You are so strong. You are so powerful,’ ” said Delaney Tarr, a senior at the high school. “We know what we want. We want gun reform. We want commonsens­e gun laws . ... We want change.”

She added: “We’ve had enough of thoughts and prayers. If you supported us, you would have made a change long ago. So this is to every lawmaker out there: No longer can you take money from the NRA. We are coming after you. We are coming after every single one of you, demanding that you take action.”

Outside the building, the crowd burst into chants of “Vote them out” as speakers called for the removal of Republican lawmakers who refuse to address gun control issues. One sign read, “Remember the men who value the NRA over children’s lives” and then listed Republican­s in Florida’s congressio­nal delegation. Other signs said, “Kill the NRA, not our kids” and “These kids are braver than the GOP.”

College students also joined in the rally. Florida State University students Apolline Demiraj, 19, and Lindsay Rapp, 20, held signs that said “Protect Our Kids, Not Guns” and “Stop Prioritizi­ng the NRA Over Lives — Ban the AR-15.”

Some of their classmates graduated from the high school and knew some of the victims, they said.

“It’s just not normal that it keeps happening, and if we can help make a change so that it never happens again, I will protest here every day,” Demiraj said. “We have so many friends that went to Douglas and who have lost people there, so it really was a slap in the face.”

Demiraj registered to vote as soon as the rally ended and said the Parkland shooting will influence her vote.

Elsewhere, teens in at least a dozen South Florida schools walked out of class to protest gun violence and commemorat­e the shooting victims. About 2,000 students, parents, teachers and supporters held hands and chanted outside the Parkland campus.

Megan Mui, a 15-year-old, walked two-and-a-half hours from her school to Stoneman Douglas.

“I want to show my support for the changes we need to make so this never happens again,” she said, adding that she would like to see a ban on weapons like the AR-15. “They should be strictly for military” purposes.

The suspect, 19-yearold Nikolas Cruz, has been jailed on 17 counts of murder. Defense attorneys, state records and people who knew him say he displayed behavioral troubles for years, including getting kicked out of the Parkland school. He owned a number of weapons.

“How is it possible that this boy that we all knew was clearly disturbed was able to get an assault rifle, military grade, and come to our school and try to kill us?” one 16-year-old student asked the president of the state Senate, Joe Negron.

Negron did not answer directly. “That’s an issue that we’re reviewing,” he said.

When another lawmaker said he supported raising the age to buy assault-style weapons to 21 from 18, the students broke into applause.

Florida lawmakers have rebuffed gun restrictio­ns since Republican­s took control of both the governor’s office and the Legislatur­e in 1999.

Saying the tragedy at the high school was “completely unavoidabl­e,” Republican legislativ­e leaders say they will consider legislatio­n that will likely call for raising the age limit to purchase a rifle in Florida and increasing funding for mental health programs and school-resource officers, the police who are assigned to specific schools.

Lawmakers are also considerin­g a program promoted by one Florida sheriff that calls for giving law-enforcemen­t training to school employees and deputizing someone to carry a weapon on campus. Legislator­s may also enact a waiting period for rifle purchases.

“I am extremely, extremely angry and sad,” 16-year-old student Alfonso Calderon said at a news conference at the Statehouse after meeting with lawmakers. “I don’t know if I will have faith in my state and local government anymore.”

He added, “People are losing their lives and it’s still not being taken seriously.”

‘I don’t know if I will have faith in my state and local government anymore. People are losing their lives and it’s still not being taken seriously.’

Alfonso Calderon 16-year-old student

 ?? EVAN VUCCI / AP ?? Seventeen-year-old Gwendolyn Frantz of Kensington, Md., stands in front of the White House during a student protest for gun control, Wednesday in Washington.
EVAN VUCCI / AP Seventeen-year-old Gwendolyn Frantz of Kensington, Md., stands in front of the White House during a student protest for gun control, Wednesday in Washington.
 ?? AUDRA MELTON / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ryan Deitsch, 18, and other students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School met with lawmakers on the House floor at the Florida State Capitol on Wednesday in Tallahasse­e. They advocated for a range of new gun control measures.
AUDRA MELTON / THE NEW YORK TIMES Ryan Deitsch, 18, and other students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School met with lawmakers on the House floor at the Florida State Capitol on Wednesday in Tallahasse­e. They advocated for a range of new gun control measures.

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