Dayton Daily News

Dayton’s pain ripples far from where the shots were fired.

- ByKevin Riley

I woke up to a text from my son.

“Dayton ... this is awful.” At first, I didn’t know what he meant.

A quick scan of news sites made it clear: “Shooting in Dayton, Ohio, leaves at least 9 people killed.”

He’d heard news of the horrifying mass shooting that had happened in the place where he and his two sisters were born and where they’d gone to college. A place he’d visited a couple of weeks ago.

I just started crying, overcome by the tragedy that had struck the place I called home for 30 years. I wanted to call my two daughters. But what father wakes a daughter with this kind of news?

I streamed live news coverage and read online stories — many provided by old friends I once worked alongside. Veteran journalist­s informing their town, struggling to maintain their composure as they described the carnage a couple of miles from their office.

Dozens of times in my career I’ve participat­ed in covering this kind of tragedy. It never felt like this.

I texted a friend who runs the same newsroom in Dayton where I worked. I asked if she was OK. If her daughters were OK. I asked if everyone who works there was OK. They were. A little piece of relief.

Then I waited to hear the victims’ names. And that of the shooter. I dreaded it.

As the story developed, some things became clear.

Police said a masked gunman opened fire in a crowded downtown entertainm­ent district. It was just after 1 a.m. Police were able to shoot him in less than one minute, preventing him from entering a crowded bar he’d apparently targeted. If he’d succeeded, many more would have died. His motive remains undetermin­ed. Dozens were injured.

As journalist­s, both national and local, worked to uncover the story, I awaited each scrap of informatio­n.

But I couldn’t bear it at times.

The facts as they emerged enveloped me in personal recollecti­ons; the images on network news were of familiar places.

That entertainm­ent district is called the Oregon District, and it’s one of the oldest areas of Dayton. It’s filled with restaurant­s and bars on the main drag I’ve walked many times, East Fifth Street. The neighborho­od includes historic homes, proudly restored and occupied by friends.

On the western edge of the neighborho­od, at the corner of East Fifth and Patterson Boulevard, there’s an Arby’s restaurant. When I was in college, a friend worked there as night manager. She closed the place down and took the late shift cash to a nearby bank deposit slot.

“My heart is heavy,” she said in a text. She lives in New Jersey now, but it turns out one of the interns in her office attends the University of Dayton.

One of my daughters reminded me that I’d taken her and her college roommates to a birthday dinner at a restaurant on East Fifth. She remembered her dessert from that night. (Tiramisu with a birthday candle in it.)

The bar, Ned Peppers, the one the gunman attempted to enter — I’ve been there. Many times. A friend posted on Facebook that he’d met his wife

None of the nameswere familiar tome, but there isno relief in that. As I readabout the victims, they became familiar.

there.

About a block and a half from Ned Peppers, on the corner of East Fifth and Wayne Avenue, there’s another restaurant called The Corner Kitchen. It’s owned by a friend’s daughter and her husband. We had a big family dinner there the night before my son graduated from college. My sister drove down from Cleveland to join us.

As this story develops, national media will report on it, inevitably characteri­zing Dayton in shorthand.

A Rust Belt place that has seen better days. Over the Memorial Day weekend, it was devastated by tornadoes. Home of the Wright brothers. The inevitable “five things” to know about it.

For me, it’s a place of deep and meaningful experience­s, the place I came of age.

It’s the place where I nearly got a speeding ticket rushing from work when my daughter was going to start her first varsity soccer game. An understand­ing cop let me go with a warning.

It’s the place where I taught my children to drive on the winding roads of a historic cemetery.

The place where we bought our first house. Where I coached little league baseball. Where I took the kids sledding in the winter when school was canceled.

Where, as I wrote in a column when I left, I was guided by “the college professor who kept me on course to graduation, my first boss at the Dayton Daily News who hired me despite my lack of qualificat­ions, the neighbor who gave me subtle advice about fatherhood ... Dayton was the perfect place to build a life, and I highly recommend it. Along with me, my wife, whom I met here, and my three children, I leave behind the place that will always be home.”

These are the people and things I know about Dayton. It is not the kind of place where you expect the satellite trucks to show up for wall-to-wall cable news channel coverage of a mass shooting.

Finally, later on Sunday, I awaited the names of the victims and the shooter.

Five men and four women were killed in the shooting, including the shooter’s sister: Lois Oglesby, Megan Betts, Nicholas Cumer, Logan Turner, Thomas McNichols, Derrick Fudge, Monica Brickhouse, Saheed Saleh and Beatrice “Nicole” Warren-Curtis. The shooter was identified as Connor Betts.

None of the names was familiar to me, but there is no relief in that.

As I read about the victims, they became familiar.

They were fathers and mothers and students. All people living a uniquely Dayton story, as I had.

But theirs was tragically and mindlessly cut short.

Kevin Riley is editorof theAtlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

 ?? TY GREENLEES / STAFF ?? Natalie Driscoll (left) andAmber Lannon place flowers for shooting victimDerr­ick Fudge along East Fifth Street onMonday, the day after the Oregon District shootings.
TY GREENLEES / STAFF Natalie Driscoll (left) andAmber Lannon place flowers for shooting victimDerr­ick Fudge along East Fifth Street onMonday, the day after the Oregon District shootings.
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