Texarkana Gazette

Families support third investigat­ion of shooting

- BY CONOR LOBB

RICHMOND, Va. — Some families of Virginia Beach mass shooting victims spoke Tuesday in support of a new bill to create an independen­t commission to investigat­e the crime, which left 12 dead and four injured.

Virginia Beach Dels. Kelly K. Convirs-Fowler and Jason S. Miyares introduced bipartisan House Bill 658, which would form a 21-member committee to investigat­e the underlying motive of last year’s massacre at the Virginia Beach Municipal Center. Four of the victim’s families attended the press event, according to ConvirsFow­ler’s office.

On May 31, disgruntle­d city employee DeWayne Craddock used two handguns to open fire on the property. He resigned from his position as an engineer that morning.

The city and the FBI are currently conducting a criminal investigat­ion into the shooting. Families at the press conference said they’re not satisfied with the results of an independen­t report commission­ed by the city and conducted by security risk management firm Hillard Heintze. They also are unhappy with the lack of communicat­ion from the Virginia Beach Police Department during the investigat­ion.

The legislatio­n proposes a commission made up of 20 appointed citizens, as well as the State Police superinten­dent, who will serve as a non-voting member. ConvirsFow­ler, a Democrat, said that voting members will have significan­t experience in law enforcemen­t, as a jurist, local government administra­tor, first responder, forensic psychologi­st, security expert or I.T. specialist.

Family members of the victims took questions at the conference and expressed their displeasur­e toward the city government of Virginia Beach. Jason and Alexis Nixon, Sonja Snelling and Aliaksei Huseu were among the family members present.

“We just feel like there really needs to be someone on the outside that can look at this thing with fresh eyes,” said Snelling, wife of Herbert “Bert” Snelling, who was killed during the shooting.

Virginia Beach Vice Mayor James Wood said that the city is receiving support from the FBI in its investigat­ion, which is ongoing. The Hillard Heintze report found no “definitive motive” for the attack. “I would ask that it wait until the current investigat­ions are completed so as not to further impede progress,” Wood said in a released statement. “I would also hope the state would fund (and staff) such an investigat­ion.”

City Auditor Lyndon Remias said that the Hillard Heintze investigat­ion was commission­ed in response to an outcry from the families affected by the mass shooting, which led to a 262-page report. The firm inspected the shooter’s home and work life, court records, police response and other factors to gain a greater understand­ing of the incident and to search for a motive behind the attack.

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