The Denver Post

Race and the “lone wolf ” tag

- By Errin Haines Whack

When Stephen Craig Paddock — a white American — was identified as the gunman who rained bullets on multitudes at a Las Vegas concert, he was quickly characteri­zed as a “lone wolf.”

Had he been of another race or ethnicity, would he have been branded a terrorist instead, or would aspersions have been cast on his minority group?

The question has been raised again and again in recent days, as critics suggested the conversati­on around our nation’s tragedies is often framed in divisive, racial code words. If whites are blamed, they say, it is as individual­s; for minorities, it is suggested that their crimes are part of a larger narrative.

“For whites, it’s ‘just something that happened,’” said Texas Southern University professor Sharlette Kellum-Gilbert. “When it’s of another race, ‘this is how they are,’ and there are calls for law and order.”

Shaun King raised the same point Tuesday in a column for The Intercept entitled “The White Privilege of the ‘Lone Wolf’ Shooter.”

“White men who resort to mass violence are consistent­ly characteri­zed primarily as isolated ‘lone wolves’ — in no way connected to one another,” King wrote. “For centuries, when an act of violence has been committed by an African-American, racist tropes follow — and eventually, the criminaliz­ation and dehumaniza­tion of an entire ethnic group.”

Last year, when Micah Xavier Johnson shot at police officers in Dallas, Texas, killing five and injuring nine others, Black Lives Matter was blamed - though he had no known link to the movement.

In 2014, when Alton Nolen was arrested in the decapitati­on of one co-worker and the stabbing of another, some were quick to blame Nolen’s “radicaliza­tion” as a recent convert to Islam. They could have categorize­d the crime instead as workplace violence Nolen was embittered by his suspension from his work at a Oklahoma food processing plant.

The lone wolf label has been frequently ascribed to mass killers, like Aurora movie theater shooter James Holmes, a white man who killed 12 people in 2012. The term is a convenient one for a society eager to ease its anxiety after such a horrific event, said Mark Hamm, a professor of criminolog­y at Indiana State University and author of “Age of Lone Wolf Terrorism.”

Whether federal authoritie­s or leaders decline to define these acts, the public’s definition is a broader one, Hamm said.

Authoritie­s have not yet determined a motive in the Las Vegas shootings, the deadliest in modern U.S. history, which left 58 victims dead and more than 500 injured during a country music festival on Sunday.

President Donald Trump condemned the shootings Monday as “an act of pure evil,” but stopped short of declaring the incident domestic terrorism. On Tuesday, Trump referred to Paddock as “sick” and “demented” suggesting that mental health problems were a possible explanatio­n for the tragedy.

Trump was criticized in August for declining to more strongly condemn white supremacis­ts in Charlottes­ville, Va., after a protest against the removal of a statue of Confederat­e Gen. Robert E. Lee turned violent and a driver fatally struck someone who was protesting the protest. Instead, the president said “many sides” were responsibl­e.

Wes Bellamy, vice mayor of Charlottes­ville, said the tone has been undoubtedl­y different on Las Vegas.

“What transpired in Las Vegas and what happened in Charlottes­ville was domestic terrorism,” said Bellamy. “It has no color. We have to address it and call it what it is, no matter who does it.”

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