The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

As death count rises, familiar aftermath

- By Matt Sedensky and Astrid Galvan

EL PASO, TEXAS >> Anguished families planned funerals in two U.S. cities, politician­s pointed fingers and a nation numbed by gun violence wondered what might come next Monday as the death toll from two weekend mass shootings rose to 31.

The attacks 1,300 miles apart — at a packed shopping center in El Paso, Texas , and a popular nightlife stretch in Dayton, Ohio — also injured dozens more. They became the newest entries on an ever-growing list of mass shooting sites and spurred discussion on where to lay the blame. President Donald Trump cited mental illness and video games but steered away from talk of curbing gun sales.

For all the back-to-back horror of innocent people slain amid everyday life, decades of an unmistakab­ly American problem of gun violence ensured it wasn’t entirely shocking. Even as the familiar post-shooting rituals played out in both cities, others clung to life in hospitals, with two new fatalities recorded among those injured at the shooting at the Walmart in El Paso.

As in a litany of other shooting sites before, the public juggled stories of the goodness seen in lives cut short with inklings of the demented motives of the shooters, and on-scene heroics with troubling ideologies that may have sparked the bloodshed.

Equally familiar, Washington reacted along party lines, with Trump’s vague suggestion of openness to new gun laws met with skepticism by an opposition that has heard similar talk before.

“Hate has no place in America,” the president declared in a 10-minute speech from the White House Diplomatic Reception Room, condemning racism and rehashing national conversati­ons on treatment for mental health, depiction of violence in the media, and discourse on the internet.

A racist screed authoritie­s were working to confirm was left by the alleged perpetrato­r in the Texas shooting, 21-year-old Patrick Crusius, mirrored some of Trump’s anti-immigrant rhetoric. Some, like Ernesto Carrillo, whose brother-in-law Ivan Manzano was killed in the Walmart attack, said the president shares blame for inflammato­ry language Carrillo called a “campaign of terror.”

“His work as a generator of hate ended in this,” said Carrillo, who crossed the border from Ciudad Juárez on Monday for a meeting in El Paso with Mexico’s foreign minister. “Thanks to him, this is all happening.”

Trump, in turn, tweeted that the media “contribute­d greatly to the anger and rage that has built up.”

Trump suggested a bill to expand gun background checks could be combined with his longsought effort to toughen the nation’s immigratio­n system, but gave no rationale for the pairing. Studies have repeatedly shown immigrants have a lower level of criminalit­y than those born in the U.S., both shooting suspects were citizens, and federal officials are investigat­ing anti-immigrant bias as a potential motive in the Texas massacre.

Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticu­t, a leading voice on gun reform since the 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in his state rattled the country with the slaughter of 20 children, immediatel­y dismissed the president’s proposal as meaningles­s. “Tying background checks to immigratio­n reform is a transparen­t play to do nothing,” he wrote on Twitter.

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 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Greg Zanis prepares crosses to place at a makeshift memorial for victims of a mass shooting at a shopping complex Monday in El Paso, Texas.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Greg Zanis prepares crosses to place at a makeshift memorial for victims of a mass shooting at a shopping complex Monday in El Paso, Texas.

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