Regina Leader-Post

More on the Newtown shooting.

President pledges ‘you are not alone’

- MATT APUZZO AND PAT EATON-ROBB

NEWTOWN, Conn. — A mournful U.S. President Barack Obama said Sunday that the United States is failing to keep its children safe, pledging that change must come after an elementary­school massacre left 20 children dead.

“What choice do we have?” Obama asked. “Are we really prepared to say that we’re powerless in the face of such carnage, that the politics are too hard?”

In a vigil for the fallen, in a moment of grief that spread around the world, Obama conceded that none of his words would match the sorrow. But he declared to the community of Newtown, site of the second-deadliest school shooting in U.S. history: “You are not alone.”

For Obama, ending his fourth year in office, it was another sorrowful visit to another community in disbelief. It is the job of the president to be there, to listen and console, to offer help even when the only thing within his grasp is a hug.

The massacre of 26 children and adults at Sandy Hook Elementary on Friday elicited horror around the world, soul-searching in the United States, fresh political debate about gun control and questions about the incomprehe­nsible — what drove the suspect to act.

Privately, Obama told Connecticu­t Gov. Dannel Malloy that Friday was the most difficult day of his presidency.

Authoritie­s said Sunday that the gunman in the shooting rampage was carrying an arsenal of hundreds of rounds of especially deadly ammunition — enough to kill just about every student in the school if given enough time, raising the chilling possibilit­y that the bloodbath could have been far worse.

Adam Lanza shot himself in the head just as he heard police drawing near to the classroom where he was slaughteri­ng helpless children, but he had more ammunition at the ready in the form of multiple highcapaci­ty clips each capable of holding 30 bullets.

The disclosure on Sunday sent shudders throughout this picturesqu­e community in the Northeaste­rn U.S. as grieving families sought to comfort each other during church services devoted to impossible questions like that of a six-year-old girl who asked her mother: “The little children, are they with the angels?”

With so much grieving left to do, many of Newtown’s 27,000 people wondered whether life could ever return to normal. And as the workweek was set to begin, parents weighed whether to send their own children back to school.

Malloy said the shooter decided to kill himself when he heard police closing in about 10 minutes into the attack.

“We surmise that it was during the second classroom episode that he heard responders coming and apparently at that, decided to take his own life,” Malloy said on ABC television’s This Week.

Authoritie­s said they found hundreds of unused bullets at the Sandy Hook Elementary School, which enrolled about 450 students in kindergart­en through fourth grade.

“There was a lot of ammo, a lot of clips,” state police Lt. Paul Vance said. “Certainly a lot of lives were potentiall­y saved.”

The chief medical examiner has said the ammunition was the type designed to break up inside a victim’s body and inflict the maximum amount of damage, tearing apart bone and tissue.

Newtown officials couldn’t say whether Sandy Hook Elementary School would ever reopen. The school district was considerin­g sending surviving students to an empty school in nearby Monroe. But for many parents, it was much too soon to contemplat­e resuming school-day routines.

“We’re just now getting ready to talk to our son about who was killed,” said Robert Licata, the father of a boy who was at the school during the shooting but escaped harm. “He’s not even there yet.”

Jim Agostine, superinten­dent of schools in nearby Monroe, said plans were being made for students from Sandy Hook to attend classes in his town this week.

The road ahead for Newtown was clouded with grief.

“I feel like we have to get back to normal, but I don’t know if there is normal anymore,” said Kim Camputo, mother of two children, ages 5 and 10, who attend a different school. “I’ll definitely be dropping them off and picking them up myself for a while.”

Also Sunday, a Connecticu­t official said the gunman’s 52-year-old mother, Nancy Lanza, was found dead in her pyjamas in bed in the home they shared, shot four times in the head with a .22-calibre rifle. The killer then went to the school Friday morning with guns he took from his mother, got inside by breaking a window and began blasting his way through the building.

All the victims at the school were shot with the rifle, at least some of them up close, and all were apparently shot more than once, chief medical examiner Dr. H. Wayne Carver said. There were as many as 11 shots on the bodies he examined. Lanza died of a gunshot wound to the head from a 10 millimetre gun, said Carver, who described the scene at the mother’s house.

Agents also determined that Lanza’s mother visited shooting ranges several times, but it’s still not clear whether she brought her son to the range or whether he ever fired a weapon there, said Ginger Colburn, a spokeswoma­n for the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.

 ?? Getty Images photos ?? Newtown residents Claire Swanson, Ian Fuchs, Kate Suba, Jaden Albrecht and Simran Chand, left to right, hold candles Sunday at a memorial for victims following the
mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School on Sunday in Newtown, Conn.
Getty Images photos Newtown residents Claire Swanson, Ian Fuchs, Kate Suba, Jaden Albrecht and Simran Chand, left to right, hold candles Sunday at a memorial for victims following the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School on Sunday in Newtown, Conn.
 ??  ?? U.S. President Barack
Obama speaks at a memorial service on Sunday
in Newtown, Conn.
U.S. President Barack Obama speaks at a memorial service on Sunday in Newtown, Conn.

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