Albuquerque Journal

Newsroom massacre doesn’t stop Friday’s edition

Newspaper has been published since 1727

- BY MATTHEW BARAKAT ASSOCIATED PRESS

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Less than a day after five of their colleagues were killed in the newsroom, staffers of the Capital Gazette put out Friday’s edition of the Annapolis newspaper, just as it had been published since 1727.

The bold headline was simple: “5 Shot dead at The Capital.” Above the words: photos of the five deceased newspaper employees.

That front page, written by grieving employees, made good on a promise that Chase Cook, a Capital Gazette reporter, tweeted in the hours after the shooting.

“I can tell you this: we are putting out a damned newspaper tomorrow.”

He later told The Baltimore Sun: “I don’t know what else to do except this.”

This, being journalism. Writing stories about victims that they knew and worked with, colleagues that they’d talked with on the phone just hours before the massacre.

The paper’s opinion section also published a haunting tribute to the victims.

The page reserved for opinions and editorials was mostly white space.

“Today, we are speechless,” went the small column in the middle of the page. “This page is intentiona­lly left blank today to commemorat­e victims of Thursday’s shooting at our office.”

The names of the five employees who died were listed, one to each line.

The Capital is an institutio­n in Maryland’s capital and was one of the last dailies to switch from publishing in the afternoon to mornings. Its sister publicatio­n, the Maryland Gazette, founded in 1727, is one of the oldest papers in America. In 1767, it became the first paper in America to be published by a woman, Anne Catherine Green, who led opposition to the stamp tax in the years leading up to the American Revolution.

For many years The Capital was published by diplomat Philip Merrill, who died in 2006. It was sold in 2014 to the Baltimore Sun Media Group.

On Thursday, journalist­s with the daily huddled under a covered parking deck of the Annapolis Mall, not far from where reporters from scores of other media outlets were clumped together awaiting further details of the shooting.

Editor Rick Hutzell called a few of his journalist­s over to talk, a discussion punctuated with hugs and stunned expression­s.

“We’re trying to do our job and deal with five people” who lost their lives, said reporter Pat Furgurson, whose wife and adult son were with him at the mall.

Furgurson’s pickup truck became a makeshift office. He said his colleagues were “just people trying to do their job for the public.”

“You think something like this might happen in Afghanista­n, not in a newsroom a block away from the mall,” he said, reflecting on what appeared to be one of the deadliest attacks on journalist­s in U.S. history. Police later said the gunman explicitly targeted the newspaper. Reporters brushed aside any logistical difficulti­es putting out a newspaper.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Anne Arundel County official Steve Schuh holds a copy of The Capital Gazette on Friday near the scene of Thursday’s shooting at the newspaper’s office in Annapolis, Md.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/ASSOCIATED PRESS Anne Arundel County official Steve Schuh holds a copy of The Capital Gazette on Friday near the scene of Thursday’s shooting at the newspaper’s office in Annapolis, Md.
 ??  ?? Wendi Winters, special publicatio­ns editor
Wendi Winters, special publicatio­ns editor
 ??  ?? Gerald Fischman, the editorial page editor
Gerald Fischman, the editorial page editor
 ??  ?? John McNamara, a sports writer and copy editor
John McNamara, a sports writer and copy editor
 ??  ?? Rebecca Smith, a sales assistant
Rebecca Smith, a sales assistant
 ??  ?? Rob Hiaasen, a columnist and editor
Rob Hiaasen, a columnist and editor

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