San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Newsroom shooting saddens Annapolis

- A S S O C I AT E D P R E S S

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — This historic state capital is draped in grief from a shooting attack on the local newspaper, which killed journalist­s who chronicled soccer games, art exhibits and the fabric of small-city life.

A sign outside the Annapolis Bookstore, a block from the Maryland State House, starkly expresses the depth of sorrow many are feeling in this quaint waterside capital of about 40,000 near Chesapeake Bay. “There are no words,” it says.

With its weekly sailboat races and picturesqu­e downtown, residents were settling into summer’s languid rhythms when the shooting shattered the usual tranquilit­y. In a quiet town where the incoming class of the U.S. Naval Academy just arrived last week and residents take pride in a rich colonial legacy, the shooting at The Capital that claimed five lives opens a new chapter in its long history.

“It feels so personal,” said Mary Adams, who owns The Annapolis Bookstore and knew two of the victims. “It has shifted our community, and maybe it’s made us more attuned to the fact that we are all in this together.”

The Rev. Dion Thompson, who worked as a journalist at the Baltimore Sun for 15 years, made the sadness a focus of his sermon at St. Anne’s Episcopal Church in Annapolis on Saturday evening. He also highlighte­d journalism as a force to comfort the afflicted, as he sought to comfort people saddened by the killings.

“Not that it’s awakened the community, but I think our community now joins so many others in feeling this intense harm that has been done to us,” Thompson said after the service. “The Capital is not a giant newspaper. Annapolis is not a giant town, so people know who we are talking about.”

Adams knew Wendi Winters, the paper’s special projects editor. They met years ago at a Harry Potter night at another bookstore in town. She also knew assistant managing editor Rob Hiaasen, also among the dead. The others killed in Thursday’s rampage were editorial page editor Gerald Fischman, reporter John McNamara and sales assistant Rebecca Smith.

“I’m just so sad that this happened to ... the people and their families,” Adams said. “They’re all good people just trying to support a local news- paper, and now everyone is wondering how could this have happened.”

Jarrod Ramos has been charged with five counts of first-degree murder. Authoritie­s say he had a longtime grudge against the paper, suing it in 2012 for an article it ran about him pleading guilty to harassing a woman. A judge later threw it out as groundless.

Designed more for an age of horses and buggies than SUVs, Annapolis has a baroque street plan of downtown traffic circles and diagonal streets that can make it feel distant from modern times. For some, that sense of withdrawal made Thursday’s tragedy all the more shocking.

“I guess it’s a wakeup call in any community,” said Lisa Quina, owner of an interior design studio who recently moved from Baltimore. “Despite how quaint or how historic, how uncomplica­ted some of our day-to-day challenges are, we are vulnerable to the worst possible scenario.”

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 ?? Ryan Christophe­r Jones / New York Times ?? Residents hold a candleligh­t vigil for the victims of the shooting in the Capital Gazette newsroom in Annapolis, Md. The killings shook the small, tight-knit community.
Ryan Christophe­r Jones / New York Times Residents hold a candleligh­t vigil for the victims of the shooting in the Capital Gazette newsroom in Annapolis, Md. The killings shook the small, tight-knit community.

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