The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Shooting spurs anxiety in Atlanta

One parent says: ‘It feels as though no place is safe.’ Kids’ vulnerabil­ity is a major concern.

- By Ernie Suggs esuggs@ajc.com

Early Friday morning, Devon S. Johnson, a former Emory University professor now living in Newtown, Conn., went to his child’s middle school to drop something off when a random, yet terrifying, thought entered his head.

“These kids are vulnerable,” said Johnson, who left Atlanta in 2004 before eventually settling in Newtown.

A few hours later, Johnson sat helplessly in a Starbucks while he and his neighbors fielded emails, phone calls and text messages about a massive shooting at the local elementary school.

“It was unfolding in front of us,” said Johnson, whose two children do not attend the school although they live two miles away and are in the same district. “It gives you chills.”

As terrifying as the massacre was in Connecticu­t — where six adults and 20 children were gunned down before the killer committed suicide — it didn’t happen in a vacuum. This year has been particular­ly bloody in cases of seemingly random shootings at places often considered safe.

In July, 12 people were killed at a movie theater in Colorado during a midnight premiere of “The Dark Knight Rises.”

Less than a month later, six people worshippin­g in a Sikh temple in Wisconsin were gunned down.

In October, a prayer leader was shot and killed during a Bible study class at a megachurch in metro Atlanta.

Last week, two people were killed while shopping in an Oregon mall.

Now, at least 27 people, including 20 schoolchil­dren, are killed in Connecticu­t.

A movie theater. Two places of worship. A mall. And now a school.

“This is an American tragedy,” said Robert Friedmann, director of the Georgia Internatio­nal Law Enforcemen­t Exchange at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University.

Friedmann added that in most of the cases, the motivation is rarely ideo- logical.

“Unfortunat­ely, for too many people, they have some kind of internal conflict — a quarrel, a grievance, a complainin­g, a fight, fired from their jobs — so to me, it doesn’t matter how sane or insane they are,” Friedmann said. “It is not a psychologi­cal issue, it is a social phenomenon, where people take the law into their own hands and people get killed. We are at a disadvanta­ge because it is difficult to control individual urges to take a grievance out on someone else.”

Friedmann said while there will be a lot of anxiety about personal safety after the shootings, people will continue to go on about their business, although true healing could take months, if it happens at all.

“It will be somewhere in the back of our minds,” Friedmann said. “It is a frightenin­g experience. This is as close to it as it comes on stranger-on-stranger crime. Even though the statistica­l chances of getting hurt are not too high, people have a reason to be concerned.”

Community activist Suzanne Guy Mitchell, a native of Washington, D.C., said she always maintains an air of cautiousne­ss wherever she goes, especially when she is with her children.

She said after the Friday shootings, she immediatel­y spoke with the leaders of the Atlanta Neighborho­od Charter School, which her 5year-old twins, David and Sloan, attend, and asked that they review all of their security procedures.

“I feel for the families in this tragedy and it just breaks my heart,” said Mitchell, the president of the neighborho­od associatio­n for Summerhill, near downtown.

Deborah McCloud did everything she could to stop herself from rushing to her daughter’s Decatur school to pick her up after hearing about the school shootings. She did call the school, however, and asked that her daughter, Avalonia, call her back. “Just to ease my thoughts.”

“It feels as though no place is safe. We can’t go to places that are normally designated as safe havens anymore without looking over our shoulders,” McCloud said. “However, that should not stop us from living. If we do that, we give in to the violence and craziness. I don’t plan on changing anything other than living each day to the fullest. At this point, that is the only thing we can do.”

 ?? JESSICA HILL / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Parents leave with their children Friday after a shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. The incident brought fears to the surface for some metro Atlanta parents.
JESSICA HILL / ASSOCIATED PRESS Parents leave with their children Friday after a shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. The incident brought fears to the surface for some metro Atlanta parents.

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