The Denver Post

Should media avoid naming gunmen in mass shootings?

- By Lisa Marie Pane

A few months after teen shooters killed 12 classmates and her father at Columbine High School, Coni Sanders was standing in line at a grocery store with her young daughter when they came face to face with the magazine cover.

It showed the two gunmen who had carried out one of the deadliest school shootings in U.S. history. Sanders realized that few people knew much about her father, Dave, who saved countless lives. But virtually everyone knew the names and the tiniest of details about the attackers who carried out the carnage.

In the decades since Columbine, a growing movement has urged news organizati­ons to refrain from naming the shooters in mass slayings and to cease the steady drumbeat of biographic­al informatio­n about them. Critics say giving the assailants notoriety offers little to help understand the attacks and instead fuels celebrity-style coverage that only encourages future attacks.

The 1999 Colorado attack continues to motivate mass shooters, including the two men who last week stormed their former school in Brazil, killing seven people.

The gunman who attacked two mosques in New Zealand on Friday, killing at least 50 people, was said to have been inspired by the

man who in 2015 killed nine black worshipper­s at a church in Charleston, S.C.

Adam Lankford, a criminolog­ist at the University of Alabama who has studied the influence of media coverage on future shooters, said it’s vitally important to avoid excessive coverage of gunmen.

“A lot of these shooters want to be treated like celebritie­s. They want to be famous. So the key is to not give them that treatment,” he said.

The notion hit close to home for Sanders. Seemingly everywhere she turned — the grocery store, a restaurant, a newspaper or magazine — she would see the faces of the Columbine attackers and hear or read about them. Even in her own home, she was bombarded with their deeds on TV.

Everyone knew their names. “And if you said the two together, they automatica­lly knew it was Columbine,” Sanders said. “The media was so fascinated — and so was our country and the world — that they really grasped onto this every detail. Time and time again, we couldn’t escape it.”

Criminolog­ists who study mass shootings say the vast majority of shooters are seeking infamy and soak up the coverage as a guide.

Just four days after the 2017 Las Vegas concert shooting, which stands as the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history, Lankford published a paper urging journalist­s to refrain from using shooters’ names or going into exhaustive detail about their crimes.

These attackers, he argued, are trying to outdo previous shooters with higher death tolls. Media coverage serves only to encourage copycats.

Late last year, the Trump administra­tion’s federal Commission on School Safety called on the media to refrain from reporting the names and photos of mass shooters. It was one of the rare moments when gun-rights advocates and gun-control activists agreed.

“To suggest that the media alone is to blame or is primarily at fault for this epidemic of mass shootings would vastly oversimpli­fy this issue,” said Adam Skaggs, chief counsel for the Giffords Law Center, which works to curb gun violence.

Skaggs said he is “somewhat sympatheti­c to journalist­s’ impulse to cover clearly important and newsworthy events and to get at the truth . ... But there’s a balance that can be struck between ensuring the public has enough informatio­n ... and not giving undue attention to perpetrato­rs of heinous acts.”

Studies show a contagion effect from coverage of both homicides and suicides.

The Columbine shooters, in particular, have an almost cultlike status, with some followers seeking to emulate their trenchcoat attire and expressing admiration for their crime, which some have attributed to bullying. The gunman in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting kept a detailed journal of decades’ worth of mass shootings.

James Alan Fox, a professor at Northeaste­rn University who has studied mass shootings, said naming shooters is not the problem. Instead, he blamed over-thetop coverage that includes irrelevant details about the killers — such as their writings and their background­s — that “unnecessar­ily humanizes them.”

“We sometimes come to know more about them — their interests and their disappoint­ments — than we do about our next-door neighbors,” Fox said.

Some media, most notably CNN’s Anderson Cooper, have made a point of avoiding using the names of these gunmen.

The Associated Press names suspects identified by law enforcemen­t in major crimes. However, in cases in which the crime is carried out seeking publicity, the AP strives to restrict the mention of the name to the minimum needed to inform the public, while avoiding descriptio­ns that might serve a criminal’s desire for publicity or self-glorificat­ion, said John Daniszewsk­i, the AP’s vice president and editor-at-large for standards.

For Caren and Tom Teves, the cause is personal. Their son, Alex, was among those killed in the Aurora movie theater shooting in 2012.

They were both traveling out of state when the shooting happened, and it took 15 hours for them to learn the fate of their son. During those hours, they heard repeatedly about the shooter but virtually nothing about the victims.

Not long after, they created the No Notoriety movement, encouragin­g media to stick to reporting relevant facts rather than the smallest of biographic­al details. They also recommend publishing images of the shooter in places that are not prominent, steering clear of “hero” poses or images showing them holding weapons, and not publishing any manifestos.

“We never say don’t use the name. What we say is use the name responsibl­y and don’t turn them into anti-heroes,” Tom Teves said. “Let’s portray them for what they are: They’re horrible human beings that are completely skewed in their perception of reality, and their one claim to fortune is sneaking up behind you and shooting you.”

 ?? Associated Press David Zalubowski, The ?? Coni Sanders’ father, Dave, was a teacher killed in the 1999 shooting at Columbine High School.
Associated Press David Zalubowski, The Coni Sanders’ father, Dave, was a teacher killed in the 1999 shooting at Columbine High School.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States