Incident, # of shooters, weapon(s) used | Shot | Killed | Wounded | Kill-to-wounded ratio |
SANDY HOOK (2012) 1 shooter, AR-15, .223 | 27 | 26 (96.2%) | 1 (3.8%) | 26:1 |
Aurora, CO (2012) 1 shooter, AR-15, .223 | 71 | 12 (16.9%) | 59 (83%) | 1:5 |
Tucson, AZ (2011) 1 shooter, Glock 9mm | 14 | 6 (42.8%) | 8 (57.1%) | 1:1.2 |
N. Ill. U (2008) 1 shooter, 9mm | 26 | 5 (20%) | 21 ((80%) | 1:4 |
Virginia Tech (2007) 1 shooter, 9mm pistol | 49 | 32 (68%) | 17 (32%) | 2:1 |
Columbine, CO (1999) 2 shooters, 12 ga., 9mm | 33 | 12 (36%) | 21 (64%) | 1:2 |
U. Iowa (1991) 1 shooter/.38 spec. | 6 | 5 (83%) | 1 (16%) | 5:1 |
Stockton, CA (1989) 1 shooter AK-47 | 35 | 5 (14%) | 30 (86%) | 1:6 |
École Polytechnique/Montreal Massacre (1989) 1 shooter, Ruger Mini 14 .223 | 27 | 14 (52%) | 13 (48%) | 1.1:1 |
Cal. St. Fullerton (1976) 1 shooter .22 LR semi-auto | 9 | 7 (78%) | 2 (22%) | 3.5:1 |
U. Texas Tower (1966) 1 shooter | 48 | 16 (33%) | 32 (67%) | 1:2 |
St. Valentine’s Day Massacre (1929) 2 shooters, .45 submachine guns | 7 | 6 (85.8%) | 1 (14.2%) | 6:1 |
Never mind the facts, however. The public has been repeatedly told by corporate news media that the December 14, 2012 incident was exclusively carried out by the awkward 20-year-old man with virtually no firearms or military training.
“The debate over gun violence gained urgency after a gunman killed 20 first-graders and six adults on December 14 at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut,” Reuters observed as recently as February 7. “The killer, 20-year-old Adam Lanza, used a Bushmaster AR-15 type assault rifle to shoot his victims before killing himself.”[1]
Over the past seven weeks mainstream media have spoken in one earsplitting voice to drive home the now familiar “lone gunman” storyline ostensibly proffered by law enforcement while dismissing a multitude of important evidence indicating a far more complex scenario.
Indeed, as information recently pointed to by Digital Journal indicates,[2] in a widescale rush to judgment major news media have neglected vital information and statements from Connecticut state authorities suggesting that Lanza may have had accomplices.
In a December 26 court plea to postpone release of contents yielded through five search warrant, Connecticut State Attorney General Stephen Sedensky argued that unsealing such findings might “seriously jeopardize” the investigation by divulging evidence heretofore known only to other “potential suspects.”
Pointing to “information in the search warrant affidavits that is not known to the general public,” Sedensky also argued that opening the warrants would “identify persons cooperating with the investigation, thus possibly jeopardizing their personal safety and well-being.”
The prosecutor’s statement came less than two weeks after Connecticut State Police Lieutenant J. Paul Vance told reporters how there were “some cards that we’re holding close to our vest.”
In light of the above and alongside a wealth of additional evidence calling the “official story” into question, the corporate news media’s long-running and continued emphasis of the “lone gunman” narrative appears increasingly fraudulent. The question remains whether this is merely a case of slipshod reporting or part of a more intentional mass deception against the American public.
Notes
[1] Thomas Ferraro and Richard Cohen, “House Democrats to Unveil Gun Control Package; Mirrors Obama’s,” NBC/Reuters, February 7, 2013.
[2] Ralph Lopez, “Sandy Hook DA Cites ‘Potential Suspects,’ Fears Witness Safety,” Digital Journal, February 5, 2013.