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Following FSU shooting, students call on lawmakers to block effort to lower gun-buying law

Following FSU shooting, students call on lawmakers to block effort to lower gun-buying law
>> AFTER A TRAGIC DAY ON THE CAMPUS OF FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY GULF COAST NEWS REPORTER BRITT LEONI FOUND EXAMPLES OF EMPATHY RIGHT HERE IN OUR BACKYARD. FOR TONIGHT'S STORY TO SHARE. >> YESTERDAY IN TALLAHASSEE AT A PLACE CONSIDERED A SAFE HAVEN FOR STUDENTS. TRAGEDY STRUCK THAT RAISED QUESTIONS HERE AT FGCU. >> FGCU STUDENTS, MATTHEW KRAUSE AND JACK RICHARDSON, FEEL-LIKE CAMPUS IS HOME. WE JUST FEEL LIKE SCHOOLS ARE SAFE PLACE. THEY MAY HAVE WATCHED THE AFTERMATH OF THE SHOOTING YESTERDAY AT FSU FROM FARAWAY. BUT >> I WAS THERE. I IT. I WASN'T. I WAS THERE WHEN SOMEONE CLOSE LIVES, IT. >> IT FEELS LIKE YOU DO SET SOME RANDOM STUDENT STOPPED ON HIS WAY THERE AND WAS LIKE, I THINK SOMETHING'S GOING ON OVER. THERE MAY BE A SHOOTING. MATTHEW GRADUATED FROM FSU IN 2023. HIS FORMER ROOMMATE IS A CURRENT STUDENT AT FSU AND WAS NEAR THE SHOOTING. ALL YOU CARE ABOUT I WAS JUST THE SIRENS FROM VOICE MEMO. YOU SAID HE SOUNDED REALLY OUT OF GRADUATES ARE RUNNING ALL ONCE. REALIZE WHAT WAS HAPPENING FOR JACK. I JUST HEAR FROM OTHER CLASSMATES THAT SOMETHING'S GOING ON. FSU. MY FIRST THOUGHTS LIKE >> MY BROTHER GO SAILING. LUCKILY HE HE WASN'T NEAR THE AREA BUT HE KNEW HE KNEW FRIENDS THAT WERE CLOSE BY AND THEY SAID THEY HAD TO RUN BACK HOME BECAUSE THEY JUST SEE EVERYONE SCREAMING, YELLING AND ALL THAT STUFF BECAUSE YOU HEAR GUNSHOTS. LIKE. WHAT'S GOING ON. >> THANKFULLY, MATTHEWS FRIEND ANDREW IN JACKSBORO THER LUCAS ARE BOTH SAFE. BUT EVEN SO LOGIC BEHIND WHAT? >> SHE LIKED PEOPLE THAT >> DO DO DO THESE SHOOTINGS. THAT'S LIKE THEY'RE MOSTLY ON LIKE UNPROVOKED WHERE IT'S NOT LIKE SOMETHING JUST HAPPENED AND THEN THEY GO TO THEIR CAR AND DO IT. IT'S LIKE THEY'VE BEEN THINKING ABOUT THAT. IT'S BEEN GOING ON FOR A WHILE. THEN THEY GO OUT AND DO THIS. IT COULD BE ANYBODY. THE GUY WAS 20 YEARS OLD. TO. IF THAT EVEN FEEL LIKE MORE WEIRD BECAUSE SOMETIMES IT'S JUST OUTSIDERS BY THIS PERSON WITH A STUDENT. >> THERE MAY NOT BE A SIMPLE WAY TO HEAL FROM THIS, BUT IF THERE'S ONE MESSAGE, IT'S THIS. IF THIS HAPPENS TO SOMETHING, SOMEBODY IN YOUR COMMUNITY, IT'S LIKE. >> JUST GOT HELP SUPPORT THEM. AND IF THEY NEED EXTRA TIME TO GET BACK TO SOMETHING LIKE, UNDERSTAND THAT WAS A TRAUMATIC EXPERIENCE. >> HAS THE FSU COMMUNITY GRIEVES AND QUESTIONS ARE LEFT UNANSWERED. THERE'S ONE THING I'VE LEARNED FROM STUDENTS HERE AT FGCU TODAY. THE LOVE AND COMPASSION SHOWN IN TIMES LIKE THIS INDOORS LONGER THAN
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Following FSU shooting, students call on lawmakers to block effort to lower gun-buying law
Student survivors of last week’s deadly shooting at Florida State University urged state legislators Tuesday to block an effort to reverse a law passed after the 2018 Parkland school shooting that raised the state's gun-buying age from 18 to 21.Days after a gunman terrorized the university in the state capital of Tallahassee, students traveled to the Capitol to call on lawmakers to take action to protect them from gun violence.“When I transferred to Florida State University just last fall, I never thought I’d find myself locked inside a classroom, texting loved ones, unsure if I’d ever see them again,” said Andres Perez, a 20-year-old junior and president of the school’s chapter of Students Demand Action.“We owe it to the victims, not just here at Florida State University, but across Florida and across our nation, to make sure that this doesn’t happen again,” Perez said.Thursday's shooting killed two men who were not students and injured six others on FSU's campus, about one mile from the Capitol building, where lawmakers are in the final weeks of their annual session.Investigators have said the student suspect in the FSU shooting, 20-year-old Phoenix Ikner, used the former service weapon of his stepmother, a sheriff’s deputy, to carry out the shooting. Ikner was shot and wounded by police, but is expected to survive.Video below: FSU student, Parkland survivor 'forever changed' after second school shootingThe student remains hospitalized and won’t be formally charged until he is released, Tallahassee Police Department spokesman Lt. Damon Miller Jr. said Tuesday. “We don’t have a timeline on that,” Miller said in a phone interview.As of Tuesday afternoon, five of the patients who suffered gunshot wounds have been discharged from Tallahassee Memorial Hospital while one is still hospitalized and is in “good condition,” according to TMH spokesperson Sarah Cannon. Hospital officials would not confirm the identity of the patient, citing patient privacy laws.On Tuesday, FSU students stood alongside Democratic members of the state House of Representatives in the Capitol rotunda and recounted sending what they feared would be their final messages to family members, whispering “I love you” into their phones as they huddled in darkened classrooms.“We built barricades that day with nothing but chairs,” said Natanel Mizrahi, a 22-year-old senior. “There were no locks on our doors. So instead, brave students stood near the entrance with more chairs to try and do anything that they could to stop a would-be attacker.”The students called on lawmakers to reject the push to allow adults under age 21 to buy firearms, to ensure college classrooms have door locks, and to allocate funding for campus mental health resources and active shooter training.Video below: Trump calls Florida State University shooting 'a shame' but defends 2nd amendmentIn a statement, FSU spokesperson Amy Farnum-Patronis said active shooter training is optional and open to all students and employees, but is not currently mandatory for employees."Ensuring the safety and well-being of our campus community remains our foremost priority. Florida State University is continually reviewing and assessing our security protocols, including evaluating door locks, to ensure the safety of everyone on campus," Farnum-Patronis said.For some FSU students, it wasn't the first time they have been traumatized by a school shooting. For a small group, the sight of abandoned laptops and bookbags left behind by students fleeing for their lives was a grim reminder of the shooting they survived at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, where 17 people were killed and 17 others were injured.After that shooting, student survivors and grieving families crowded Florida's capitol in an extraordinary lobbying effort, successfully pushing the Republican-run Legislature to pass new gun control measures.This session, lawmakers have been considering bills to expand gun rights and roll back some restrictions, including lowering the gun-buying age. Gov. Ron DeSantis and some Republican lawmakers have backed the measure, saying that if a person is old enough to be in the military, they should be able to purchase a gun.Though the bill has the support of House Speaker Daniel Perez, Senate President Ben Albritton had been more hesitant about the measure even before the shooting at FSU.Speaking with reporters in March, Albritton became emotional recounting his visit to the Parkland high school building. He said he is a lifetime member of the National Rifle Association but that he has not made a decision on the measure.

Student survivors of last week’s deadly shooting at Florida State University urged state legislators Tuesday to block an effort to reverse a law passed after the 2018 Parkland school shooting that raised the state's gun-buying age from 18 to 21.

Days after a gunman terrorized the university in the state capital of Tallahassee, students traveled to the Capitol to call on lawmakers to take action to protect them from gun violence.

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“When I transferred to Florida State University just last fall, I never thought I’d find myself locked inside a classroom, texting loved ones, unsure if I’d ever see them again,” said Andres Perez, a 20-year-old junior and president of the school’s chapter of Students Demand Action.

“We owe it to the victims, not just here at Florida State University, but across Florida and across our nation, to make sure that this doesn’t happen again,” Perez said.

Thursday's shooting killed two men who were not students and injured six others on FSU's campus, about one mile from the Capitol building, where lawmakers are in the final weeks of their annual session.

Investigators have said the student suspect in the FSU shooting, 20-year-old Phoenix Ikner, used the former service weapon of his stepmother, a sheriff’s deputy, to carry out the shooting. Ikner was shot and wounded by police, but is expected to survive.

Video below: FSU student, Parkland survivor 'forever changed' after second school shooting

The student remains hospitalized and won’t be formally charged until he is released, Tallahassee Police Department spokesman Lt. Damon Miller Jr. said Tuesday. “We don’t have a timeline on that,” Miller said in a phone interview.

As of Tuesday afternoon, five of the patients who suffered gunshot wounds have been discharged from Tallahassee Memorial Hospital while one is still hospitalized and is in “good condition,” according to TMH spokesperson Sarah Cannon. Hospital officials would not confirm the identity of the patient, citing patient privacy laws.

On Tuesday, FSU students stood alongside Democratic members of the state House of Representatives in the Capitol rotunda and recounted sending what they feared would be their final messages to family members, whispering “I love you” into their phones as they huddled in darkened classrooms.

“We built barricades that day with nothing but chairs,” said Natanel Mizrahi, a 22-year-old senior. “There were no locks on our doors. So instead, brave students stood near the entrance with more chairs to try and do anything that they could to stop a would-be attacker.”

The students called on lawmakers to reject the push to allow adults under age 21 to buy firearms, to ensure college classrooms have door locks, and to allocate funding for campus mental health resources and active shooter training.

Video below: Trump calls Florida State University shooting 'a shame' but defends 2nd amendment

In a statement, FSU spokesperson Amy Farnum-Patronis said active shooter training is optional and open to all students and employees, but is not currently mandatory for employees.

"Ensuring the safety and well-being of our campus community remains our foremost priority. Florida State University is continually reviewing and assessing our security protocols, including evaluating door locks, to ensure the safety of everyone on campus," Farnum-Patronis said.

For some FSU students, it wasn't the first time they have been traumatized by a school shooting. For a small group, the sight of abandoned laptops and bookbags left behind by students fleeing for their lives was a grim reminder of the shooting they survived at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, where 17 people were killed and 17 others were injured.

After that shooting, student survivors and grieving families crowded Florida's capitol in an extraordinary lobbying effort, successfully pushing the Republican-run Legislature to pass new gun control measures.

This session, lawmakers have been considering bills to expand gun rights and roll back some restrictions, including lowering the gun-buying age. Gov. Ron DeSantis and some Republican lawmakers have backed the measure, saying that if a person is old enough to be in the military, they should be able to purchase a gun.

Though the bill has the support of House Speaker Daniel Perez, Senate President Ben Albritton had been more hesitant about the measure even before the shooting at FSU.

Speaking with reporters in March, Albritton became emotional recounting his visit to the Parkland high school building. He said he is a lifetime member of the National Rifle Association but that he has not made a decision on the measure.