All About Change - Protecting America’s Children from Gun Violence

Episode Date: June 21, 2021

On December 14th, 2012, Adam Lanza entered Sandy Hook’s elementary school and shot and killed 26 children and staff members. This devastating event led Nicole Hockley, whose son died in the shoo...ting, to establish the Sandy Hook Promise: an organization dedicated to preventing the next school shooting. Photo Credit: Ian Brown.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Thank you. a podcast focused on inclusion, innovation, and social justice. On December 14, 2012, America was shocked by a mass shooting that targeted young children. The notorious Sandy Hook shooting shook the very foundations of our nation's society with the deaths of 20 children and six staff members of the school. With me today is Nicole Hockley, whose six-year-old child Dylan was murdered in the horrific tragedy. Because of her horrific experience, Nicole co-founded the Sandy Hook Promise, a non-profit organization that strives to make the Sandy Hook shooting the last one. Nicole, welcome to All Inclusive. Thank you so much for having me, Jay.
Starting point is 00:01:04 the last one. Nicole, welcome to All Inclusive. Thank you so much for having me, Jay. So, Nicole, I know this must be so difficult for you, and I can't even imagine what you went through, but can you tell us about the day of the shooting when you first heard what had happened? Sure, and thanks for asking. It was a Friday morning in December. And the morning was pretty uneventful and normal. You know, I woke up my two boys, Dylan was six at the time and in first grade, and Jake was eight and in third grade at the time. And as usual, we walked up the driveway and waited for the bus to arrive. Dylan was autistic. And at the top of the driveway, we would always play with the neighbor's kids. He didn't know how to play necessarily, but they used to play tag and he would always like shout about who's the tagger, who's the tagger and um there was a
Starting point is 00:02:05 weird moment before he he got on the bus which is stuck in my mind um there's a lot of things obviously that stick in my mind from that day um but we had a little routine um because like a lot of little boys Dylan had a uh love dislike relationship with school. And we used to count down the days. And so as we would walk up the driveway, like Monday was five days school, two days no school. Tuesday was four days school, two days no school. And this helped him understand days of the week and heading to the weekend. So Friday would normally be one day school, two days no school. And as he was preparing to get on the bus, he looked at me and he said, last day school, mommy. And I said, that's right, D, one day school, two days no school.
Starting point is 00:02:57 And he just kind of nodded at me and said, last day school, mommy. And then he got on the bus. That was the last time I ever saw him alive. I was at an exercise class when a call came through from a friend letting me know that there was a shooting at the school where we both had our children. I collapsed to the floor in my class and one of my other friends collected me and took me in her car to drive to Sandy Hook, which is only a few miles away from where I was. And as you got closer, there were just cars and police cars and sirens, and the streets were jammed. The streets were jammed, so I got out of the car and started running to where the school was.
Starting point is 00:03:53 There were just so many people there. This is a school with several hundred children, and it was complete chaos. And there's a fire station at the front driveway to the school, and they were sending everyone there. And the rooms were crowded with children all sitting down and floors everywhere, you know, the back offices of a fire station. And parents were just pressed right up against each other, trying to wiggle their way through to find their kids. And I remember seeing a few of my friends looking for their children. One of my friends said, I saw Jake, my eldest, he's in
Starting point is 00:04:31 another room. And I said, that's good. Have you seen Dylan? No. And another woman who I recognized from the town said, what class is he in? And I said, he's in Miss Soto's class and she said I heard she got shot and that was the first time that I'd really heard of that this was a potential and I and I got angry and I yelled at her and I said don't you dare say that if you don't know it's true um and I just kept pressing my way through and I found um a lot of other first graders all sitting with their legs crossed quietly. And I'm just searching all the faces looking for D. And then a policeman, I think, stood on a chair between an archway and said, you know, we need to get the kids all to the front so we can start allowing parents to take kids home, make some space. allowing parents to take kids home, make some space. At this time, I found Jake, and he just threw his arms around me, which was amazing, because I knew he was safe. And he said,
Starting point is 00:05:31 where's Dylan? And I said, I don't know, but I'm going to find him. And then they made all the parents stop, and it became silent. And they asked all the kids and the teachers to get the kids up to the front where the bays of the fire trucks were so that they could line up by class. And as all the kids were walking by, holding hands, some were crying. You know, you just keep looking at every face, looking for your child. And he wasn't there. And I went out front once all the kids were there and found an adult holding Ms. Soto's sign. And there were only a few kids there.
Starting point is 00:06:15 I saw Dylan's reading partner. And she just had this blank look on her face. And I went up to the adult and I said, where's the rest of the class? And he said, I don't know anything. I've just been asked to stand here with this sign. And parents started collecting their kids and leaving. And my friend said, do you want me to take Jake home? And I said, yes, please. I said, I'm sure Dylan's fine. I'm sure he's hiding somewhere. And I know Mrs. Murphy, his special education assistant, wherever he is, she is too.
Starting point is 00:06:57 She would not leave him at all. They were very strongly bonded. And eventually it was only some families milling around and they asked us to all go in the back room and even then you know had my mind could not comprehend in the slightest that there was potentially any any harm done to my child and I started to just shut down and no one knew what was going on. We had to fill in a form that said the name of who we were waiting for and what class they were in. Some people were crying. Some people couldn't stop talking. They were on their phones. I did
Starting point is 00:07:40 not want to go on my phone. I just reached out to my husband and I said, you need to get here because I'm all alone and I don't know what's going on. And then they let us know that a lot of people had been killed. Again, no more details. And then our governor at the time, Governor Malloy, came in with what I now know were senators, but I didn't recognize him at the time. And I didn't even know who our governor was. I'd only been living in Newtown for 11 months, having recently relocated from England, where I'd been living for 18 years. And our governor started talking and realized that everyone in the room had not been told anything. And he was the one who took it on himself to be brave enough to say, if we were still waiting in that room, then the person we were waiting for was not coming back.
Starting point is 00:08:40 Yelling, crying, screaming, just complete pain. And I just shut down because that's what I do. And shortly after that, my husband arrived. We were assigned a police officer to take us home. take us home. Ironically, my street and house was also shut off because the killer lived across the street from me, which we didn't even know at that point. I didn't know why our street was closed off. And we went directly to where Jake was with our neighbors from a few doors down. And I was not able to talk at this point. And so my husband had to tell Jake that Dylan had been killed. And I have never heard a child
Starting point is 00:09:42 sound like that. He was howling like an animal. And we just went upstairs to a bedroom and pretty much stayed there the entire weekend. It's such a, you know, I can't even imagine, and my heart goes out to you and your family, and I can still hear, you know, all the years after how, you know, devastated this was for you. I mean, I remember clearly Sandy Hook from a national perspective. It made news all over the world and, you know, there was an outrage at the number of children, especially that were killed in this mass shooting. How did the community come together after this?
Starting point is 00:10:41 come together after this? At the start, the community came together very strongly, and I didn't totally recognize all of that at first, because I was just very much focused on my family. But the outpouring of support from Newtown, from around the world, was amazing. And, you know, we had, there were vigils, and President Obama came and spent time with each of us, and there were lots of immediate charities formed, people didn't know where to send things. There was a warehouse that was literally filled with gifts. I mean, everything from paintings of the 26th, of paintings of individual children, mountains of teddy bears. Some really bizarre things as well.
Starting point is 00:11:54 But it was a time of united grief. And, you know, for some people, then they need to go back to their lives and for others divisions start because i think after every tragedy i've seen since then now that i'm so much more attuned to it there's always a coming together and then people want to do different things different things to try to prevent it. And it creates issues and tensions. But for my community, some people had already come together.
Starting point is 00:12:40 So I want to talk about Sandy Hook Promise and what the organization is focused on doing. But before I get to that, something like this has ramifications that will go on for a lifetime for those that we're touching. And I know that there are people in the community who are affected who have since died by suicide. So something like this just has ramifications. And unfortunately, as we're going to talk about a little bit later, these mass shootings are something that are quite a common occurrence in the United States. But tell us a little bit about Sandy Hook Promise and what the organization does. Well, we are focused very much outside of new town um there is a lot of a lot of ongoing trauma and grief and issues um as a result of what happened at sandy hook school um that will affect this entire generation um and i continue to keep an eye out for warning signs in my own son, who's now 16 and still remembers that day and what he
Starting point is 00:13:46 heard and saw. But for Sandy Hook Promise, our mission is to ensure that this tragedy doesn't continue to happen in future. We envision a future where no child ever has to experience the devastation of a school shooting. And we do that by teaching people how to recognize the signs. In all of the research, you know, when determining the strategy, it became very clear that to create behavioral change, there's a lot of levers that you can pull. Education and programs, grassroots voice, legal action, policy action, political action. And the gun violence prevention movement had only ever focused really on policy. And then soon after politics, but no one was really teaching how to prevent it.
Starting point is 00:14:41 And while Sandy Hook Promise still very much advocates for legislation in the area of mental health awareness and funding and gun violence prevention and safe access, we are well aware that you can't legislate for behavior. You need to create a behavioral change first and then have legislation to enforce it or reinforce it. So we're very much focused on from all the school shootings that have studied, from the meetings with the FBI, from meeting with mental health experts, social movement experts, academic experts, gun owners, non-gun owners, we decided we need to teach kids how to lead this change by teaching them how do you recognize signs of someone who's in crisis, whether that is from self-harm, harm towards others, or anywhere on that spectrum of violence from bullying to
Starting point is 00:15:42 something that could eventually escalate into self-harm, eating disorders, dating violence, domestic abuse into homicide and suicide. How do you recognize those signs and then intervene to get that person help? You know, speaking to a trusted adult, using an anonymous reporting system, fostering inclusivity and connection so that something doesn't escalate. And that's where our programs are. How do we teach kids to recognize these signs? Because there are always signs, you know, four out of five school shooters tell someone before they commit an act of violence. Seven out of 10 people who die by suicide exhibit signs and signals. So these are all opportunities for intervention. And that's
Starting point is 00:16:25 what we're teaching. So, I mean, I find it to be extremely powerful, you know, to go from, and we'll talk a little bit about, you know, guns that, you know, guns are the problem. And, you know, we have to legislate to let's look at people who are in trouble that could become, you know, mass shooters. I've never encountered that before, but I think that that's a very powerful way of looking at that. And, and in, in a way, you know, very spiritual to open yourself up and, and to say, listen, you know, I'm going to go to an area that's probably really uncomfortable for me and deal
Starting point is 00:17:02 with, you know, people that, you know, could have been in the same place as the person that killed my son and work in that area. But let's draw back a little bit and talk about, you know, gun violence in America. Why do these shootings happen regularly in the United States. Not just, you know, someone taking their own life, but going and trying to kill as many people as they can. And it doesn't happen as much in other parts of the world. Yeah. And I've heard so many ideas and hypotheses as to why that is, you know, is it, is it violent video games? Is it, um, a mental health issue? Is it when you, when you get right down to it, it's about access to weapons, um, because, um, uh, violent video games are not just the soul, um, are, are not just in the United States. Um, people that are, that have issues with mental wellness or coping issues,
Starting point is 00:18:08 that is not the sole purview of the United States as well. What is different is access to weaponry. And that comes down to our Second Amendment and the way it's been translated to mean that anyone can have any gun they want at any time. translated to mean that anyone can have any gun they want at any time. And it's become such a political discussion, so partisan and so based in fear that it's really hard sometimes to break through, to have logical conversations. And, you know, it's not about taking something away. It's not about being pro-gun or anti-gun. It's about protecting kids. And that's something we can all agree on. So if we start from that basis and figure things out, but the problem in America is, you know, there's, you know, 330 million people and more guns than that. And the fear messaging that comes out from more of the pro-gun lobby is,
Starting point is 00:19:10 you know, you need to be armed to the hilt in order to defend yourself. Whereas actually mass shootings are incredibly small in number. Suicides are what drive gun violence deaths. And that is all about access and poor storage, you know, and lack of safety. So I just, I read an article that you, that you authored with Laura Dern, the actress, which says in 2020, 23 million guns were sold, which was a huge jump from previous years. And that in this year alone, I mean, we're sort of not even halfway through the year,
Starting point is 00:19:53 but there's been 47 mass shootings so far in the United States, and over 200 children have died as a result. This is a national disgrace. And why, I mean, without getting too political, why our state and our federal government, why are they not able to do more to prevent this? Sadly, they are very able to do more to prevent this. The problem is politics. It's become a political issue rather than a public safety issue. If it was treated as public safety, I mean, with over 40,000 people dying by gun violence every year, and there are solutions in place, it's, it's a shame that we're not able to put those, put our politics aside and just think as people. There's a lot of work that we can do at a grassroots level as well.
Starting point is 00:20:55 I don't think it's just the job of politicians. It's around how we look out for each other. It's around how we respect and for each other. It's around how we respect and include each other. It's also around, you know, being able to speak up. We're a bit of a, or in the past, we've been a bit of a bystander culture. You know, I will video what's happening, but I won't intervene. I will, it's someone else's responsibility to do that rather than being upstanders and leaning in and saying, this person needs help, and I'm going to do something about it. So there is a behavioral change that's needed for all of us. In addition to then, you know, having our politicians be upstanders as well. Do you think that we've, as a society in America, become in some ways immune to these shootings happening and just say, okay, well, this is just part of life living in America? I mean, will they ever stop? Or do you think that we're just going to wake up every week or every
Starting point is 00:22:01 other week and just hear about something like this happening? I absolutely believe it's going to stop. And that's my life's mission. So I will always believe that. I think there is an element of desensitization, but it's more coming from a sense of apathy or a sense of it'll never happen to me. We find, unfortunately, that most people only become active in this issue once it has touched them. And with 40,000 people dying every year, mass shootings on the increase, there is soon going to be a point in time when it is hard to find someone who hasn't been touched by gun violence. And I think that will be a big turning point. But, you know, I'd rather us not have to wait until we get there and take action now instead. What do we know about him and how he got to that point of doing something so terrible and outrageous? Well, having met with, having certainly read the police report several times and having met with the behavioral analysis unit who did some profiling on him, I think the main thing is this was a troubled person who had a lot of issues, observable issues throughout his life. And they were not intervened on. His mother, you know, he was prescribed medicine.
Starting point is 00:23:49 He didn't take the medicine. He was prescribed therapies. They were ended. His mother was an enabler, as far as my opinion is, in terms of allowing his behavior to go unchecked and unsupported with help that could have stopped him from escalating. We don't know the exact triggering moment, but some of these signs were evident even in his elementary school years with drawings about killing, stories that he wrote, which a teacher did bring to light, but nothing happened about it. He was incredibly isolated. He isolated himself in his own house,
Starting point is 00:24:40 put blankets up, duct taped up over all the windows, had very little interaction with his own mother. This was someone who had no connection, potentially had an untreated illness as well, and had other drivers that made him want to go for infamy and the easy kill of an elementary school. And he had completely unfettered access to weapons. There were lots of guns in the house. They were not kept in a locked safe. Many were found in his own bedroom closet.
Starting point is 00:25:26 I had a friend in high school who died by suicide by a gun and the family had a lot of guns in the house. And I mean, I think I've seen your writings, you know, guns are extremely, senior writings, you know, guns are extremely, extremely dangerous items and, and they're all over the place. And, um, you know, the access to them that children may have is just a lethal combination. Um, but you, you talked about, um, what qualities he had or what was going through in his life. Are there commonalities between other mass shooters? Are they showing some of the same traits that we should be looking out for? Yeah, it is around these signs. These are usually escalating acts of self-harm or violence that go unchecked and unintervened on, and it just continues to grow. So that's why I'm so focused on upstream violence prevention. How early in the cycle can we create interventions
Starting point is 00:26:34 and stop the next escalation from happening? Because it is a spectrum of violence. No one snaps and overnight becomes a mass shooter. There's no such thing of that. This is something that grows. And while one sign isn't necessarily enough, it's about the accumulation of signs and the increased amount of them over time that really are a signal that someone is in deep trouble of self-harm or violence to others and needs an intervention. And that's where the focus needs to be, early intervention, early support, and obviously lack of access to means to carry out any act of self-harm or violence to others. So, Nicole, you mentioned one thing in a previous answer and i just wanted to see what you meant by
Starting point is 00:27:25 that people who are looking for infamy what did you mean by that he um according to the police reports he had uh been um studying previous mass shootings such as columbine in depth and wanted to get a higher kill rate he wanted to remember as having killed the most people. I think for most of us, it's a really difficult thing to wrap our heads around. I mean, I know it happens all the time. You know, we can list, you know, many, many famous, you know, mass shootings where a lot of people have been killed, including children, it's just so difficult to wrap your head around, you know, the idea, not that, I mean, death by suicide happens, it's frequent, it, you know, we should work against it and, and, and raise stigma and, and, and educate people. But the mass shooting
Starting point is 00:28:19 aspect of it is really hard for a lot of people to wrap their heads around, but yet it seems to be a thing out there that other people are following previous cases. Very much so. That is a very obvious and more overt sign of someone who is potentially planning damage to other, this obsession with previous mass shootings, studying them, detailing, emulating them. That is not typical behavior for many people. That's a sign of someone who is having dark thoughts and needs help. And the idea of competing with mass shootings, and unfortunately, we've seen it again. There have been shootings since then that, you know, the person has talked about wanting to do a Sandy Hook or, you know, get a higher kill ratio than Sandy Hook. I can't go there after the act is done.
Starting point is 00:29:24 But if there's something that can be done to prevent that person from fulfilling that, which is often also a cry for help, as in the case with the Sandy Hook shooter, this was suicide by mass shooting. There was no intention that our shooter had of coming out of that school alive. And that happens a lot in school shootings as well. So I have four teenagers. And, you know, as a parent, you know, obviously, I'm concerned about them, about, you know, their mental health, about how they're growing up. What are you telling, you know, parents? What are we looking for? You know, the telltale signs that we need to see, like, oh, you know, this is not right.
Starting point is 00:30:07 This goes beyond, you know, something that someone needs to be counseled on, but, you know, it's a little bit more. This is about significant shifts. So, and it can be hard for a parent when your child's in front of you every day and what's typical teenager uh what's teenage drama and hormones and what is something beyond that so i always tell parents please trust your gut if you think something's wrong ask get an intervention get get support um have good communication with your kids and be part of their lives um but signs to look for include, have they stopped being interested in things that always used to be a passion to them? Have they drawn away?
Starting point is 00:30:51 Are they unable to manage their anger or cope with something that would seem to be a small problem and they're overacting to everything? Are they having significant changes of behavior, of dress, of giving away items, of studying mass shooters, or studying firearms and how to acquire it? Are they bragging about violence? Are they performing acts of self-harm or harm towards animals? Sometimes these are things that also build up. Are they just incredibly different from the child that you've known them to be?
Starting point is 00:31:24 And if this is seen in your family and is seen in school as well, and especially because teachers spend a lot of time with our kids. So we need to also trust what the teachers are seeing in the classroom and not deny. When the school comes to you and says, we're concerned about your child for these reasons, your heart wants to envelop your child and protect them, but you need to open up your heart to thinking the best way to protect them is to listen what their problems are and figure out ways to support them. Maybe, Nicole, we can talk a little bit about some of the educational programs that Sandy Hook
Starting point is 00:32:01 Promise runs and, you know, you can talk about them and the impact that they've had. We have two pillar programs. Start with Hello, which teaches kids how to recognize when someone's alone and reach out and include them, create connections. It's all about fostering connectivity and safer school climates. It's an SEL program that is used in thousands of schools across the country right now. In total, our programs are in about 15,000 schools in all 50 states. We've trained, I think, about 12 million people have participated in our programs as of this point. Our other pillar program is Say Something, where we specifically focus on teaching kids how do you recognize signs and signals in your friends, particularly on social media, where so much
Starting point is 00:32:53 communication is done, and how to then tell a trusted adult or use a different system if your school has an anonymous reporting system, or we then launched our own anonymous reporting system in 2018 so that you're you're not we're not expecting kids to create the interventions we're saying go to an adult a trusted adult or an expert and let them say this is what I'm seeing this is what I'm nervous about and this person needs your help and then allow the adult or the expert to do the intervention. But those two programs in themselves have reduced bullying. They've reduced isolation in things like lunchrooms. They have gotten thousands of kids to mental health supports that are needed. They have tangibly stopped a considerable sad number of suicide attempts.
Starting point is 00:33:48 And they have stopped several dozen evidenced school shooting plans that we believe would have taken place had we not intervened. Can you talk a little bit about the program Students Against Violence Everywhere? And is there any connection between that and the survivors of the Parkland shooting in Florida? So Students Against Violence Everywhere, or SAVE, is our student youth empowerment. They're student clubs. So a lot of times where schools have our programs, we want to ensure that this becomes the fabric of the school. It's not just a one and done training. It's about how do you sustain it. And it's about having young people get involved in, you know, being agents for themselves as to the safety of their own school and community. So we have about three and a half thousand student clubs now across the country.
Starting point is 00:34:45 And we do summits and leadership things. We started this in 2017, so before Parkland. And there are SAVE clubs down in Broward District, which is one of the districts that we work with. Ironically and sadly, we were just about to implement the programs in Broward District when Parkland happened, which I know my team took, we take every school shooting very personally and very hard. But the fact that we were about to train on that, and then this happened, you know, that hurt our team emotionally quite a lot. We have, you know, in terms of what came out of that with March for Our Lives and Safe and Sound Schools, there's a lot of behind the scenes work. We all talk to
Starting point is 00:35:32 each other, but we're focused on different ways to tackle this problem. Finally, I just wanted to ask you, in many things i've read you refer to dylan as my butterfly yeah can you talk a little bit about that yeah um so d was dylan was autistic and he had you know limited verbal skills uh i was very fortunate that he was good with touch and a huge cuddler. He used to hold on to me like a koala bear half the time. And just a very happy boy. He also, like a lot of kids on the spectrum, had repetitive movements. He was a flapper. So whenever he got excited, he would jump up and down and flap his arms. We used to joke that he was just going to take off and fly away one day. But I think he was four or five when I asked him,
Starting point is 00:36:33 you know, why do you flap? And I really wasn't expecting him to answer because of his verbal skills. But he looked at me and he said, because I'm a beautiful butterfly. looked at me and he said, because I'm a beautiful butterfly. And at his funeral, which was a week after the shooting, and my husband and I were, you know, addressing the people there, I started to talk about the butterfly effect and the theory that a butterfly flapping its wings on one side of the world can create change on the other side of the world. And I said that Dylan and all those that we lost that day were butterflies,
Starting point is 00:37:12 and their energy was going to create change. So Dylan is our butterfly, and he is that force for change. And now when I have the honor to go out to schools around the country, and this is no word of a lie, when I'm addressing assemblies with several hundred kids, you know, I see all their shining faces and then I see those light bulbs go off over their heads as we're talking to them and they know that they can make a difference.
Starting point is 00:37:39 And then all I see are butterflies because it's the kids that are gonna make this change happen. So if someone wants to get involved and can they contribute, are there other ways that they can get involved in the sandy hook promise yeah there's tons of ways to be involved in sandy hook promise we have a website sandy hook promise.org you can get involved by donating of course to allow us to enable us to do this work and reach more kids you can become a promise leader which we have i think about 8 000 of them across the country right now, which are our volunteer ambassadors helping bring the programs to schools and advocate for sensible legislative changes. You can get involved in your school's Safe Promise Club.
Starting point is 00:38:36 You can also download our brochures, download the signs and learn what those signs are of someone in crisis so that you're teaching them in your own family, to your own children, and to the community around you. Nicole, thank you so much for joining us today. I know this was not easy, extremely emotional. Your work is just vital for the future of this country, and I really appreciate the time you spent with us. Thank you so much, Jay. It was an honor speaking with you. Thank you. All Inclusive is a production of the Ruderman Family Foundation. Our key mission is the full inclusion of people with disabilities in all aspects of society. key mission is the full inclusion of people with disabilities in all aspects of society. You can find All Inclusive on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, and Stitcher. To view the show notes, transcripts, or to learn more, go to rudermanfoundation.org slash allinclusive.
Starting point is 00:39:58 Have an idea for a podcast? Be sure to tweet at Jay Ruderman.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.